tv Varney Company FBC February 29, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EST
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not spreadsheets. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ ( ♪ ) with the push of a button, constant contact's ai tools help you know what to say, even when you don't. hi! constant contact. helping the small stand tall. >> i don't think we can have any kind of confidence that even should he achieve reelection, he's going to be there for the next four years. it's such a challenge for the white house. >> the american public is tired of two-tired justice system and somebody being completed completely different especially when they see what's going on with president trump at this point in time. >> to be bad economics so set
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the minimum fashion. >> people like donald trump are chaotic and breaking aspects of the system that haven't served the american people well over the last couple of decades. stuart: isn't that a beautiful looking sky there in new york city? a hint of sun somewhere. we like that. good morning, everybody. it is 11:000 on the east coast and it is thursday, february the 29th. that'll be leap day. got it. check the markets. i'm looking at the dow with a minor league loss at 15 points and nasdaq modest, very modest gain up 76. big tech a bit of mixed picture in the trading session and amazon, meta, alphabet up and microsoft, apple, down. check the 10-year treasury yield
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is 4 pl 4.23%. well below 4.25. now this. every day this week, we brought you an example of the president's decline. a stumble, a slurring of words, confusion, it can be painful to watch. when he appears in public, his decline is obvious. now there's an account of how he handles meeting and discussion in private. more problems. former speaker kevin mccarthy describes the president in closed door meetings. roll tape. >> he still has a tell prompter but the tele prompter are carts. i found when i met with him i would just be a cup and will he'd read from the cart. card. >> if you deviate like i didn't sit and negotiate with him the debt ceiling. he just sticks to the cards. if you go -- if you deviate from the cards, he can't continue on ward there. that's why i -- look, he served
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the country whether you like him or not. i respect the man for serving the country and thank him for that service, but he's not of the age that is best to be able to serve in the presidency, especially in the position he is going forward with what i have watched to serve again. stuart: evansville a one-on-one, he's using cue cards and discussion going beyond what's on the cards and he can't follow. he only says what's written down in front of him so who writes the cards? that person is effectively running the show. should not be like this. the president uses a cheat sheet when he meets foreign leaders and makes him look weak and you happen sure. private gatherings of donors and that worries some of them. his handlers keep him underwraps
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for the most part and even in private he needs to be told what to say. imagine trump using cue cards that tell him what to say. unimaginable. this can't go on because no one believes biden can be president for another four years except perhaps joe biden. it's time his family, his friends and senior democrats told him it's time to go. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: brian brenberg with me this morning. the president using cheat sheets and note cards and more. go. >> if you deviate from the cards, he has to end. what happens is they're trying to convince us, the voters he's okay. that's not the problem. the problem is the foreign leader that knows he needs the cards, who knows he can't input and integrate information.
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that foreign leader says, well, i've got this guy exactly where i want him and if biden really needs the cards that bad, it means our adversaries actually hold the cards, stuart. that has me so worried. stuart: does anyone believe this man, this president of our cans be president for another four years? does anybody really believe that? i haven't met anybody that believes that. >> i don't even think the folks helping him get there believe that but they believe they can write the note cards, which means you've got a shadow leadership in the country and hasn't been elected to do the job of presidency. stuart: right. i mean, if somebody is writing the cards and telling him what to say, they're running the show. can't be like that . brian, stay with me for the hour, please. getting to the markets and dow down 13 points. small gain for the nasdaq up 66. not that much price movement so far today. but ken fisher is here and he's
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a big hitter on wall street and joining us this thursday morning in new york. ken, how should we read the inpolice station numbers? you have a certain way of looking at inflation, tell us. >> it's simple like one, two, three. first, never put too much emphasis into any one month's data because it's not that accurate. if the numbers come out with precision, the indexes don't reflect reality. it's not that accurate. then remember that to some extent, the stuff can be luck in a month like broken clock at 6:00 p.m. is you have to look at it at 6:00 p.m.. it doesn't necessarily tell you much. and then third, remember that owe con mist and the central bank itself, fed, believe a wrong thing. they believe that if the economy is stronger, it m makes inflatin
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worse and have to get inflation down with a weak economy. it was false in the 1960s and false ever since but they believe that and there's agoation on how they'll react and trying to second guess crazy people is always crazy. stuart: sounds like you don't give much importance to inflation numbers on a daily basis. >> well, let's think about that one way differently, stuart, and thanks for having me on as always. i do appreciate it. the trend in the longer term is always important. one month, two months and inflation is global. most people get it wrong and not just the united states. we go the way the world goes and it's important to keep an eye on the global numbers and nobody pays attention to that. pretty benign and regularly getting better and trend going the right way. global innation is below the average of last 30 years and moving irregularly and shouldn't get more excited than that.
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stuart: we have higher than most of the major markets in the world, including america. >> first, note most of the media saying you're completely right, stuart. most of the media keeps saying it's just a magnificent seven. those six huge tech stocks and tesla and that's the bull market. the fact of the matter is you look at s&p 500 last year. 348 of the stocks and 192 rose 20% or more and look at the world index and seeing world, 642 of them rose 20% or more. take out the magnificent seven from the world and the world increasing on average in a calculated basis and the real killer as you said, if you protect suspect much. hitting this career all time
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high in australia, denmark, france, germany, india, ireland, japan, netherlands, spain. look up some place that's more tech heavy and taiwan and today and so this is a magnificently broad market and garmin fungal and slow down and going too fast and join the market as well as it lasts. and more. stuart: last one, does politics make a real difference. is this rally due in part to maybe trump wins. >> so i'll say the fourth year president's term, election years as i've often said on average, positive 83% of history going back into the 1920s and 11% average returns and years where the second year was negative like it was in 2022 and it had been positive every single time since the bottom of the great
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depression and all the victims of 15% but let me just say also that often the timing like inflation index isn't perfectly precise and precision is often seen as more than it really s. there's a lot of volatility in stocks and move irregularly and moving them along and usually when we have this incumbent democrat then might lose because republicans should have seen as more business friendly, markets tend to be strong in the election year and relatively early in the year. when we have a republican incumbent back that might lose and stronger and later in the year. they might lose and you're completely right and stuart: ken fisher, you know what you're talking about. thank you for laying your expertise on us. >> that you can't for having me, stuart. stuart: excuse me.
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i had a could have. lauren: you okay? say the movers. take a look at snow flake. put it on the screen. down 19% and cloud stock for a company and companies are spending less on cloud stock ware and over four years ago and frank is retiring and i want to point out snow flake is consumption base and not a subscription model as a lot of compecompetitors and bidenomickenstock. they're so popular. you know they're ugly. stuart: suburban identities coming out to the country and wearing birkenstocks and swatting at flies. lauren: call them urbanites. stuart: suburbanites. lauren: and they don't give discounts and always full price. if i'm saying all the good things, why is the stock down
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15.25%? rose in the quarter by 22% and gooing for the margins. stuart: goat to beyond meat? lauren: no, shall i? up 35% and upgrade and upgrade beyond meat got an upgrade and focusing on cost control and core products. stuart: i can take over now. it's just fine. biden in trouble on the way to border. trump heads to busy eagle pass. 2,000 apprehensions in their last five days. biden going to brownsville and going for the crisis and he'll make his case. why he's been so quiet. after this.
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stuart: biden is trump headed to the border with two very different messages and biden blames republicans for the crisis and trump blames democrats. lydia hu in brownsville, texas, biden will be later on. who do the residents blame? reporter: yeah, stuart, i got to talk to residents and point out the illegal border crossings have gotten worse under president biden's watch. listen. >> we've been saying there's a problem down here long before biden got elected and he's done nothing to help us.
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>> a guideline on how to break the laws and commit how to work without a social security number and without paying taxes. that's a big issue. >> trafficking immigrants is a huge business. unfortunately this administration opened up the business. reporter: residents criticize president biden's choice to come here to brownsville and drop sharply from the high of may of last year and thousands apprehended in just a single day and biden looking for a photo opportunity and making it look like the border is secure now and over the last five days with just the last 46 apprehensions and sources tell us 100 migrants used bolt cutters to cross the boarder and this is a brownsville processing center
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and the relative jump overnight and numbers in eagle pass, texas, 300 miles west of here. their border patrol counts more than 2,000 apprehensions in the last five days and we'll find former president trump later today in eagle pass, texas, talking about his policies and promises for the boarder and he's going to increase the deportations as we expect president bide ton talk about and cast his blame on house republicans for abandoning the bipartisan border deal and we expect to hear from them shortly. stuart: lydia hu at the border. why the powerful turn a behind eye while china kills americans. that's the title. peter swieser wrote that book and he's with me now. in your president, why haws president biden been quiet on the china fentanyl issue?
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>> well, because he has ties linked to the financial drug trade and china is the one driving the fentanyl tried and cartels are the junior partner and provide the precursors for the cartels and our department of homeland security, stuart says that 2,000 chinese nationals are in a small town south of the border helping the cartels produce the fentanyl. when the cartels communicate, they need secure communications and use devices that are encrypted in china and they know the chinese will not share it with all law enforcement. money laundering and cartels launder their money through chinese state owned banks and problem for joe biden is that the chinese gang that set up the sinsinaloa cartel in the fentanl trade and making them the king of fentanyl and an organization called ubg and headed by the name of white wolf. white wolf has a business
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partner and that business partner sent $5 million to the biden family in 2017. so joe biden doesn't want to have a conversation about chinese involvement in the fentanyl trade because it will bring up very sensitive subjects. stuart: are the chinese leaning on him? i mean, are they making it clear, hey, we got something on you and that will affect his attitude towards china. is it that bad? >> it may be. joe biden is a shrewd politicians and not talking about topics and subjects and making you look bad. i don't know exactly what the relationship is and the fact that we have one degree of separation between the first family of the united states and this criminal syndicate that helped set up the plague in the united states and is in washington what they'd call a problem. joe biden is smart enough to know he done a lot want to talk about the subject and says in
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the context of fentanyl and china no finger pointing and he doesn't want that because in a way it would incriminate him and the fact that his family was taking money from very sketchy people in china. stuart: do you believe orono that money from the fentanyl people has actually gotten to -- directly to president biden? >> no, there's no evidence of that but again, it's the problem of association. $5 million sent in 2017 by a chinese businessman and according to hunter biden laptop and $5 million interest free forgivable loan that's never been paid. that chinese businessman involved in white wolf and involved in the fentanyl trade and biden family receiving this money, this business partner and way too close as far as any, you know, optics that joe biden wants to get out there.
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he doesn't want to have this conversation and look, fentanyl is the leading cause of death for people under 45 in the united states. it's a weapon china deployed and deploy it had effectively. stuart: peter, you made it your clear and we like clarity on this. peter schweizer, thank you very much. brian is with us. talk about hunter. endless investigation and are republicans wasting time because maybe the public is getting tired of this. >> separate a couple things, are they wasting their time on investigation of issues at play? no, those are important issues. if the president is compromising his position as a vp to get money from adversaries, look into that. to your point, i don't think this is going to give republicans a lot of political lift. it's too complicated and been on it for so long and maybe when you find the smoking gun and can
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link it, okay. they haven't gotten there yet and so all the drip and the drab of it i think gets lost in the daily news. they're got getting a lot of political lift and that's what they're looking for right now. stuart: first lady jill biden spearhead ago get out the vote campaign. who is she targeting? lauren: women. what's the number one issue for voters? immigration and border. that's safety. women are particularly concerned about their own safety and kids. should i send my daughter to college? look what's happening. jill biden is lead ago mobilization effort to get women to vote and going to visit swing states: georgia, arizona, nevada, wisconsin. female voters decided 2020, 55% of them went for biden. how much has that number come down or is the abortion issue alive and well and a motivating factor? stuart: a couple of interesting questions there. you'll have to answer them some day. lauren: well, i think they'll be
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answered at the ballot box. two very strong issues mobilizing women. stuart: check the markets and not much price action today and all in the green and only just. dow up 20, nasdaq up 60. let's see bitcoin it's 62.4. they've reached a deal to avoid a government shutdown and for now, we'll tell you how much time they bought for themselves. the answer is not much. the supreme court saying there won't be a trial ahead of the election maybe? shannon bream will explain it all, next. ♪
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it's time to feed the dogs real food, not highly processed pellets. the farmer's dog is fresh food made with whole meat and veggies. it's not dry food. it's not wet food. it's just real food. it's an idea whose time has come. stuart: on the markets right now, it's some green but not much. put it like that, dow up 20, nasdaq up 60. lauren has the movers and i want to hear about octa, which i'm familiar with. lauren: up 20%. they've got a rare double upgrade from sell all the way to buy from bank of america. stock at 104 and price target
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doubled to 135. a really strong quarter and strong guidance going forward, bank of america liked and other brokerages. stuart: what about boeing? lauren: they're down and report that the department of justice, department of justice is scrutinizing what happened on alaska airlines max 737 -- 737 max 9 jet when the door blew out. this could be potential criminal liability. just yesterday the faa gave boeing 90 days to fix and address the comprehensionive issues. stuart: supreme court reviewing whether president trump has a place in the election interference case. shannon bream with us. is a trial or conviction not likely to happen before the election? i suspect briden wants that to happen and probably won't. what say you?
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>> stu, i think it's a lot less likely either things happens before we all go to the ballot box and some early voting starting in september, october and when the rest of us, whoever get there is in november, listen even though they could lose the case at the supreme court, this issue of immunity, stu, the former president actually scored a win and time asking ever everything. the supreme court saying the decision by late june and only then does the pause been put on the trial court lift and the trump team saying weeks or months and getting through discovery and pretrial motions and pushing to august and september, maybe later. of course special council jack smith has to think about the optics of trying the case in the middle of debates of people voting, stu. we'll have to see. stuart: yeah, i don't think biden will get his way on this one. there's another one. stuart: a judge in illinois ruled trump ineligible to appear
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on the ballot in colorado. how can they do that? >> super tuesday and colorado and maine have president trump's name on their primary ballots and they say, the question of whether the votes will count or not is all up to the supreme court. you'll remember back on the 8, the justices heard arguments on whether colorado was right or wrong to kick him off the ballot. we are still waiting that decision. it could literally come at any time, but all of these state haves kind of put their state decisions on hold till they hear when the supreme court has to say. super tuesday not knowing if your vote counts or not and we need to show up just in case. stuart: keeping him off the ballot in illinois, is there any merit to this whatsoever? >> the interesting thing is one state judge who's disown this and overruled a lower bipartisan electoral board that had decided we can't kick him off the ballot. it's not proper procedurally and we're not going to do it and the trump-appointed team looking at
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higher court here in illinois to appeal this thing too and i would imagine that's going to have to happen quickly and they don't vote till march 19. again, early voting starts for a lot of folks, well before that. stuart: trying to find how this is in favor of democracy. you keep president biden's principle political opponent off the ballot and i'm just wondering how americans would react to that? i can't help but think that would enormously boost trump's support. >> everything coming against him legally has helped him politically and he was very fresh cent about that and saying if you get indicted, are you going to stop running? >> no, way, it'll help my numbers and it's helped him in fundraising and polling and so far at ballots that have been cast, it's been decisively in his favor. stuart: my premise on one of my editorials today is that the biden administration has deliberately orchestrated a legal attack on trump with these
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91 charges in four separate trials. my position is that that attack model, that strategy is not doing well. it's falling to pieces and not going to get a trial or conviction or anything before the election. that whole strategy falls to pieces. am i going too far here? >> it depends. listen, the president president trump will say this worked to his benefit and the more he faces these prosecutions and calls them persecution and base rallied to him and that's been a loss for the biden team all though i think they want him as their best rival across the stage and 2020 rematch, but there's so many things that are now hanging by a thread. fani willis and that final hearing tomorrow before that jung there and georgia, there could be significant delays in that case. many of these cases are meeting with real roadblocks that could be as you said possible none get to a jury before november. stuart: okay, a michigan man is
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stepping down in november. he's already thrown his hat into the ring to replace him, john corn. my opinion, mcconnell's computation to america and the republican party was three supreme court justices. he built today's supreme court. do you agree with me? >> he did and hundreds of other federal judges that got on the bench and things that last well beyond any senate majority leader and any president and these folks can stick around for decades and shape the court system. for mcconnell, that's got to be a top, top part of his legacy. stuart: we've got to make sure we watch you on fox news sunday, 2:00 p.m. eastern on sunday of course. shannon bream, you're all right and hope you come again soon. >> i'd love to. thank you, stu. stuart: if you're not careful. now congressional leaders struck a deal to avoid a partial government shutdown. okay, ashley, the next deadline is not that far away, is it? ashley: it certainly isn't.
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they bought themselves another week. reports say the house plans to vote today on a continuing resolution to extend government funding deadlines from march 1 and 8 to march 8 and the 22. not a lot of time. the house will then try to pass six appropriations bills and justice interior and military and veterans affairs and energy and those bills will be voted on in two packages trying to speed up the process. gop headliners already railing against the plan which means a rough road for house speaker mike johnson saying the resolution buying time to work out the last technical issues on these spending bills. the fight goes on. stu. stuart: it's always going on. thanks issue ash. brian brenberg with me. when will we ever straighten out the financing of this country? seems like american politicians are not being favored. why can they not stop spending?
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>> they don't want to. spending gives them power. stuart: thank you. they go there to do things to solve problems. i'll say this and unless you're willing to shut down the government, this never changes. if you won't shut it down, by default all you can do is spend money still. stuart: that's political not attractive to impose hardship on the country. >> maybe if you did it and told your story and you did it like seriously enough, maybe some americans would say i can see what you're talking about. why not try it? right now all they're doing is like going another week and all the money out there and fighting hard for you and nobody is fighting hard to cut spending. >> nobody is fighting hard. stuart: nobody fighting hard to cut spending.
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liberals it's not sexy and not fun. if you do it and take the pain, you can go on a nice big vacation when you're done. stuart: all true, thank you very much, indeed, everyone. cdc trying to push another covid booster and who they say should get the new shot. president biden says he got a clean bill of health after his physical yesterday but the white house insists he doesn't need a cognitive exam. we have to story for you, believe me, after this. ♪
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capacity however. we're joined from the white house by rich edison. when, if ever, will the president take a cognitive exam? >> that seeps unlikely and the white house maintains that the president just performing his job duties proves that take ago cognitive test is unnecessary. >> if you look at this president, what this president who's a commander in chief, he passes a cognitive test every day. every day moving from one topic to another topic understanding the granular level of these topics. reporter: president biden had physical yesterday at walter reed medical in bethesda and they released the evidence and described biden as healthy, active, robi robust 81-year-old remaining fit to execute the duties of the presidency. biden is the oldest president ever in office and looking to stay president till he's 86 and
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polls show vo voter are concernd he's too old for a second term and confused names of world lead herbs and robert hur called biden a sympathetic well meaning elderly man with a poor memory. in his decision to decline prosecuting biden from handling classified information. biden responded angly at a press conference saying he's well meameaning and elderly and he ks "what the hell i'm doing". donald trump says biden must take a cognitive test to find out "why he makes so terrible decisions". biden points out trump is just about as old as he is, 77-81 years old and trump has confused names of leaders in public as well. stuart. stuart: rick edison there at the white house. the leaf blower didn't arrive. i'm surprised. >> not today. stuart: come back tomorrow and see what they can do. brian brenberg with me. if the white house is confident
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in the president's ability, why not do the test and prove it. >> because they're not confident in his cognitive ability. that's why. he passes the test every day and every day he's out there doing it. the problem is every day we watch him take the cognitive test of daily duties and half the days we watch him fail miserable that's why we would like somebody to officially weigh in on this. stuart: he'd never have a cognitive test, ever. lauren: should it be a requirement? stuart: they can't introduce a requirement just like that. lauren: if he take it is, others should too over the age of fill in the blank. it's a scary thought. stuart: can i move on? america isn't the only country nation with an aging leader. how many countries have a lieder over the age of 70? lauren: xi jinping, he's 70, vladamir putin is 71, india's leader is 73. ten most populous countries on the planet, eight have leaders
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in their 70s or in their 80s. the head of saudi arabia, the king is # 88 years old. stuart: yes, but he's not really the leader. the leader is really 35. lauren: okay, when you see gray hair for lack of a better word, what do you see? do you see wisdom, experience, a steady hand, connections? or do you see -- >> is this a trick question? >> where you going? lauren: how old is too old? stuart: depends on your ability and what you do and how you come across. >> gray hair has never been the problem. it's never been the problem. it's what happens underneath the gray hair. stuart: very good. very philosophical right there. thank you very much, indeed. ashley, we need you for this. did the cdc just recommend another covid booster shot? ashley: yes, for people with the
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most severe complications of covid, primarily those ages 65 and older. cdc says they should get a booster this spring and another round offering the best protection possible ahead of likely rising cases and cdc says the additional dose should be given at least four months after a previous dose for healthy older adults or three months after a covid infection. the number of covid deaths is decreasing and last summer they're going with 500 covid deaths a week. stu. stuart: got it, thanks, ash. it's that time, we show you the dow 30. how the market feel, where is it going here? well, it's about, not quite sure and donald trump wants to flip
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new york read in this election. might even hold a rally in new york city and the republican club if trump has a chance in the empire state. that's next. ♪ students... students of any age, from anywhere. using our technology to power different ways of learning. so when minds grow, opportunities follow. ♪
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stuart: an appeal's court rejected trump's bid to stop the civil fraud penalty plus interest. ashley, what did the judge allow trump to do? ashley: well, to allow him to temporally run the family company in new york and apply for loans from new york banks all to help post a bond to cover that $454 million civil fraud judgment. but the former president still on the hook for paying that massive penalty. trump's lawyers have claimed the judgment was called exorbitant and punitive making it impossible for him to secure a bond. trump had been barred from getting a loan from a new york bank run ago new york based company for three years and
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appeals court decision and lifts the business ban against trump's sons as well. stu. stuart: all right, thanks, ashley. gavin wax is with me now. he's the president of the new york republican club. welcome to the program. donald trump is considering holding rallies in new york city? can he pull it off? >> absolutely. if anyone can pull it off, he has a unique appeal and building a diverse coalition and building parts of new york city and demographic cohorts and working class voters and hispanics and saw a lot of trends working his way last cycle and can build on that and build a big splash in the big apple. his hometown. stuart: maybe in madison square garden march 28th and seeing a musical and obama, clinton and biden are going to be holding a fundraiser. if he held it on the same night, that would be cool, wouldn't it? >> i definitely think that could stick it to them a bit.
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i feel bad for anyone driving that day in traffic. lauren: stick it to us. >> going to pack it out and sell out a huge crowd at msg and stop by the big app and will visit. he on has to move the needle a few points in the paints and think about new york state, new york city and 47% for lee zeldin, he got in the low 30s, maybe 29 in the city. push to a third, 33, that's the rule. flip the state. anything is possible. stuart: could the migrant crisis change the vote in the city? >> this migrant crisis is push ago lot of traditional democrats to the breaking point and pushing entire social welfare system close to being caput. it's going to make a difference and shift voters around or at the very least have them stay home. stuart: i would like to see donald trump hold ago rally in the bronx. >> i love it. stuart: go to the belly of the beast.
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>> historic. stuart: no offense to the bronx. pull a crowd there? >> i think he can pull a crowd in any of the five bureaus and five and the bronx is a place that he taked about and the establishment and visit it and make it great again and announce for everyone and bronx for michigan and rust belt to the inner cities and stuart: i seem to remember ronald reagan going to the bronx and campaign as i recall. >> wasn't the best stop but, you know. stuart: you're a trump guy aren't you? >> yes. stuart: good man. gavin wax, thank you for being with us. come back soon. >> thank you. stuart: here we go, thursday trivia question, it's a good one. central park tower is the world's tallest residential building. all right, how tall is it? 980, 1110, 1360, 1550 feet tall?
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i haven't a clue but we're going to guess on it. the answer when we come back. everybody wants super straight, super white teeth. they want that hollywood white smile. new sensodyne clinical white provides 2 shades whiter teeth and 24/7 sensitivity protection. i think it's a great product. it's going to help a lot of patients. what will you do when the power goes out? power outages can be unpredictable and inconvenient, but with a generac home standby generator, your life goes on uninterrupted. .. it automatically powers up, giving your family the security and peace of mind they deserve. we don't have to worry about whether we lose power or not. if the utility company does not come through, our generac does. after the hurricane happened, we just want to be prepared for anything.
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world's tallest residential building. ashley, you first. lauren: i will go with the tallest, 1350. stuart: you are new yorker, what have you got? >> 1550. stuart: you are staten island kind of gal, what do you think? lauren: i will go with number 2, 1110 feet. stuart: i'm going -- on with lauren. 1110. brenberg and ashley got it right which if you are looking to move the cheapest apartment available cost 6. $5 million. a penthouse is $195 million. a swing in the wind. thanks for sticking around for the entire hour. we will watch "the big money show" at 1:00 pm eastern time on fox business and sending your friday feedback too. coast-to-coast starts now.
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