Nov 14 7:00 PM

Obama admits issues with Obamacare. Can he recover?

President Barack Obama talks about the Affordable Care Act in the White House in Washington on Nov. 14, 2013.
Larry Downing/ Reuters

President Obama proposes Affordable Care Act fix, apologizes for Web portal problems

Emily Ethridge, a CQ Roll Call staff writer who covers health care policy, will join Consider This host Antonio Mora to discuss President Barack Obama's speech on health care, which included a proposal to allow more Americans to keep their current insurance plans. 

Then, Lynn Sweet, the Washington bureau chief of the Chicago Sun-Times, and Bill Schneider, a George Mason University professor and senior fellow at the Third Way think tank, will join Mora to discuss how the president's latest round of apologies will impact his standing with Congress and voters. 

Are Typhoon Haiyan victims receiving the medical attention they need?

Chris Weeks, a spokesman for the relief organization World Vision, will update Antonio Mora on whether there is adequate medical care for victims of Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines

Two Secret Service members from President Obama's detail accused of misconduct

David Nakamura, a Washington Post reporter, joins Antonio Mora to discuss the story he helped break on how a Secret Service supervisor allegedly tried to break into a woman's room in a Washington hotel after he left a bullet from his service weapon in that room. In addition, that same agent and other supervisor are accused of sending sexually suggestive emails to a subordinate.   

Is poverty mainstream in America? 

Dean Baker, the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and Curtis Skinner of the National Center for Children in Poverty at Columbia University, will join Antonio Mora to discuss the extent of poverty in the United States. 

Record sales of art at auction

Dan Duray, a senior editor at The New York Observer, will join Antonio Mora to talk about how high-end auction houses are setting record prices in art sales. Christie's sold a Francis Bacon triptych for $142.4 million this week — a new record for the most expensive artwork sold at auction by any artist.

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