the landmark laws controversial provisions. and the frontrunner for the gop nomination gets shaken up on the trail. all right now on fox news sunday. and hello again from fox news in washington. we ll talk with our guests in a moment but first some late news. former vice president dick cheney is recovering in a virginia hospital after undergoing a heart transplant saturday. the 71-year-old who has suffered five heart attacks was on the transplant lift for almost two years. now, the results from saturday s republican primary in louisiana. rick santorum came out on top with 49%. mitt romney was second with 27% and newt gingrich and ron paul rounded out the field. a look at the updated delegate count shows romney with 568 delegates. almost halfway to the 1144 needed for the nomination. let s turn to the issues that will define the general election between president obama and whoever the republican nominee is. joining us here in studio is president obama s senior advisor david
on this, the eve of a key gop primary in louisiana, rick santorum is charging hard. polls show him as a double digit favorite there, but santorum is also on the defensive today. he s taking a lot of heat from his rivals for hinting that reelecting barack obama might might be preferable to electing mitt romney. listen to this. you win by giving people a choice. you win by giving people the opportunity to see a different vision for our country, not someone who is just going to be a little different than the person in there. if they re going to be a little different we might as well stay with what we have instead of taking a risk of what may be an etch a sketch candidate for the future. strong words. let s go live to our senior correspondent joe johns. he s in louisiana. joe, i take it senator santorum is back peddling furiously today. joo he sort of has to, when you think about it, wolf. this is one of those situations where he said something and almost immediately the cr
( cheers and applause ) jon: that s our show. join us tomorrow night at 11:00. here it is your moment of zen. is it okay to call a woman that? i think it s a compliment of sorts. captioning sponsored by comedy central captioned by media access group a [ the colbert report theme music playing] [cheers and applause] stephen: welcome to the report, everybody. good to have you with us. thank you so much, ladies and gentlemen. [cheers and applause] [crowd chanting stephen] these people are not following around. thank you soç much. you people have the spirit! [cheers and applause] nation, for anybody who lives and works in new york, you know that wall street is the finance capital of the world. and when you work on the street, there s a sacred trust. you never go public with complaints about your bosses. [ laughter ] and in exchange one day they ll explain to you what it is you do for a living. [ laughter ] i m disgusted to learn about this op-ed in today s new york tim
[cheers and applause] but the greatest betrayal of all of the revelation that goldman sachs derisively called their overly trusting clients mup eves. that s muppets. that s ak rit. some were muppets and unfortunately ernie took a real bath. i may not agree with this guy but i have to sleuth his principles. once he found out that goldman had a cult tougher greed he left immediately after 12 years at the firm. i doubt he will have any trouble finding a new job because he tacked his resume on to the article. he won a brns medal for table tennis at the macabea games also known as the jewish olympics. [ laughter ] this guy gets to jump to the front of the line by announcing i m the third best jewish ping pong÷ú player on earth? [ laughter ] way to reinforce the hateful stereotype that ping pong players control the banking industry. i ve had it. sorry, i ve had it. the alabama and mississippi primaries were last night and the stakes for romney were high or as mitt would say jus
[crowd chanting stephen] these people are not following around. thank you soç much. you people have the spirit! [cheers and applause] nation, for anybody who lives and works in new york, you know that wall street is the finance capital of the world. and when you work on the street, there s a sacred trust. you never go public with complaints about your bosses. [ laughter ] and in exchange one day they ll explain to you what it is you do for a living. [ laughter ] i m disgusted to learn about this op-ed in today s new york times but greg smith entitled why i am leaving goldman sachs in which he revealed to become a leader you must per squad your clients in the stocks you are trying to get rid of because they are not seen as having a lot of potential profit and not one single minute is spent asking questions about how goldman can help clients. of course, time is money. they don t want to waste clients money by spending time thinking about them. [ laughter ] this banker-dict