tv Varney Company FOX Business January 25, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EST
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>> they're already kind of running a basement approach. remember when they built a set in the white house to give him the opportunity to read off prompter only? they will create a cocoon for him. >> this administration needs to [inaudible] policies don't stop invasion at the southern border. >> any woman that concedes a match that they're playing against a man and they lose out on prize money, i will happily pay that fee. >> it's really impossible for me to see a situation where the president with the power of incumbency doesn't have this completely locked up by march 5, super tuesday for trump. it's a question of when haley
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gets out as opposed to if she gets out. stuart: i so remember this song. it was a great song. 1967 i think the the summer of love. i can remember it so well. 50 years ago but yesterday is a blur. january 25th on the markets. the rally has faded i'm afraid. we still have the nasdaq up 72, and we still have the dow in positive territory but nowhere near as strong as we where. big tech, mixed picture this morning and most are up. there you go. they're all up. alphabet, microsoft, amazon, apple all on the upside and microsoft 406 and intraday all time high and treasury is 4.13% and down ever so slightly. now this once again the
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president is messing with america's energy industry. louisiana wants to build a nat gas export terminal and $10 billion project that would enhance america's position as largest exporter of low carbon nat gas. biden and the greens are determined to stop it. at the last minute, the new york times reports the project had to be checked -- at the last minute they want to check for the climate impact. biden's punting and the climb impact will delay everything till probably aft election and declare it doesn't pass climate muster and it'll be canceled. that would probably mean the end for any other nat gas export terminals to be built. how about that. he mentioned it. the world can't get the benefit of the least polluting fossil fuel because the greens can't accept any at all. new york times headline, biden officials poised to delay big gas project. the writer clearly want as
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delay. in the washington post, ben jealous, executive director of sierra club asking if biden will stand up to big oil and want askancelation of nat gas oil. america invented fracking and a way to shale deep underground and fracking produced a bonanza of home grown gas that i lowed us to reduce or carbon emission more than any other country and the greens don't want us to help if it means any fossil fuels. energy is an election issue. trammed said on day one he'd drill baby drill and president biden may make him popular with the greens but not the rest of us beating occupy on the gas industry. i like my gas stove. former obama adviser and comment at a timer van jones has advice for president biden. roll tape.
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>> if we were biden, i would stay hidden and i'll tell you why, hi doesn't inspire confidence. he's not a great messenger for himself. there's something wrong with the campaign and we're expecting joe biden is during his last campaign to be flash gordon and save his own campaign. the people benefiting from the biden economy and they exist should be in power to speak. stuart: imagine that, that's on cnn. chris bedford joining me now. what do you say about the president being fit for president? >> yes, van jones is being very honest and the president had trouble being on the campaign trail four years ago and certainly hasn't improved in the condition or delivery and four years ago, there was a interesting position here where donald trump was at his lowest maybe popularity rate largely due to covid and i am pacts of that. joe biden at the same time was someone that was looked at as a healer, and people like van
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jones and the new york times were able to essentially run joe biden's campaign for him. now this time around, biden white house going to different newspaper reports and reading the list of all the things they've done wrong and trying to coach them. once again seems like they're planning on the media to run that campaign for them. stuart: if biden were to be out for whatever reason, that would mean we have president harris. do you think she could win in november of this year? >> no, i don't think she could. there was a short period of time before she was really a well known figure where in washington dc where i live, for example, you saw qu quilts and posters of her like she was some kind of motivational person and that's all faded. she's done so poorly in the job and she's become so isolated in that job that democrats across the board are looking at her saying she's not the one. she wasn't even joe biden's first pick and someone hoisted
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on there. they know that and you see that also when gavin newsom was facing his recall election in california. the vice president was the former senate r was assigned to campaign there because she couldn't really help him out. stuart: how do the democrats get her out of the vice president's position? i mean you can't, can you? there's no way around it. >> no, you have to nominate her to something pretty serious. they're kind of stuck with her. they're stuck with both of them. remember, both of these people weren't the first choices of the democratic base. they wanted someone that was -- joe biden got his butt kicked in new hampshire and iowa. people were expecting him to lose in south carolina but the black vote rallied to him as someone that was not nearly as left wing as everyone else he was running against. at that point he put himself in a box saying don't worry, he may not be another old white male and they're going to pick a woman of color but there weren't there many options in the democratic stage ready for that ticket and had to huge kamala
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harris. this is the ticket they're starting are regret and looking at younger bench and saying a lot of folks were passed over for joe biden and wish we pulled in that towel earlier. stuart: what a mess. thank you junior joining us, see you again soon. >> thank you. stuart: now to the marks and the rally has faded and we were up strongly at 9 9:30 eastern whene opened the market. we're still up but not as much as we were. lou basenese with me for the hour. looking at the market for us this morning. i want to get right to big tech rally, and it's been quite a rally. it's still in progress now. does it have legs? >> absoluteically we'll see if it has legs of -- absolutely and we'll see if it has legs of hussain bolt next week. big tech falling and fading and too richly priced. the reality is right now they're below the 10-year average on evaluation basis and there's a lot of room to run. we know ai is propelling the growth and your beloved
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microsoft. last week i predicted we'd be over 400 before too long and retirement doing great. today's gdp print of better than expected 3.3% makes things really interesting for meta and google because they're driven primarily on advertising and so as the economy is reaccelerating, those are two of the big seven that are underlooked, a bit undervalue #-d relative to the rest. i don't personally own any, not making a recommendation and would never own facebook because i think zuckerberg is pure evil with what he does on social media and ties into the social media bans. stuart: that's a little strong. >> it is, but listen to jonathan hates versus frequency view with lex free burn on the podcast of knowledge of data on the negative effects on preteen girls and zuckerberg down plays and goes over profits than principles. fundamentals are strong but i like alphabet as economy reaccelerates and advertising rates they reaccelerate and that looks compelling. stuart: next week when the big
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techs report, they better not disappoint on ai. >> absolutely. tesla is proving that and deliver the results and have the performance otherwise there's no price action. stuart: listen to the call after the results are announced. they get the and all that'll project towards the future. that's what's going to be important. >> absolutely. always that guidance. not what happened the last quarter, it's what happens in the next quarter. stuart: tuesday for microsoft. >> yeah. stuart: i'll be glued. thanks, lou, stay right there. lauren is looking at movers and tesla down $22. 10% today. lauren: super bowl, dan ives and web bush had highest price target, $350. he not only cut it to $315, he called the tesla conference call a "train wreck" sports grill said elon musk didn't act like an adult on it. he offered nothing, no guidance for production other than to say it was would be lower than 2023 when it was 1.8 million vehicles. nothing on the elephant in the
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room: those margins, have they bottomed? to me it seems like wall street is did agrees with elon musk's strategy of cutting prices repeatedly for market share. if the market is not growing. are they going to copt to cut prices? bernstein has tesla at 150 and average by the way is 226. bernstein says they don't want growth or margins to improve for tesla for two years. positives: tesla working on $25,000 car and they say they have the capacity to build 125,000 cyber truck as year. stuart: investors are not buying it. >> no, they're not. stuart: do you buy this dip? >> no, i would not buy. you've run out of the hype and promise of electric cars. we're seeing demand diminish and now they've got to think of next hype machine, what's the next promise? ai in musk's opinion but look at fundamentals of business, it's deceldecelerating and the operag margin down 50% 15-8, that's not attractive in the automotive mark and bmws and toyotas and
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15-16 and ford about 10. tesla is proving it can't exist alone as auto maker and got to move into the next big hype machine and that's ai. musk, i'll give him credit. i would never short the stock and did once and made money and will never again. he's the best visionary out there to project what's coming next. he could reenergize this stock but not on the backs of the ev market where social security increasingly competitive. stuart: thank you very much. nancy pelosi tried to take a dig at trump's mental fitness and made a mistake of her own. watch this. >> he tried to say that nikki haley did not allow the national guard to come but it was nancy pelosi. it was nobody. it was joe -- it was donald trump. stuart: a little confusing. if you're trying to contrast trump's mental sharpness with joe biden, the difference is frankly day and night. one major union threatening to pull support for the president over his spot for israel. which union. does americans -- does america
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have a problem supplying weapons and ammunition to ewe yanis and allies in the -- ukraine and allies in the middle east? we have a problem and we'll be back says our next guest. trading at schwab is now powered by ameritrade, giving traders even more ways to sharpen their skills with tailored education. get an expanding library filled with new online videos, webcasts, articles, courses, and more - all crafted just for traders. and with guided learning paths stacked with content curated to fit your unique goals, you can spend less time searching and more time learning. trade brilliantly with schwab. people are excited about what ai will do for them. we're excited about what ai will do for business. meet the watsonx assistants, ai designed to multiply output by automating tasks. when you watsonx your business, you can use
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stuart: u.s. military shooting down houthi missiles in the red sea. trey yingst with the latest. .i hey, stu, more developments out of the mideast and yesterday houthi rebels in yemen fired three antiship ballistic missiles at u.s. flag container ship. according to u.s. central command, the incident took place
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in the gulf of a aden to the soh of yes, ma'am and it was intercepted by the uss gravely and one splashed into the sea nearby and came after the united states launched its ninth round of strikes against iran-backed houthis in two weeks. yesterday the houthis claim they hit an american military vessel but provided no evidence to support that claim. further north in iraq, american officials and local counter parts are expected to begin talking about the future of american presence in iraq. currently there are around 2500 u.s. troops stationed there as part of broad coalition against isis. those forces have become a main target for iranian proxies that have launched more than 150 attacks against them since mid october. with the war between israel and hamas at day 111 and no sign of conflict dying down here and thus other attacks are expected to continue. each one of these attacks against u.s. forces does risk dragging the region into a
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broader conflict and each and every one of them targeting american forces and thankfully so far many have been intercepted. stuart. stuart: got it, trey yingst, thanks very much indeed. bring in former cia operations officer laura valdman. is it fair to say, laura, we, america, cannot supply the weapons and ammunition needed for the overseas war s? >> not only can we but we have to. we're in the middle of existential competition between western values and eastern. the -- a lot of people have concern because ukraine requires 200,000 for example, 155 millio- 155-millimeter artillery shells each month and until ukraine, we were only making about 14,000 rounds a month. luckily we've already responded to that and now making 28,000 a month and the army has plans to
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increase that to about 100,000 a month. this is good for america because for example of the $1.5 billion the army is putting towards this effort, 90% of that stays in the united states. it increases our industrial base. stuart: so what we want to do, the plan then is to increase our industrial production of artillery shells and drones and what have you. also to streamline and speed up the acquisition process and speed that up and also emergency authorization to wave permits. are we going to do all that? >> we are. stuart: that's the plan but are we going to do it? >> we're going to do it if the legislators and the white house step up. what we -- we're in crisis mode. what we need right now is a bipartisan commission that puts politics aside.
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this an election year and everything seems to be viewed through the lens. stuart: laura, isn't that a classic trick, you've got a problem, the president appoints a commission look into t the commission reports months down the road and then the president says, well, we're not going to do that right now. that was all a waste. >> yeah, i'm not saying look into it. i'm saying be operational. actually increase the number of robots in the production factories. breakdown supply chain log jams and increase shift hours. these are very practical steps that can be taken. frankly -- stuart: it's going to take time. we've drawn down the supplies of ammo and what have you to such a point we need a immediate lift and not going to get it for some time. >> i would say we are. we won world war ii in four years and we can absolutely step up our production, but it's going to take political will. i mean we have the capabilities
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to do it here if we make sure that factories -- and mostly it's general dynamics producing on behalf of the army. for example the artillery shells i was talking about. again, break down log jams, increase the -- sorry, go ahead. stuart: no, you mentioned america won world war ii in four years. >> yep. system of articulation stuart: stuart: -- stuart: do you think world war iii is coming at us? >> if we don't push back it will. we're talking about the red sea attacks. what we should really be talking about is this is all about iran. we shouldn't even be talking or naming the organizations that are attacking us from gaza, from lebanon, from yemen, from the red sea because it's all teheran. so we have to. we have to push back against iran, china, and russia, which is another reason that ukraine is in our interest. we are degrading one of our
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greatest geopolitical adversaries without spilling american blood. that's huge. stuart: it is, laurie r. it's a complicated situation. we value your input. come back and see us again soon. laura baldman. >> thanks, stuart. stuart: bye. the largest teacher union in the country putting major pressure on the president to call for a seize fire in gaza. ashley, the teacher's union want as se ceasefire? the teacher's union is pro hamas; is that right? ashley: yes and a growing number of teachers are urging the national teachers association, the largest union in the country, to take back its support for biden till there's a ceasefire in gaza. teachers also calling for the u.s. to stop sending military funding, equipment, and intelligence to israel and to also commit to a fair due process for asylum seekers and refugees. so far 19 local state and
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reiningal outlets of nea have passed resolutions calling for a ceasefire in gaza. some teachers say they will withhold voluntary donations from the union's political action committee. by the way, nea members planning to protest alongside the american federation of teachers at nea's next board meeting, which is next month. there you have it. the country's teachers. stuart: going to leave it right there, ash. thanks very much. check that market, please, dow up 92, nasdaq up 93, and s and, up 22. show me defense stocks, please. we've been talking about these foreign wars all over the place and defense stocks were mostly down and rtx corporation and missile maker. >> yeah, defense sec tores rally on outbreak of war and not as it indoors and it's a momentum tear bump they get. stuart: coming up, mcdonalds is a major contributor to the u.s. economy. we're going to tell you how many billions of dollars the fast food chain pumps into the gdp.
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stuart: nasdaq up 88 points, it's modest but it's a rally. we see green. lou basenese brought stock picks with us. >> it's under the radar semiconductor play and the way to think is a baby arm holding and have same royalty revenue model and they could train royalty on every chip that gets made and it's -- they have a technology that's used to make chips more efficient and more powerful and can be used in any chip and nvidia's chips to intel's chips to apple's chips. it's a company that's on the brink of commercialization. stuart: very small, isn't it? >> it is a small cane and i focus on early inviters. >> it's small.
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>> small layers of oxygen. stuart: kennedy determined to get her two cents worth in. atomera, you like that. did you just turn around? it did. it just turned around. do you know that? >> i didn't watch it. it's a stock that semiconductor plays and look at it -- stuart: but we came on and it was down 1.7%. you recommend it and the thing is now up 1.7%. >> i would not recommend people run out and buy anything. do your own due diligence. stuart: somebody did. you're a market power. stuart: it's your power. stuart: no, prairie operating -- >> this is not a buy. energy is an election issue. if this is a company that if we return to republican and energy independence and this is a company that up listed on to the nasdaq and that's not had any debt and it's rolling up assets in colorado right now and basin there has a proven managers andment team that's done this
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before and i'm watching them and getting closer to the election, it could be interesting and outside of the tech space and not just a tech guy. stuart: prairie operating company, we'll remember that . thanks, lou a. woman that got high on marijuana and killed her boyfriend has been sentenced to community service. william la jeunesse joining us. this woman stabbed her boyfriend 108 times and looks like she got off easy. >> it's cannabis-induced psycho i cans or the marijuana -- psychosis or the marijuana made me do it and judge bought it hook, line and sinker. 32-year-old goes on a date and normal. boyfriend offers her to smoke marijuana from aborning. she has a second hit. then has an adverse reaction and again experts call marijuana-induced psychosis. >> it is associative feeling ands don't understand what's going on around them. and they're often becoming violent. >> she's literally reeling over
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him -- kneeling over him with a 10-inch bread knife like the movie carrie and his body is right there on the floor. >> she claims to have blacked out stabbing chad 100 times and herself in the neck. police tased her several times and no effect and had to break her arm in five place withs a baton to get her to stop. prosecutors reduce the murder charge to manslaughter but defense argues she's not responsible because it all has to do with the pot. jot defense was that it was involuntary intoxication and claim when had she took a second hit, that was involuntarily accomplished. reporter: prosecutors wanted five years but judge david worley gave her probation. >> we are absolutely outraged in
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disgusted with the sentence. judge worley from the beginning was biased. >> she just got away with murder. it's not going to make her learn or think. reporter: pot today is so powerful, stuart, this induced psychosis is a real thing. does it mean as chad's father imply that had pot, smoking pot in california gives you a license to kill? probably an overstatement but the prosecutors say they've opened the pandora's box. stuart: that was my expression. i think they have. thanks very much, william. well, the aforementioned kennedy is with us. let's bring in out here. we've got this famous article in the wall street journal saying marijuana today is far more dangerous than we know. kids are getting this psychosis if that's the right word. we have opened pandora's box and you can't close it up. >> no, you can't close it up and go back to prohibition, all you're doing is empowering the cartels. they'd love it marijuana was once again illegal in the u.s.
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because the demand is here. it's not going anywhere and we took so long to legalize marijuana. the problem was you could only test it at one university for decades. stuart: that's true. >> there was not appropriate research so we didn't know we had no way of measuring what marijuana could do or legally researching it. there was no way of telling if you were impaired because it was kept illegal for so long. there were no proper tests that you can do. as we know about marijuana, it doesn't really fit into one category. for some people it's a stimulant. for others it's a depressant so law enforcement has been left empty handed for so long. i don't think you should go back to making it illegal. i think this is really the problem of overregulation, and so you crowuated this massive -- created this black market. in new york city, you see weed shops everywhere. they're not legal weed shops. it is so hard to get a license to sell legal cannabis in the city that the illegal ones have
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taken over. stuart: isn't the problem also technology? technology has massively increased the strength of marijuana these days and also marijuana -- sorry, technology has created these vapes so you can smoke marijuana, there's no smell, you can do it in five seconds flat, you can do it in high school and kids do. that's the problem. technology has taken over the weed and there's nothing you can do about it. >> well, it's the illegal vapes that as a mom of two teenagers, that's what really worry reigns leadings me and i have -- worries me and i have this conversation all the time and we have to have open conversations and i say do not put anything in your body that you did not buy at a legal dispensary. don't take anything that was given to you at a party. my daughter knows a ninth grader killed because she ate an edible at a party and it was laced with fentanyl and she died. so fentanyl is a much bigger problem. that is the illegal fentanyl that is getting into the country, that is what's killing people. so the knee jerk reaction is
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let's make all the stuff illegal. we're making the problem worse. stuart: understood. i want you to have a crack at this one, nancy pelosi tried to knock down donald trump for what she called cognitive disorders then in the same breath made a slip herself. watch this. >> let me say i'm not going to spend too much time on donald trump's cognitive disorders. he tried to say that nikki haley did not allow the national guard to come but it was nancy pelosi. it was nobody. it was joe -- it was donald trump. he knows and you know that mitch mcconnell, chuck schumer and i begged for hours for the national guard to come. stuart: just a tad confusing i would say. >> she's very confused. stuart: is the public really going to believe that biden is more mentally fit than trump? that's a hard sell, isn't it? >> that's a very hard sell. i mean, donald trump, he has some issues of his own and some misstatements, you know, we are being terrorized by a geriatric
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zombie army in washington right now. people like nancy pelosi and joe biden, they should do all seniors in this country a great service and return them to the golden tatture they deserve -- stature they deserve atop mount olympus and not as evil power hungry mobsters that want to take control of our lives and terrorize us while they're completely confused. stuart: i think i understand that one. kennedy, you're explicit and explained it so well. thank you very much, kennedy. >> thank you. stuart: see you soon. time to send in friday feed back. tell us what you think. too late to reverse court on pot legalization? we want your thoughts on that. also, president biden on ruth to wisconsin. he's pushing bidenomics again but poll after poll show it has a negative view by the economy. why keep going at it? we'll show you the latest poll after this.
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♪ ♪ students... students of any age, from anywhere. students in a new kind of classroom. ♪ using our technology to power different ways of learning. ♪ harnessing ai to plant new beginnings. ♪ so when minds grow, opportunities follow. it's odd how in an instant things can transform. slipping out of balance into freefall.
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stuart: government reported a 3.3% expansion rate in the quarter and investors like it and market is rallying. dow up 100 and nasdaq up 94. mcdonalds plays a major role in the u.s. economy. ashley, i think you've got some numbers on this. what are they? ashley: boy, have i got numbers and fast food giant contributes an astounding $100 billion made every year to the u.s. gross domestic product that says so according to an economic impact report from mcdonalds and oxford economics and the company and its franchises helped generate 1.4 million jobs in the u.s. every year and generate more than $22 billion in taxes. now, that impact is spread
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throughout the country from about $100 million to the economy of wyoming to $6.1 billion to the economy of texas and why all the numbers boasting. fast food chain facing a regulatory onslaught of state and federal levels including a california law that just raised the wage for fast food chain restaurants there to $20 an hour. stu. stuart: big numbers too. lou basenese with me and going back to big tech rally and it's outstanding and some are pulling back just a bit today.
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>> these are the companies behind it and look at advertising and digital economy and this is the amazons and the meta and alphabets of the world. like these are the companies that are -- people bemoan the fact they're such a big contributor to s&p 500. it's always been this way and used to be intel and general motors. stuart: bigger and bigger. powerful. >> right, we don't want the economies globally to be shrinking and stuart: mike tobin joining me from superior, wisconsin, where the president speaks later today. are wisconsin voters buying bidenomics? reporter: well, it depends where you'd go here in superior and content having a mixed bag and
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this stop, stuart, will feel like a campaign stop as he drums about bidenomics and with some momentum. you saw the announcement that the economy grow by 3.1% and added 2.7 million jobs and the president will talk about that. the location here, superior, wisconsin, gives them the ability to brag about the john a. blatnick bridge and the $1.7 billion investment to replace that bridge connecting northwestern, wisconsin and duluth, minnesota. and comes after the president got an endorsement with the united auto workers. >> i want to be in the fight with uaw reporter: democrats aren't going to make the mistake of 2016 and take wisconsin for granted ands
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ten electoral votes and wisconsin fits the definition of a battleground state. six of the last presidential elections going 4% and biden won douglas county here last time around and not that much. that's on outlier. what you see in wisconsin with the population centers of madison, dane county, that's a stronghold for the democrats and population centers around milwaukee. that's a stronghold for the democrats but when you get here into the rural parts of the state, north and western parts of wisconsin, that's where you see the trump signs in the yards. stuart. stuart: you got it. mike tobin, thanks very much indeed. back to the markets. lou basenese with me. less is more and those are all
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fundamental factors contributing to a booming economy and booking tock market. >> strong growth, 3.3% g.o.a.t. and lowe low unemployment and inflation is coming down. it is. >> that's the problem trying oversimply fio things and early days of bidenomics was run away inflation, one away spending and stalling and seeing the flip side. which is it. which bidenomics are we talking about? first half or second. stuart: show me the dow 30, please. i want a sense of the markets. semi-boying today and green all over the place. i see only 2, 4, 6, 7 losers and 23 winners on the dow. there's this, a group of black democrats from chicago suing the city over the handling of the migrant crisis and ask john
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stuart: black democrats in chicago fed up with bind's border policies and now the -- how the mayor is handling t he's a democrat too. black voters typically vote democrat. is the migrant crisis changing that? reporter: well, for some februaries it is, stu. black voters feel ignored, abandoned and taken for granted by democrats over this migrant crisis. so far the city of chicago and state of illinois spent nearly $800 million on the migrant crisis. caring for the migrants providing healthcare, education, housing, all things that the black community have been saying that they need and want as well but for years they've been told there wasn't enough money so there's a lot of real frustration over that with mayor brandon johnson, governor jb pritzker and directed towards president biden is so much so that some lifelong democrats in this deep blue city never voted for republican and are now considering for the first time in their lives.
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>> in terms of parties, in terms of support for the neighborhood, support for black people in general. are the migrants being -- getting more than blacks? absolutely. absolutely. >> what i say to president biden and the entire democratic party is that you have missed the mark with this, and you have lost some very committed voters. reporter: black voters are a key part of the democratic base and fox news poll nearly half said they didn't approve of biden's handling of the border security and this is an area of concern for democrats and whether black voters decide to go for republicans or just decide to stay home, either would be a major blow for president biden's reelection bid. stuart: certainly would. garret tenny, thank you very much indeed. you grew up in chicago.
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my question is is the black community there now hostile? absolutely hostile to the migrants? >> stuart, they are pissed the hell off on what they're seeing in their communities. they're pissed off and see this as a new jim crow tactics and get on the back of the bus. that's what they're seeing and we're given all the resources $800 million per spending from the state and the city of chicago has given earlier estimates last year saying they were spending $40 million a month. i got to tell you, stu, this is something that's been going on in our community for a very, very long time. black voters as you know have been extraordinary loyal to the democratic party. what they continue to see time and time again is black lives don't matter to many of the democrats. it's the black votes that matter and thousand they're binging in the new migrants, we'll see all kinds of policies being rolled out. the attempts to give individuals the right to vote because they're trying to coalesce a new
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voting block for the democratic party. they're giving black people the schiff, stuart. the shift and folks don't like it and this is the end of brandon johnson administration as mayor. that's what i've been hearing. stuart: there's a councilman in the wealthy chicago suburbs and saying people sign up to house migrants as volunteers. what do you make of that? >> i think that councilman you're referring to is out of naperville saying that residents there should sign up to have migrants live with them. stuart: weapon. >> i lived in naperville and got started in a gop in naperville and i can assure you that's a nonstarter for many residents there and for many in the city of chicago. they're very far left and liberal. at the end of the day, we need border security. the u.s. house of representatives, they came out with a new report, rather a report just i think it was last
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december which showed that the united states is spending $451 million on this migrant crisis, and that's for the migrants that we know about. there's bye been a number of knn got aways and a number of terterrorists as you know. we're in a state of desperate need of help in this country. stuart: desperate need of border sproll real coral. gianno caldwell, thank you for being on the show. see you again soon. 11:55 and it's time for the thursday trey why question. here we go. i like this one -- trivia question. i like this one. how many permanent teeth to adults have, 24, 26, 32 or 36? the answer when we come back.
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stuart: we all have bad teeth. what did you say again? number 2? 28? number 3, thirty two. >> trying to count with my tongue. i will go with 28. stuart: i will go if 24. there is no way i've got that many teeth, 32. ashley wins again. did you look up? 32, 8 in scissors, four k9s, 8 preambles and four wisdom teeth. stuart: you cheated, you did. thanks for sticking around. send your friday feedback, e-mail us, varneyviewers@fox.com. coast-to-coast starts now. neil: steady as she grows.
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