‘I am very kind’: Joni Ernst defends her ‘We are all going to die’

Iowa Senator Joni Ernst defended his controversial statement “We are all going to die,” at a Town Hall meeting and said “you need to listen to the whole conversation.”Speaking to CBS News on Monday, Ernst said, “I am very kind, and you need to listen to the whole conversation.”During a hot town hall on Friday, Senator Joni Ernst attracted viral attention with comments about the mortality as he defended a controversial GOP -backed domestic policy bill. The law dubbed a large beautiful bill act – for this a node for the nickname of former President Trump – to apply the requirements of work for some medicid recipients, among other reforms. When Ernst tried to convince Medicid to convince the proposed changes, the crowd motivated someone to tell that the policy would die.Ernst in detail said that the law would “focus on those who are the weakest” and assured that “those who meet the eligibility requirements for the Medicade will protect us.”Subsequently, Ernst posted an irony video waiver on Instagram, stating, “I made a misconception that everyone in the auditorium understood that, yes, we are all going to be destroyed by this earth. So, I am sorry. I really, I am really happy that I don’t need to bring the subject of tooth fairy.”His comment criticized those who challenged the potential election. Democratic Nominee candidate Nathan SEZ accused Ernst of contempt for the component, while state representative JD Scoolten announced his campaign launch, cited as inspiration citing Arnst’s town hall behavior.House law will enforce additional medicine sanctions, including children’s work, volunteers or requirements for non-class adults for study. It introduces more frequent eligibility assessment, reduces funds for unspecified immigrants, freeze taxes and restrictions gender transition service coverage.The amendments proposed for Medicade and SNAP may lead to a probably funding extensions, adequate savings, to reduce Trump’s 2017 tax deduction and border security measures.Ernst admitted in the town hall that when she supports some aspects of the house-passed law, the “bill will be changing” as it proceeds through the Senate, where some Republicans advocate low-medicid cuts.