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tv   The Evening Edit  FOX Business  January 31, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm EST

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larry: so illegal immigration and waves of lawlessness, sorry to say it, but they are closely realitied. save america -- related. save america, kill the bill. and stay up late to watch lizzie macdonald. elizabeth: you're the best, larry. kill the bell is right. shut the border no. we're staying on the story. thank you so much, larry. let's bring in former acting dhs
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secretary chad wolf and national border patrol council vice president art del cueto. yes america thank you both for your service to america and thank you for coming on the show. >>. firsts to you, chad. president biden put the border in a state of collapse, full stop. nearly a hundred executive actions in the first hundred days, wiping out everything trump did to secure it. voters across the nation say it's heartbreaking and entour if rating. the crime -- infuriating. the crime wave from gangs that were never concern never there before in cities and suburbs. sanctuary cities a lawless mess. your reaction to the house a passing house homeland security passing two articles of impeachment for homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas but, chad, the white house is blaming house republicans for this mess. >> well, it's amay -- amazing. the white house has blamed basically anyone and everyone. you remember ablamed the trump administration, they blamed mexico, they blamed it on a
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worldwide migration kind of incident if that's going on. , look, the reality is exactly what you out outlined which is a hundred, almost a hunkstive action as in the -- hundred executive actions that caused this crisis. so the easiest thing to do is proto reverse those executive actions and to solve the crisis today. they don't need the wait for any legislation to be signed into law. they have the authority, they have the means to solve the crisis. this is not a resource issue or an authorities issue, it's a leadership and will issue, and to date, unfortunately, the president nor the secretary have had the will to do the right thing. and to really close the border and bring some order back from the chaos. elizabeth: to what chad just said, art, come on in on this because democrat henry way or -- cuellar of texas, he said the laws exist now to stop the border crises the president ignited. he could rescind also all of his executive actions that weakened
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the border, and he could support the house bill that would strengthen the border. but he won't. where do you come down on this? >> look, elizabeth, i've lived here my if entire life. i've a been here my entire life on the border, and i can tell you right now nothing was as a good as when mr. wolf and president trump were running things, and nothing is add -- as bad as it is now. you're going to see people from both sides of the aisle talking about it because the cartels that are in charge of bringing everything into the country illegally, they don't care what side of the aisle americans are. they just want to fill their pockets and destroy american hives. and under this administration, the only winners are the cartels. and the rest of the country are big losers because this administration failed to want to do the right thing. elizabeth: we had illegal immigrant, asylum seekers in new york city, beat up a cop on 42nd street in times square. five of them are arrested.
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they're still looking for more of those who did the attack. we're going to get to that in just a second. you know, chad, house republican, they're basically putting the white house on notice, but the republicans can lose only two votes, i think, to adopt the articles. but, you know, let's get to what secretary mayorkas has been repeatedly testifying, saying that the border is secure. watch this. >> it is my testimony that the border is secure, and we are working every day, day and night, to increase its security. >> secretary mayorkas, do you continue to maintain that the border is secure? >> yes with, and we are working day in and day out to enhance its security, congressman. the border is closed, the border is secure. the border is closed. we are expelling single adults. elizabeth: how can we say the border's secure, chad? i mean, voter polls say -- voters are saying in the polls the border's not secure.
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if this is a re-election threat to the president. but he's not doing anything to address it. he's just blaming republicans. >> well, i think that's right. most americans can look at a video and images at the southern border, and they know it's not secure, they know it's not closed. having sat in the seat that the secretary does now, i would have never made those statements. my statements were much more measured in saying that the border continues to be the most secure that we have seen it, but there's a lot of work to do. to say it's secure, to say you have operational control to say it's closed, those are very definitive statements that the secretary's making, and you say those statements on top of historical numbers of apprehensions. americans just shake their head, and congress is shaking their head, and that's why there's some accountability through this impeachment process. elizabeth: you know, everybody in the ivory towers in the media, and i've been doing journalism since the '80s, i hate talking about myself, but the fact that this wasn't covered and now it's a surprise,
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art, that abc is reporting trump has more solid support now than he did in 2016 when he ran on the border back with then. now you've got john kirby, nsc spokesifman, he's denying that biden is withholding executive action on the border until he gets the money for ukraine. the president claimed for three years the border's secure. now he claims he's done all he can on the border. but he's the one blocking the house pass and -- house-passed secure the border act. he's the one not undoing the executive actions he did the first 100 days to weaken the border. your final word. >> and they lack the political will to do the right thing. they just don't care about what's happening to our nation's borders, they don't care what's happening with the country, and you're seeing the numbers and, obviously, you see what's happening in texas. and for all the problems in texas, i'm going to tell you that right now, it's that much worse in arizona, but a lot of the focus hasn't been there because we also have politicians that aren't bringing up the subject and showing you the
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truth. that's what it comes down to. they don't want the american public to know the truth. elizabeth: as you know, we've already been reporting on what you're saying, art. as texas strengthens its border, now the wave is going toward arizona and california. so that's the next step in this story. chad wolf, art del cueto, thank you so much for joining us tonight. okay, even more fireworks on capitol hill today. senators hammered mark zuckerberg and big tech ceos for putting profits ahead of protecting children and social media. children are in a mental health crisis from social media. plus they're actually getting killed and exploited. grady trimble on capitol hill with the story. grady. >> reporter: liz, there were two especially poignant moments in today's hearing when meta's ceo, mark zuckerberg, and snap ceo evan spiegel apologized to the families in the room who say their kids were hurt or even worse, lost their lives because of social media. spiegel apologized to families
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whose kids bought drugs using snapchat, and zuckerberg, at the urging of senator josh hawley, told the families he's sorry for what they've gone through but neither of the executives squarely took responsibility. >> i'm so sorry that we have not been able to prevent these tragedies. [applause] if -- >> [inaudible] the things that your families have suffered, and this is why we're investing so much -- [inaudible] efforts to make sure that no one has to go through the types of things that your families have had to suffer. >> reporter: but lawmakers are placing the blame on social media companies and their ceos. they're clearly frustrated by these executives and by the fact congress hasn't passed any substantial the legislation to protect kids and their mental health on these platforms. >> for years you've been coming in public and testifying under oath that there's absolutely no link, your product is wonderful, the science is nascent, full speed ahead while internally you
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know full well your product is a disaster for teenagers. and yet you keep right on doing what you're doing. [applause] right? >> that's not true. that's not true. >> mr. zuckerberg with, you and the companies before us, i know you don't mean if it to be so, but you have blood on your hands. you have a product -- [cheers and applause] you have a product that's killing people. >> reporter: lawmakers once again grilled tiktok's ceo about the chinese parent company, they're clearly not buying his response that tiktok doesn't share any data or information with the chinese communist party. liz? elizabeth: grady trimble, thank you so much. and turning to this new development, president biden now says he will finally go to the toxic rail site in east palestine a year after the fact. he's going to go to ohio. joining us now, east palestine resident russell murphy. russell, we're so happy to have you back on. you're also a business owner there. we spoke to you a year ago after
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that norfolk if southern train derailment created major health hazards. what do you say now to the president finally coming to visit? >> well, liz, it's good to see you and thanks for reaching out. and i'll be frank, i think now biden coming would be about as a useless as a bra with on a chicken breast. it doesn't, doesn't do anything for us. doesn't do anything for me or my family. elizabeth: is that what everyone else, your neighbors, are saying too? >> yes. elizabeth: okay. so, you know, former president trump already went there. we had the white house press secretary today said there is no set date for the president's visit, potentially it's going to come in february. the president, biden, president biden promised to visit last march. last fall he said he couldn't go because he couldn't take a break. he spends 40% of his time out of d.c. at his beach home in delaware or out at camp david. it's rare for him to spend a weekend at the white house, but he hasn't been to ohio to where you guys are.
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let's watch this. >> well, i haven't had the occasion to go to east palestine. there's a lot going on here, and i just haven't been able to break. and so it's going to be a while. but we're making sure that's pal a stein has -- palestine has what they need materially in order to deal with the problems. >> reporter: the president said over the long weekend that he hasn't had to occasion to go to east palestine. i just haven't been able to break. the derailment was on february 3rd. president biden's not had a break since february 3rd? >> the president will go to east palestine. he promised that he would and he will. >> reporter: so he was not on a break when he was in lake tahoe? elizabeth: what do you say? is this a political tripp? if you know, trump went. trump went pretty quickly and gave with out water and more. what do you say? >> yes, yes. trump, our true president, he was here. matter of fact, he brought
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water, he brought laundry detergent, we're actually still using some of it. he stepped up. biden, it's just going to be nothing but for his party. it's going to be photo ops, it's going to clog the town with traffic and the mess that's going to go with it. i think, you know, even as the mayor said, there's just no -- there's nothing that he can come here and do now. he missed it. elizabeth: russell, talk to us about the health problems still in your town. >> um, you know, just with my family, you know, you wonder when an acute symptom is going to become chronic. and, you know, here we are almost a year in, and, you know, we're still dealing with some of this stuff. you know, let alone the real estate decision you have to make, you know? if i'm 51 years old. we afforded our place over time. and it took a little bit of money.
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now for us to sell, to try to find something else, you know, it's out of sight right now to buy. so, you know, that's just the real estate part of what's going on in our lives. now, the health symptoms, you know, i still have that odd taste in my mouth. the fatigue, the -- my wife has a hard time with a little bit of hearing, vision, i still have a slight bit of vision issues. it's just odd. it's crazy to me that the way that we're being treated. and your health care provider, it's still a struggle to get anything done with, you know, deeming chemical exposure. elizabeth: listen, russell, we're going to stand with you guys, okay? we're going to stay on this story. we're right by your side. we're not letting up, okay? we're going to keep covering it, russ el murphy. thank you so much for joining us tonight. it's great to have you on. >> thank you. and anytime. elizabeth: okay.
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coming up we've got senator eric. >> schmidt, congresswoman claudia tenney, investment adviser and wall street pro nancy tengler and gop strategist ford o'connell. tensions are mount. at any moment new york judge arthur edge ron could rule on former president trump's penalty in the new york civil fraud case. we're on it. and we got bad news for bidenomics,ing -- stocks taking hits today. the federal reserve did not cut interest rates, it's not convinced historic inflation under biden is going away. and former president trump meets with the teamsters. can he take union votes away from biden? and 26 attorneys general now join half the nation's governors in backing texas in texas' fight with the white house. how is this hitting the president's re-election? plus, retired lieutenant general keith kellogg is here on why the white house is waiting now four days to act against iran and its
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proxies after that drone bombing that killed three u.s. soldiers and injured more than 40. all of this coming up on "the evening edit." ♪ ♪ (christina) with verizon business unlimited, i get 5g, truly unlimited data, and unlimited hotspot data. so, no matter what, i'm running this kitchen. (vo) make the switch. it's your business. it's your verizon. hi, i'm sally. i'm from phoenix, arizona. i'm a flight nurse on a helicopter that specializes in trauma. i've been doing flight nursing for 24 years. as you get older, your brain slows down and i had a fear that i wouldn't be able to keep up. i heard about prevagen from a friend. i read the clinical study on it and it had good reviews. i've been taking prevagen now for five years
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elizabeth: well, let's welcome
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to the show former national security advisor to former vice president mike pence, he's retired lieutenant general keith kellogg. general, it's great to see you. okay, sir, why do you think the white house is waiting four days now to respond to the drone bombing by an iran-linked group in jordan that killed three soldiers and injured more than 40? if what's the delay? >> yeah, liz, thanks for having me. here's what a i'm hoping they're doing, they're loading up. and what i mean by that is there's three parts of deterrence, and they're trying to reestablish deterrence -- deterrence in the region. one of them is communications that you're telling them what to do, don't do the something. the other is capacity which they've got with plenty of weapons systems, and the other is credibility. that's where they're at a, on the credibility piece, i think what they're putting together is a campaign plan. what i mean by a campaign plan, it's not one and done. they're going to do multiple targets over multiple days, and then the you have to ask the question, what tier level of targets are they going after?
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to me, the tier one, the top targets, are outside -- are inside iran. and i don't think they're going there. they're going to go to the tier two, tier three, probably tier three level which that means we're going to strike in iraq or syria or they're going to strike in yemen. the problem is what i said at the start, you have to reestablish credibility. if the other side doesn't believe you're credible so, in other words, a glancing blow, you're going to get more of the same. so what i'm hoping for is they're building up a campaign plan that's aggressive. if honestly, i don't think they're going to go there. i don't think they're going to develop a plan that is going to be very credible to the iranians, and that's a who's actually driving the show. they're the main sponsor of hezbollah where or hamas or the houthis. that that's where all this stuff is coming from. and you've got to show them, liz, that we're serious, and i'm not convinced we're going there. elizabeth: okay. because here's what's happening too, the iran-backed houthi terrorists of yemen said they fired several anti-ship missiles
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at a u.s. warship in the red sea, and that missile was shut down by the uss bravely without injuries or damage to the ship. we're hearing the white house is preparing weeks with of retaliatory strikes. what do you think, weeks? >> no, i don't think -- liz, they can't go weeks. weeks is way too long. you don't send a message. it becomes norm. by the way, the ship you're talking about from the reports i'm hearing, they used a flay lance system to finally down -- phalanx system to finally down that missile. that's the weapon of last resort. that means that missile was very close to hitting the warship. and if they hit a warship and the casualties that could come with that,s that's a real escalation. so when they talk about the weeks, you know, weeks to me doesn't mean anything because there's not enough targets out there. they need to go downtown. if they make it serious, they need to go after tier one targets inside iran. i just don't think they're going there, liz. they're going to bypass it. elizabeth: you know, there's confusion about the biden policy
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here, right? and the confusion starts at the top. you're going to see that, and you're going to then watch former national security adviser robert o'brien. watch this. >> what is your message to hezbollah and its backer, iran? >> don't. don't, don't, don't. >> don't come across the border, don't escalate this war? >> that's right. >> tony blinken said it's the most dangerous time since 1973. i disagree with him, i think it's the most dangerous time for the word world since 1938. just three short years ago a, we were working toward the peaceful settlement of afghanistan, the russians were deterred, we were putting the chinese in a box, taiwan was safe, and now everything's -- the world is aflame, and it's because president biden moved away from a piece through -- peace through strength posture to an appeasement posture. elizabeth: lieutenant general, your response to that? >> yeah, i served with robert in the white house. he nailed it. he's right on the money. you've got to have strength. you've got to use strength to
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bring it back into the box. we haven't done it. the thing that scares me more than any that robert said, this isn't 1973 which tony blinken talked about, that's how dangerous the middle east is. when robert o'brien is talking 1938, that's when chamberlain went the munich and said peace in our time, and within one year the world was at war. that is a big conversation -- consideration, and that's a big concern when you've got the middle east, the europe right now and the far east. we may be heading there, and robert's right on the money. elizabeth: got it. lieutenant general keith kellogg, thank you so much for to america. it's god to see you. okay, coming up, we are awaiting a potential ruling possibly could come tonight from new york judge arthur edge ron in former president trump's civil fraud if case. the penalty here, the new york attorney general's demanding $370 million. trump is expected to appeal. we also have laugher tengler investment ceo wall street pro nancy tengler joining us to break down the state of
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bidenomics today and u.s. inflation hitting your households. the fed if today again sat tight, did not cut rates. it's in the liking the picture of inflation for america. this is coming up on "the evening edit." ♪ ♪ so... - we're engaged! - we're engaged! congrats carol! your youngest finally popped the question. but now, you're really going to have to get those new dentures. after all, you need a smile that matches the moment. so this might be a good time to mention that aspen dental can create natural looking dentures in no time. just for you! and that comes with $0 down plus 0% interest if paid in full in 18 months. helping mothers of grooms look their best. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner.
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elizabeth: look who's back with us, laffer tengler investments' see cio nancy tengler. the story about the state of bidenomics today, this is a kitchen table the issue. it's hitting all a americans. when you saw i the federal reserve for a fourth straight meeting not cutting rates, keeping interest rates at a 23-year high, the fed's indicating it's not ready to cut rates, not confident inflation is moving down, what was your reaction? >> well, it's the same, liz, as it's been all the e way through. i mean, i think what we know is that, yes, inflation has come down, but it's still embedded in the system. only wall street cares about the rate of change, and it's down
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about to the fed's target if you look at the core pce. but the average american is still paying anywhere from 20-30% more all the a while real wages and wage growth has come in. so we went from 9% peak if wage growth to now 3.8, and if you think about that, i mean, it is just barely keeping pace with inflation. so that's one of the things that i think is really troubling. and then the fact that we know that the fed is uber-tight and they've indicated their going to stay tight, the good news is they've indicated a lot of things and then only to flip-flop a few weeks or a month later. but we're going to start to see strain because the job market is definitely softening. elizabeth: yeah. we saw that adp if report, i think private payrolls january, so 7 -- 107,000, that's it in january. that disappoints. we have a report coming up i think on friday. you know, so how much is the white house to blame for inflation? they've blamed russia's war in ukraine, disruption of supply
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chain. inflation is 17.6% higher under bide when he took office it was at 1.4%. it was under 3% for something like 1019 consecutive straight -- 109 consecutive straight months. how much is he to blame? >> right. i think there's plenty of blame to go around, but the inflation reduction act, quote-unquote, was passed and begun to be implemented right after we saw vaccines, people going back to work. and and so the fiscal spending, and i've written a lot about this, i wrote a piece called mre fiscal spendings has really fanned the flames of inflation. and then you had a federal reserve sitting on the sidelines, not acknowledging the importance that fiscal spending was praying -- playing into inflation, and so they sat a back and waited way too long to get engaged. and then the spending continues. we just heard today the that the fed is about -- i mean, the administration is about to release over $53 billion in chip
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subsidies to intel, among others. i think there's a better place to spend that money, much as i think we do need to bring our chip production back to the u.s. it feels a lot like state-controlled designation of industries and where we want to spend our money in this country. should be the free markets. elizabeth: so it's just torching through americans' paychecks. i mean, hourly wages are still down 2.8% so far under this president. you know, you point out gas is up 35, food up 20%, and it's -- private payroll number, that's a drop of, from 158,000 in december now 107k. and, you know, that number was, you know, the december number was revised down. so then you have consumer confidence at its highest is since the end of 2021. how do you explain that? and, by the way, if the economy's so good, why do we keep hearing about layoffs at companies like ebay, xerox, wayfair, blackrock, citigroup,
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ups? what do you say? >> well, i say that pricing power is waning. so you have china's economy in turmoil. they're exporting inflation or disinflation to the u.s., but there's a reduction in demand for our products. so pricing power is waning. then you've got companies have to figure out how to meet their earnings and margins targets, so they cut jobs. and to be fair, many of the tech companies were bloated, but i think that will continue as things get tighter, as the fed remains on the sidelines longer. so i am concerned that we keep getting these unanimous decisions. as the great general patton said if everybody's thinking alike, minute's not thinking, and i do believe it's time for the fed to step back and look at america and the average consumer and and start to set policy accordingly. elizabeth: got it. nancy tengler, thank you so much for joining us tonight. it's good to see you. okay, this power play coming up, former president trump met with the teamsters in washington today as he seeks their endorsement. the group did endorse biden in
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2020. fox news' mark meredith live in washington with the story. mark. >> reporter: liz, good evening to you. former president trump is now openly courting big with labor, meeting today with the teamsters' union. whoever they end up picking, it could give them a boost with workers this fall. and today we heard from trump after the meeting, he vowed to keep fighting for the teamsters' vote. >> i think we had a very productive meeting. stranger things have happened. usually a republican wouldn't get that the endorsement for many, many years they've, they only do democrats. but in my case, it's different because i've employed thousands of teamsters, and i thought we should come over and pay our respects. if. >> reporter: the teamsters say they do plan to meet with president biden soon. however, no date has been announced. the biden campaign just fired off an e-mail a second ago saying they think trump is pretending to be pro-worker. the teamsters also offered to sit down with former ambassador nikki haley, no word if a
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meeting's going to happen there, but the teamsters' leader knows traditionally the group would be expected to back biden. >> there's no question the biden administration has been great for the unions. but again, sometimes dialogue helps formulate difference of opinions that will be favorable to unions and positions moving forward. so that's what our goal is. >> reporter: now, the themsters have not -- teamsters have not decided when they've going to make an endorsement announcement, likely not until summer, but you had the uaw just back the president's campaign a few days ago, so we'll look to see whether or not the teamsters give us a surprise or not. trump seemed pretty happy after that meeting. elizabeth: got it. mark meredith, great to see you. joining us now, gop strategist ford o'connell. ford, your reaction to that story. ford, okay, let's say you run a labor union. which candidate would you pick and why? >> well, if you're a member of the teamsters, it's a no-brainer. in this election there's only one choice, and that's donald
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trump. he's pro-worker. he grew wages. he kept inflation low. he hammers china and secures the border. remember, securing the border is about making sure the workers' wages are protected. donald trump is the only choice in this election. elizabeth: yeah, but the uaw said no to trump and went for biden. >> that ease because shawn fein really was in the can for the democrats. when you actually look at the uaw, why did they strike? for two reasons. one is biden's ev policy and his war on american energy. joe biden's policies were actually trying to eliminate the uaw, and i cannot believe shawn fein if did this. it was a back door deal with the biden campaign. elizabeth: we've got news coming in, quinnipiac just released a poll. nikki haley beats biden in a head to head matchup 47-42. so how shakes out, this is a wild 2024 race. and so your reaction to that new poll coming out from quinn by if yak, nikki haley would beat biden 47-42, that's the support right now for her. >> well, yes, that is the
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support, and i think donald trump's made an excellent point, any republican should beat joe biden in 2024. but when i look at the polls overall, donald trump right now is in the best polling swing state position. the states are going to decide this election. if any republican presidential candidate in the 3221st century, so while haley's running well, donald trump's running better. elizabeth: and what's hitting him too are the court cases, right? there are four of them. judge engeron in new york, what do you make of this? the reports were that he was going to decide today, the new york civil fraud penalty against former president trump. new york attorney general letitia james was seeking $370 million from trump and the other defendants. the original a figure was $250 million. not sure why the a.g. ratcheted up to that figure. where do you come down on this? >> well, look, you have the four criminal cases, those are designed to harm trump politically. his civil case in new york state is designed to harm him financially, to break him financially and, frankly, the entire thing's a farce.
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even the associated press ran an analysis on this saying this has never happened in the state of new york and, frankly, whatever money they're asking for is absolutely ridiculous because when you have a fraud case, you need a victim. in this case there are no victims. elizabeth: got it. ford o'connell, thanks for joining us. it's good to see you. >> you got it, liz. elizabeth: sure. another story involving the state of texas and elon musk. elon musk is threatening to move tesla to texas. after a delaware judge ruled against his pay package. and congresswoman claudia tenney's coming up. george soros begun is pushing to turn texas -- again is pushing to turn texas blue and democrat as a texas deals with a historic illegal immigration crisis. and 26 gop attorneys general back the state of texas telling president biden, you've got to secure the border, do it. let's check in now with our buddies dagen and sean, what you got coming up on "the bottom line"? sean: we have the senate negotiating a bipartisan immigration deal, will it pass?
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we'll discuss it with senator mike lee as well as americans say they pay too much in texass but get -- taxes but get too little in return are. the great steve moore's going to be here. dagen: and we have john carney and tammy bruise on our -- tammy bruce on our panel together. so much to discuss, but why was a navy veteran charged with a hate crime for attacking a satanist statue made out of household items? we don't know. top of the hour. ♪ ♪ a digital money coach in the chase mobile® app. use it to set and track your goals, big and small... and see how changes you make today... could help put them within reach. from your first big move to retiring poolside - and the other goals along the way. wealth plan can help get you there. ♪ j.p. morgan wealth management.
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elizabeth: okay, a brand new fight involving texas. this time it's elon musk. he wants to move tesla to texas after a delaware judge ruled against his record pay package at tesla. lydia hu in new york with the story. lydia with. >> reporter: liz, a delaware judges has voided billionaire elon musk's $56 billion compensation package if from tesla. she describes that package as, quote, the largest potential compensation package ever observed in public markets, and she concludes it's unfair to shareholders. finish musk's pay was established in 2018. it provides him no cash and offer as instead stock action options each time the company hit a series of escalating operational and financial goals.
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when the package was approved, tesla was valued at less than $60 billion. to reach all the goals the company needed to hit a market capitalization of $650 billion, which it did, in 2022. one shareholder owning nine shares challenged the package claiming the goals were easier to achieve than the company disclosed. the shareholder also alleged that musk exerted too much kohl over the compensation decision through board e members with whom he maintained close relationships. well, tesla defended the compensation saying it incentivized musk to invest his attention into the company and grow the business and that that a growth delivered value to the shareholders. in the past five years, the share price is up more than 800%. here's the tape from internewspaper -- interneuroif -- entrepreneur vivek ramaswamy. >> i'm hopeful the delaware supreme court overturns this for
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the sake of capitalism and for the sake of future boards that are able to make the right decision instead of behaving like a bunch of government bureaucrats. >> reporter: we reached out to tesla and attorneys for elon musk but did not hear back. it's reasonable to expect they will appeal. elizabeth: great stuff, lydia hu. thank you so much. let's welcome to the show new york congresswoman claudia tenney from house ways and means. it's good to have you on. you know, this border crisis under biden is creating mayhem in u.s. cities. what do you make of this story, two new york city police officers brutally attacked in times square, police arrested five but they were released without bail, no cash bail, and now reports new york governor kathy hochul may deport them? do you believe that? >> i don't believe she's going to do it, but this is what you're going to continue to see. we have this problem upstate as well. we've had an allege ad rape, we've had a sexual assault and a murder in rensselaer county, all upstate new york crimes committed by el legal immigrants
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who were forced upstate because of mayor adams because of the terrible, reckless policy of joe biden -- joe biden refusing to use his own power to support our border and sovereignty which he as the power to do. and he unraveled all the trump era, whether they were regulations and did this by executive order his very first day in office a, and he created this catastrophe. and he actually has the power under statute. immigration naturalization action, section 212 gives the president broad powers to remove illegal immigrants and and others from the border to protect our border and our sovereignty. he just refuses to do it. it's a political game to try to blame the republicans for this problem which he created, and he refuses to solve. and that's why you've seen the impeachment that came out this morning of secretary mayorkas. let me tell you another thing that actually he doesn't have the power to do, and that is to e will eliminate student debt. even our supreme court weighed in and said he couldn't do that, and he did that for political reasons as well, and he was wrong only that.
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elizabeth: so, you know, the other thing that's happening too, congresswoman, we have a political action committee, the texas majority if pac, funded by billionaire george soros. george soros is trying to turn texas blue and democrat. i mean, he's tossing six figure donations to democrats in dallas county, cameron county and more. what we want -- we'd like your reaction to we've got a former cartel member talked to fox news about just is how dire the border crisis is. let's take, get your reaction to this. watch. >> nothing's been done. i don't care what president biden says at the moment, it's still the same. there's nothing changed. everything is running the same since the very first day. there's, you know, he has a power to do it, i just don't understand why he's not doing it. there's so -- the drugs, the people, you know, the cartels are coming in, i mean, they're
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just taking advantage of every situation at these border crossings. you've seen the amount of fentanyl that's been coming across, i mean, it's really gotten big throughout the united states. elizabeth: congresswoman, you heard that. even a former cartel member is saying president biden has the power to stop the border crisis. even he is baffled why he's not doing that. your reaction? >> how about that, a criminal stating the obvious of what we all know. the cartels are controlling our border, and it's estimated that they're making about $32 million a week on human trafficking alone, not to mention the drug trafficking. they're controlling the border. we have allowed this to happen, and he's right, joe biden does have the power. he just cited a statute out of the immigration nationality the act. he has power under article ii, section three, he can also do executive orders to reverse what he did in his first day in office to protect our border. he's starting to get a lot of
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pressure to do that, but you have to wonder why don't they do it. what is the reason for putting americans at risk? we could have something many times the scale of 9/11 with the types of people coming across the border if and finding their way into the interior of this country. they could be joining terror the cells, they could be setting up something that would really bring down the entire nation, and you have to wonder is that their mission. and, by the way, missouri state is no help. elizabeth: got it -- new york state is no help. thank you so much for joining us tonight. of it's good to have you on. >> thank you. elizabeth: this story coming up, california state lawmakers, they're pushing for a brand new rule and standard for car drivers that could be adopted nationwide. some critics are asking, is this again too much government control? if senator eric schmitt from senate transportation's going to break this down on "the evening edit." next. ♪
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direct. they explained life insurance is a valuable asset that can be sold. we learned we could sell all of our policy, or keep part of it with no future payments. who knew? we sold our policy. now we can relax and enjoy our retirement as we had planned. if you have $100,000 or more of life insurance, you may qualify to sell your policy. don't cancel or let your policy lapse without finding out what it's worth. visit coventrydirect.com to find out if your policy qualifies. or call the number on your screen. coventry direct, redefining insurance. elizabeth: joining me now from senate transportation, missouri senator eric schmitt. great to you have you on, california sets standards often nationwide. that is how the biden white house treated the state of california, what do you make of california lawmakers, making a new rule to automatically put a new
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switch in cars to stop drivers from speeding more than 10 miles an hour over the speed limit. what do you think? >> it may be one of the stupidest ideas that i heard, that is something coming from california, they seem to outdo themselves every year on ideas are, the idea to have a kill switch, i have a son with epilepsy, what if you have an emergency or someone is fleeing an attacker, the list goes on of reasons why this is a dumb idea, this is part and parcel of their nanny tate mentally -- state mentality. always looking for ways to meddle with people's lives. and this is ridiculous. you sort of run out of adjectives with the ideas out of california. dagen: they are talking new cars and trucks.
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elizabeth: built or sold in california starting from 2027, will be mandated to have this intelligent speed limiter system, electronically prevent the car from going over 80 miles per hour. the question is, would that exempt cops and ambulances and fire trucks. >> the next thing we'll hear about them, you move to social credit scores, if your carbon footprint is too big you can only drive a certain amount of miles per day, this is the slippery slope you go down when you have dumb ideas like this take hold, this state has by 2035, they want to be you know, you can't -- try to to eliminate the internal c combustion engine, they announce this the same week they have rolling blackouts in california, no one thinks things through, they come up
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with new dumb ideas. this is virtue signaling from the left, but the consequences are real, could be deadly. elizabeth: so much for the infrastructure spending because of the electric car batteries are so heavy. tearing up the road. from where you sit in senate transportation, when you see top down mandates from biden white house or states like california demanding everyone that buy an electric car, what do your constituents say. >> i believe in america, if that is what you want to do, god bless you, when i was attorney general of missouri we sued school districts for mask mandate or counties, if you want to walk around a park on a beautiful day with 10 masks on your face, this is america, but we should not mandate this. the idea we're mandating this, you know it affecting workers, they have to layoff hard working americans, the
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jobs are going overseas, where they are mining the materials that are dirty to mine, we're subsidizing this, if people want to choose to buy whatever, i am fine with that, we should not be subsidizing it, it costing american jobs, there is no real plan on how it will work for real people. and talk to someone who has a dealer they have their inventory so big with the electric vehicles people are not buying them. you will have a r a lot of dealers that will go out of business. elizabeth: senator eric schmitt thank you there thank you. elizabeth: thank you for watching the "evening edit" on fox business, i'll be out a couple of days, david asman will take over for me, now time for my buddies dagen and sean. on "the bottom line." dagen: you are not allowed to leave. elizabeth: i am chained here. dagen: kidding thank you. elizabeth: thank

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