President Trump’s son Eric channeled singer Kenny Rogers on Tuesday to praise his father’s actions during the health care debate, saying business people “know when to hold their cards and know when to fold their cards.”

Eric Trump said his father was right to walk away from the House plan to repeal and replace ObamaCare because it was unraveling.

“Sometimes the deals you walk away from become your best deal and I commend him. I commend him for saying, ‘listen, you guys don’t have your act together, you’re not going to get it done.

We’re either going to vote or not if. If we’re not, we’re moving on to something else,'” Trump, 33, said on “Fox and Friends.”

He said as opposition to the GOP’s American Health Care Act grew many people would have dragged out the process for months trying to find a consensus.

“I like the fact that he put a definitive deadline on something,” Eric Trump said. “I think the best business people know when to do that – know when to hold their cards and know when to fold their cards.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan canceled the vote in the House last Friday as support for the plan dwindled.

During the appearance on “Fox and Friends” Eric Trump and his wife Lara said they revealed that they would be having a baby boy to Trump family members when they gathered for the inauguration.

“We went to the White House and that’s kind of when we broke it to the family,” Eric Trump said. “We’re so excited. It’s going to a little Trump boy entering the world in September.”

Besides being the Commander-in-Chief, Eric Trump said his father is also a doting grandfather.

“He’s a great grandfather. I see it with Don’s kids and Ivanka’s kids, they’ll be at one of the clubs at the weekend, and the kids will jump on his golf cart, and he’ll have five kids hanging off the golf cart and he has his hands around them and they’re driving around. He’s really a great grandfather,” Eric Trump said.

Rogers won a Grammy award in 1980 for best male country performance for “The Gambler,” which included the lyrics: “You’ve got to know when to hold ’em / Know when to fold ’em / Know when to walk away / And know when to run …”