Speaker Ryan press exchange on tax reform polling, rebounding economy

House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin tells reporters at a weekly press briefing that pundits and spinsters and spinmeisters out there were confusing the public but 18 percent of people polled weeks before the Reagan signature 1986 tax reform believed they would see the cuts, which was what was happening with any large piece of legislation, but he was comforted by fantastic results to improve the lives of hard-working taxpayers. Ryan says he was riffing but feels passionately about bigger paychecks, a simpler system, two things to get that under control including reforming entitlement programs on autopilot and three reconciliation legislative packages, entitlement reforms that trap people in poverty instead of incentivizing work, changing welfare loss to push and pull people out of poverty into the workforce. Ryan says three things would get the economy humming, that retiring baby boomers present a new economic challenge and American needs higher birth rates, though he had done his part, a 90 percent increase in the retirement population, but only 19 percent increase in the working population.
House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin tells reporters at a weekly press briefing that pundits and spinsters and spinmeisters out there were confusing the public but 18 percent of people polled weeks before the Reagan signature 1986 tax reform believed they would see the cuts, which was what was happening with any large piece of legislation, but he was comforted by fantastic results to improve the lives of hard-working taxpayers. Ryan says he was riffing but feels passionately about bigger paychecks, a simpler system, two things to get that under control including reforming entitlement programs on autopilot and three reconciliation legislative packages, entitlement reforms that trap people in poverty instead of incentivizing work, changing welfare loss to push and pull people out of poverty into the workforce. Ryan says three things would get the economy humming, that retiring baby boomers present a new economic challenge and American needs higher birth rates, though he had done his part, a 90 percent increase in the retirement population, but only 19 percent increase in the working population.
LICENTIE KOPEN

Ontvang gepersonaliseerde prijzen door ons te vertellen wanneer, waar en hoe u deze content wilt gebruiken.

GEGEVENS

Beperkingen:
Mag niet worden gebruikt als partijdig materiaal voor een politieke campagne om het kandidaatschap te promoten of tegen te staan van enige persoon voor een verkiesbare openbare functie en mag niet worden gebruikt om de onderwerpen en doelstellingen van de hoorzitting verkeerd voor te stellen, of enig lid van het Huis van Afgevaardigden van de Verenigde Staten of de Amerikaanse Senaat in opspraak te brengen of te smaden, of het Huis van Afgevaardigden of de Senaat of enig lid in diskrediet te brengen.Editorial Use only. May not be used as partisan political campaign material to promote or oppose the candidacy of any person for elective public office, and may not be used to distort the objects and purposes of the hearing or cast discredit or dishonor any member of the House or bring the House or any Member into disrepute.
Redactioneel nr.:
893845960
Collectie:
FedNet
Gemaakt op:
14 december 2017
Datum van uploaden:
Soort licentie:
Rights ready
Release-informatie:
Geen release. Meer informatie
Lengte van clip:
00:03:52:21
Locatie:
Washington, DC, United States
Gemastered naar:
QuickTime 8-bit H.264 HD 1280x720 30p
Bron:
FedNet
Naam materiaal:
hpr121417b-c.mov