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tv   The Evening Edit  FOX Business  July 17, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm EDT

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addy airo ♪ if. ♪ larry: my last word, it's real simple. my last worked unity. political unity, spiritual unity. i'll tell ya, folk, this milwaukee story is something else. and something else, liz macdonald coming up right now. elizabeth: thank you so much, larry. i don't know how you do it every night. i'm going to get you an oxygen tank for christmas -- [laughter] because you put it out there in such a powerful way -- larry: thank you. elizabeth: i'm honored to follow in your big footsteps, larry kudlow. welcome to "the evening edit." i'm elizabeth macdonald. new details this hour about the
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serious and severe security lapses that led an assassin to the to come within millimeters of murdering president trump. now, major finger-pointing and blame breaking out between the secret service and local law enforcement in butler, pennsylvania. where president trump was with nearly assassinated. c.b. cotton standing by live in butler, pennsylvania, with the details. c.b., this story gets more bizarre -- i want to get to some new reporting from our congressional corps important aishah hasnie, she says that source told her that the secret service was aware of a threat but still allowed former president donald trump to walk on stage. that's really, really huge right there. right now i want to go over some of the layout of this entire area. we know the secret service has said local authorities were responsible for everything outside of its secure perimeter. what's not clear right now, liz, is how many local agencies were a part of that effort.
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in the meantime though, the butler township commissioner, edward natali, is clarifying the rule of -- role of at least one local agency. he wrote, quote, the butt her township police department had no security detail for this event. there were seven officers all assigned to traffic detail, period. the butler township police department was not responsible for securing the agr building or any other location. anyone who says so, reports on it, implies it is uninformed, lying or covering their own backside. i trust i am being loud and clear. so some strong words there. natali went on say the butler township officers, again, who were at the rally were on traffic detail. he explains that two of those traffic detail officers saw people point at the roof, went over to check it out, and he explained on fox news what happened next. >> the officer is grabbing,
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using both hands to grab the edge of the roof to try to pull himself up. in that process, he exposes himself. the shooter turns and points his gun at him. obviously, he is not in a position, he's pulling himself up with both hands, to wield his gun. so, obviously, he fell back. he's actually in the process of falling back, he ended up injuring himself. he was not retreating. if he was in a position to engage the shooter, he would have done so. >> reporter: so now the question remains which agencies were responsible for securing what the secret service says was an outside perimeter. congressional committees and federal agencies are demanding answers to include people who call this area home. what do you think this community deserves? >> answers. truthfulness, transparency. i'm disappointed that that we're, you know, we're being handed empty excuses and lies.
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[no audio] >> reporter: so law enforcement experts i've been speaking with remind me that while local police may assist the secret service with campaign stops and things of that nature, ultimately the responsibility falls on the secret service to protect our past presidents. liz. elizabeth: c.b. cotton, terrific reporting. let's welcome to the show house homeland security committee chair congressman mark green. congressman green comes to us from the rnc. congressman, this requires a january 6th style commission, a truth commission to get at what happened. show the cell phone video at the rally. it was a chaotic scene after the gunshots rang out, congressman. it shows law enforcement having to ram through a fence at the programmer the, struggling -- perimeter, struggling to get through to protect the president. who were you requesting public testimony from, sir? >> we're requesting public
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testimony from director wray, director cheatle. we want them both in front of our committee. we want secretary mayorkas there. obviously, the credit service is a part of homeland security can, and -- the secret service -- and we want to ask questions like who made the can decision not to cover that that building? that building was 1400 yards from the president -- 140 yards from the president, that was supposed to be covered by the person at the 8:00 or 3:00. why didn't they see the guy and take him out in an appropriate amount of time? there's a lot of questions we've got to ask, and we need to ask those in front of the american people so they can know accountability is happening. elizabeth: okay. so we've got oversight chair james comer subpoenaing the head of the secret service, kimberly cheatle. okay, this news. bear with me, congressman, for a second because it's getting more outrageous by the day about the security lapses around the president of the united states, donald trump. just bear with me just a second. okay. how many red flags do we need?
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the shooter was reportedly scoping out the site a new days in advance of the rally. his parents reportedly called law enforcement warning he went missing the day of the rally, that security i saw thomas crooks three hours before it began, but he passed through security anyway with a range finder used in hunting. how in the world did that happen? >> it makes no sense. he was actually spotted by law enforcement and reported to the secret service as a suspicious about an hour before in the timeline. and the fact that local law enforcement didn't detain him, you know, we've got to ask -- again, it kind of comes back to the investigation we're going to be doing. what were the rules of engagement given to local law enforcement when they can actually detain somebody? i mean, a local law enforcement officer would detain someone suspicious, i would think. so it makes no sense to me. we've got to get to the bottom of that -- elizabeth: yeah. i mean, we're talking traffic cops were backing up the secret
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service? and then you have three snipers -- >> well, that's a part -- elizabeth: go ahead. >> that's a part of the protocol. just like the missions i i was on in special operations. in this case can secret service is the inner perimeter, and then you have rangers and other sort of big army, and there are layered approaches to this. there were supposed to be three perimeters here, and there weren't. the inner perimeter was breached, the outer perimeter was breached, and there's lots of pieces to this. whether or not, you know, the appropriate rules of engagement were handed off to local law enforcement for that outer perimeter, all of those things we've got to dig into. but it's appropriate to have local law enforcement there. elizabeth: we came within millimeters of a president assassinated and a national crisis of historic proportions. also three snipers reportedly stationed inside the building right as the shooter was climbing on the roof. no agent on the roof because the secret service director says it was unsafe because it was sloped when it's about as sloped as a bunny ski hill. let's listen to former classmate
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talking about the shooter and who he, what he thought of him. watch this. finish. >> i brought up the fact that i'm hispanic and, you know, i'm for trump. he called me stupid or insinuated that i was. he's, like, well, that's kind of stupid. and he was real smug, arrogant whenever he was talking. elizabeth: okay. so that's thomas matthew crook, that's the assassin who's now been shot dead -- crooks. we're saying everything tonight, congressman, because no candidate, no president should have had to have gone through what president trump endured. so whether you're republican or democrat can, everybody's hair on fire, should be on fire because of what happened, and you can't let up on this, congressman. >> no, that's right. our staff hasn't been -- i mean, we've been working, i've been working. i just got to the convention today because i was in d.c. yesterday digging into this. we've laid out some very specific what we think are break points in this, and we are going
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to hammer those and find out exactly what went wrong. but you've got a director of, you know, secret service who wants to say basically that that slope is an issue? and there are other things that are going to come out in our committee hearing. there are a lot of changes that need to happen at the secret service. liz: elizabeth: chairman mark green, good to see you tonight. let's bring in for his reaction senator ron johnson is. you see the news about what went on with almost where president trump was assassinated. you've been in briefing. what have you been hearing? >> well, first of all, let me tell you from my standpoint, the briefings were infuriating. director cheatle started out, and she admitted there were mistakes and gaffes. yeah. those the mistakes and gaffes resulted in the death of an american hero who died protecting his family, two other americans greavesly wounded -- grievously wounded and a presidential candidate almost
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assassinated. i was told we were going to ask questions. four senators got to ask questions. senator cornyn asked when did the secret service first become aware of this potential threat of this individual, and she said it was over an hour beforehand as a congressman green just talked about. i would have wanted to ask the secret service snipers were able to take out this individual moments after he opened fire, how long were the sniper team aware of this individual? how long did they have him in their sights? did they ask for permission? if was permission not granted for them to take out this threat before he opened fire? the those are the questions i want to ask. i've sent a letter yesterday demanding these agencies preserve all of their records. i've already got a long list of questions. at the very end of the briefing, they said if you have additional questions, submit them to dhs and the fbi. i've submitted them. i'll be waiting for answers. i won't be holding my breath. elizabeth: yeah, that's not good enough. president trump's running mate, j.d. vance, he's set to speak
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tonight at the rnc. last night was a night of powerful speeches. this is, basically a lot of it was talking about hammering biden's catastrophic failures, how he has hurt america. watch nikki haley, governor ron desantis, and watch nevada senate candidate sam brown who was hit by an ied explosive serving in afghanistan. watch this. >> look at my face. this is the high cost of war. if joe biden stays in office, more service members will pay this price. >> i haven't always agreed with president trump. but we agree more often than we disagree. we agree that democrats have moved so far to the left that they're putting our freedom in danger. donald trump has my strong endorsement, period. [cheers and applause] >> we need a commander in chief
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who can lead 24 hours a day and 7 days a week. america cannot afford four more years of a weekend at a bernie's presidency. if. elizabeth: your final thoughts, senator. >> those are great american, they ghei great speeches. -- gave great speeches. one you should have included was governor sanders who knows the president, humanized him. and i wish every american could know the president trump that governor sanders knows better than me, but what i've seen of president trump, if you get to spend time with him, you cannot not like him. he's intelligent, he's compassionate, he's engaging, he's gracious. that's who i hope america sees on tomorrow night. elizabeth: senator ron johnson, great to have you on, sir. pleasure to see you again. >> thanks. elizabeth: be sure to tune in to fox business tonight at 7 p.m. eastern time, special coverage of the rnc speeches including
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j.d. vance. and still ahead this hour, the chairman of house administration, he's congressman bryan steil. congressman chip roy from judiciary. fox news chief legal correspondent shannon bream, retired nypd officer bill stanton, gop pollster chris wilson and gop if strategist ford o'connell. we've got more details coming in this hour on that disastrous phone call president biden had with democrats that rattled his party. including that he mocked and ridiculed a house democrat, a military veteran, who yesterday him. and california democrat adam schiff now publicly calls for biden to drop out and warns of a wipeout for democrats if he does not. is schiff worried about his california senate race with steve garvey who is now outraising him in funding in and former president trump reveals the main pillars of his economic plans. we've got the details. and more on president trump reportedly talking to jpmorgan chase ceo jamie dimon if as
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treasury secretary. and the "wall street journal" says trump boosted his latino and black support by ignoring the republican party's advice on what to do about the border collapse. and we have a powerful rnc speech from the brother of rachel morin, a mother of five murdered last year by an illegal alien, and republicans raising concerns as biden says his plan for his first hundred days is a takeover by the government of local elections. we're going to break break it down. and coming up, we've got that powerful sound of madeleine brame, the mother of a murdered military veteran really went after manhattan d.a. a alvin bragg for reducing charges against her son's killers. the same d.a. that went after trump. crime victim families are pleading for america to vote for trump. we're going to dig into all of it tonight on "the evening edit." we will be right back, stay
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elizabeth: welcome back. we're excited to have back on the show fox news sunday anchor shannon bream. shannon is the author of three books including a new york times bestseller. shannon has been covering the justice system for fox news for a very long time. shannon, if we could just,
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please, first have is you sit tight for a second and and listen to madeleine brame. she electrified and gave a powerful speech at the are rnc last night, electrifying the whole convention center talking about how her family suffered from out of control crime and weak on crime prosecutors that took the life of her son. she's saying all of this caused the life of her son, a military vet who fought in afghanistan. watch this. >> my son, sergeant hasan correa, an afghanistan war retired veteran, he reffed eneme from the taliban only to be murdered with a knife on the streets of new york city. the four assailants responsible for his death initially were facing justice. but that changed when district attorney the alvin bragg was elected. [background sounds] suddenly, two of the homicidal
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maniacs responsible for my son's deathed had their a gang assault and murder charges completely dismissed. i later learned alvin bragg often dismisses and reduces dangerous criminals. he wants to clear the jails and return violent felonies onto our streets every day. the injustice was devastating for me if my family. soft on crime prosecutors like alvin bragg in new york, kim fox in chicago and george gascon in los angeles have turned our great country and cities into war zones! they stabbed us in the back. joe biden and kamala harris, who
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claim to represent us, have abandoned us. they are neglected the poor if minority communities across america. elizabeth: shannon, you were there last night at the rnc when madeleine lit it up. what was your reaction? what did you see? >> i mean, people on their feet numerous times. you could see the reaction from the family box where president trump and now-vice presidential nominee j.d. vance were too. people were very moved by what she was having to say. and the pain of a mother who lost her son is, imagine him coming home from combat duty. you've got such relief, and then he ends up being killed on his own home turf in new york. and she gets to this bigger problem. of course, the theme last night was make america safer about a jury room of -- number of jurisdictions where the so-called prosecutors, you know, many times don't prosecute the crimes. that's what they're elected to do. they, of course, have discretion in that, but there's been a plot
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of frustration. several have been subjected to recall efforts and to think your son would lose his life here and then some of the people responsible for it would basically get off with much lesser charges, if any at all, i think she expressed the are frustration of what a lot of people many big cities are feeling especially if we think about our law enforcement officers. you know, we talk to them is and they say what good is it for me to risk my life and go out there and go against and wrap up these criminals and recommend charges and then a prosecutor says thanks but no thanks? if that's got to be demoralizing for our law enforcement officers too. elizabeth: shannon, it's interesting you say this because, you know, d.a. bragg is the same d.a. who went after donald trump. and now we've got jack smith, he's going to the appeal the dismissal of the classified documents case. the focus is going after trump when families like madeleine brame's are saker wait a is second, there's crime -- saying, what a second, there's crime that's been hitting our families. >> and i think that's been a
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huge frustration in a place like new york where they feel like there's a slap on the wrist for very dangerous people. when alvin bragg was the first to to indict president trump, people thought it was a very weak case. we sat there through weeks of it, and it was a very interesting conclusion in the way the judge made decisions, the jury instructions, all of it felt pointed to a very specific conclusion. now that's also in question after the supreme court's immunity decision. so a bit of that is on hold. they are re-examining that case in light of the supreme court's immunity decision. elizabeth: you know, shannon, i hate to bother you with this, but there's news coming in that the u.s. secret service moving on to the assassination attempt on donald trump's life, the president's life, there's news coming in that the secret service knew that there was an assassin in, at the rally, but they let trump get on that a stage anyway. your thoughts on this? >> listen, this is terrifying. i just talked to a couple of
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senators who were in a briefing this afternoon and said that they were so frustrated. what they did find out was they said this was a lot of filibustering and a lot of information given to them that wasn't relevant to the questions that they had, and when it got time for questions, it was time to wrap up, and most of them did not get to ask questions they had. but they told me, and multiple of them have come out and said, listen, we were told they knew of this threat, there was some reporting hours in advance about somebody being spotted, his parents worried that he was missing. but more concrete threats the closer they got. and so it's shocking information, but we've got to know everything we can find out. elizabeth: shannon, you're going to be busy. thank you so much for helping us out tonight. >> thanks, lizth. elizabeth: now this story, former president trump reveals the main pillars of his economic agenda for america. it's low taxes and also how to stop inflation. he's got the plan. and president trump reportedly talking to jpmorgan chase ceo jamie dimon for treasury
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secretary. also this, an hour before the trump shooting, president biden reportedly held a disastrous zoom call that rattled democrats. we've got the details. and now this, california democrat adam schiff says president biden should drop out, they're worried about a red republican tsunami taking over the house and senate this fall as well as the white house. coming up on "the evening edit." we'll be right back. ♪
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elizabeth: let's welcome back to the show gop strategist ford o'connell to "the evening edit." ford, you're at the rmc. so are people reacting to the news that president biden held a, quote, disastrous phone call with house democrats, he was rambling, confused and then he also mocked and bullied house democrat, military veteran jason crow when he yesterday his
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leadership say saying, biden saying, quote, tell ming something you've never done with your bronze star like my son? what do you make of all this, ford? >> look, operation throw biden under the bus is apparently gaining steam, and the only person that doesn't seem to know the electoral walls are closing in on him is joe biden. and the fact that joe biden continues to talk about his son dying in iraq when he didn't and mocking an actual bronze star member? look, the biden presidency's all but over. elizabeth: all right. we've got california democrat senate candidate adam schiff, steve garvey is outpacing him many donations. now adam schiff joins the list of 221 democrats saying -- 221 democrat -- 21 democrats saying biden should drop out. axios is reporting biden is going even further left thinking this is the answer to fix his campaign, ford. >> well, democrats are in political purgatory. they don't know what to do.
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basically, joe biden is seen as incapable, and kamala harris is seen as incompetent. and if they do knock joe biden off the a ticket, kamala harris will still be at the top of the ticket because there's no way they're going to drop the first black woman from the democratic ticket and, frankly, adam schiff is playing politics because he's warming up to kamala harris in the state of california. let's. elizabeth: let's watch this speech, more gaffes by biden. he's going to ban rent increases of more than $55 nationwide. he likely meant 5% he also a said the word palm when he meant to say psalm. watch this. >> -- i'll tell you what a black job is, it's the vice president of the united states! one of my best friends when i was a life lifeguard in the projects, his name, nickname was mouse. the idea, the idea that corporate-owned housing is able to raise your rent $3-400 a
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month or somethingsome i'm about to announce they can't raise it more than $55. let me close with this. palm tells us i've been young and now i'm old. and guess what? save billions of tons of -- because of pollution. because people -- all the studies show you can get from point a to point b in a train or a vehicle, the same distance, you take the train. elizabeth: okay. there were a number of glitches there. ford, just sit tight. there's new polling coming in. cnn reports democrat insider polling funded by democrat donors, trump is gaining on biden in 14 states, key states, including beating biden in 5 swing states that biden won. michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin, arizona, georgia. trump is gaining in those states. he's beating biden in those states and and in six mri blue states, colorado, minnesota, maine, new mexico, virginia and
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new hampshire. your final word on this. >> look, donald trump's on a roll. he's had the best three weeks of his political career outside of election day 2016, and if the election were held today, it would be a trump tsunami, and basically joe biden's presidency will be over in four months. elizabeth: got it, ford. good to see you. trump's running mate, j.d. vance, he's going to the speak tonight. he and the president look to make america strong once again. this after j.d. vance has a -- that had a brief conversation and respectful one with vp harris. they're both looking forward to debating each other. grady trimble live at the rnc in milwaukee with more. grady. >> reporter: hey, liz, they're still working out the details, but it sounds like both harris and vance are onboard for it. but we don't want to get ahead of tonight because vance has a big speech, probably the biggest of his so far short political career, and the that point, he is a junior senator, only been in the senate for about 18
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months. so tonight's really an opportunity for him to introduce himself to the american people. and we expect him to discuss his upbringing, sort of tell his life story about growing up in poverty, rising to become a senator after working in venture capital. graduating from yale law, serving in the marine corps. you know, we briefly heard from vance this afternoon at his first campaign appearance since joining the trump ticket. he says as he thinks about what he's going to say tonight, his main goal so to best articulate why reelecting trump is so important. >> the guy who actually connects with working people in this country is not fake scranton joe, it's real president donald trump. they know that when he was president for four years, groceries and gas and energy and housing were actually affordable to a normal person in this country. and after a four years of the biden administration, the basic trappings of a good middle class life have become less and less
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attainable. >> reporter: last night it was a display of unity from the gop. we heard from several of the former president's primary opponents including florida governor ron desantis and former south carolina governor nikki haley. she called on voters to cast their ballots for trump even if they don't agree with him on everything. she also says just coming together as a party isn't enough. >> we must not only be a unified party, we must also expand our party. [applause] we are so much better when we are bigger. we are stronger when we welcome people into our party who have different backgrounds and experiences. and right now we need to be strong to save america. >> reporter: and tonight the theme is make america strong once again. the head of the rnc speaking
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today says that that, of course, applies to foreign policy and geopolitical issue, but it also applies to some of the other important issues of this upcoming election including building a strong economy and a strong border, liz. so we look forward to the speeches tonight. elizabeth: grady trimble, always great to have you and your reporting, always terrific stuff. look who's back with us, the chairman of the house administration committee, congressman bryan steil coming to us from the rnc. it's great to see you again, chairman steil. so this bloomberg report, sir, the interview with trump was done in yawn. trump is talking about jpmorgan chase ceo jamie dimon as his treasury secretary and keeping fed chair powell on the job. how do you feel about that? >> the key is that we have a strong dollar to make sure that a we are actually able to compete globally. i think what we need is stability. we've not seen that under the biden administration. janet yellen has been assisting
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the biden administration, moving us in the wrong direction. i think we've got some great opportunities and a number of appointments that president trump hat an opportunity to make. elizabeth: so an anti-inflation, strong dollar agenda, that's the appeal to get swing state voters to give him, you know, hand trump the election. trump's policies did not create inflation. his average yearly inflation, i think, was something like 1.9%. less than 32%. so -- 2%. so he's talking about drilling more, taxing and regulating less, unleashing u.s. energy. he wants to lower corporate tax rates to as low as 15%. so more u.s. energy, tax cuts, less regulation, also higher tariffs to stop unfair trading practices. that's the trump pillar of the economic agenda he wants for the nation. what do you think, congressman? >> we've got a huge opportunity to bring costs down. right now families are struggling to afford the things that they need p. almost everything is 20% more expensive than it was when president biden came into office.
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that's because president biden's policies are driving inflation hire. everything from his student loan giveaway to the massive amount of spending that came out in particular in the first two years when democrats had one-party control to the massive amount of regulation that a this administration has put forward. we have a huge opportunity to turn the corner with president trump as you correctly noted, unleashing american energy, bringing down regulation, reining in the run runaway spending that's been brought on us by the biden administration. if we do that, grow the economy, grow real wages, american families will win. elizabeth: all right. chairman bryan steil, good to see you. coming up, we've got congressman chip roy from house judiciary and retired nypd officer bill stand -- stanton. powerful speeches at the rnc. the biden white house getting hammered over the border crisis. family members are getting killed. we've got those victims' families speaking out. and the "wall street journal" reports trump did boost his
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latino and black support among those voters by sticking to his position and ignoring the party's advice on the border. first, we want to hear what's coming up next hour, the thrills, the spills, the excitement on "the bottom line." let's talk to dagen and sean. sean hey, e-mac. the floor is starting to fill pup. people are filing in. we have a great show coming up. we're going to talk about what are the takeaways from this convention as well as the latest on the assassination if attempt of donald trump with the house whip, tom emmer from minnesota. he's going to be here as well as working men and women and tech entrepreneur. they're backing trump including elon musk. we're going to have alina habba here on that. dagen: kayleigh mcenany on kamala harris, now she goes after j.d. vance who will be speaking tonight at the rnc. kamala saying that j.d. vance will be loyal only to trump and not to our country. j.d. vance was a marine. where is kamala harris?
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well, do we even need to ask that question? and we also have pete hegseth. the left, the liberals, the democrats, they are scared of the unity that is on display. been happening two nights so far. night three of the rnc, top of the hour. ♪ ♪ peaking to self) about our honeymoon. what about africa? safari? hot air balloon ride? swim with elephants? wait, can we afford a safari? great question. like everything, it takes a little planning. or, put the money towards a down-payment... ...on a ranch ...in montana ...with horses let's take a look at those scenarios. j.p. morgan wealth management has advisors in chase branches and tools, like wealth plan to keep you on track. when you're planning for it all... the answer is j.p. morgan wealth management. when the sawdust settles and the engine roars the thing you care about is a job well done. but when you get your tools from harbor freight something about the job feels different - your wallet.
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the moment i met him i knew he was my soulmate. "soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title.
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elizabeth: well, look who's here, congressman chip roy from house judiciary and retired nypd officer bill stanton. thanks for joining the debate panel tonight. congressman, your reaction to the "wall street journal" reporting that president trump ignored his party's advice, got tough on the border and now polls show trump is drawing more support from hispanic voters than any gop nominee since george w. bush and that trump's support among black voters is trending stronger than any gop nominee in 50 years dating back to 1972? what do you think? >> well, i think it's nice to see "the wall street journal" on the side of border security rather than cheap labor, with all due respect to my friends at the journal. for too long, republicans were on that side of the coin, and now the american people are reacting, they're responding. and you saw it last night at the
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convention. you saw moms speaking out, right? you saw them talking about the horrific stories and losing a loved one, a child to fentanyl poisoning. and a lot of america was awakened to that a last night because they saw the speech. but i've been talking about it for years because there are moms right here in my district, jenelle rodriguez right down in san marcus, stephanie turner in austin who lost her son tucker three years ago. i could go down the list of dozens of moms i've been meeting with who have lost their kids to fentanyl. we've been trying to raise this alarm bell for years. president trump was talking about this a long time ago, and now the american people are reacting. and they're coming and they're showing up. and haas night was a testament that this are election is about the people. this is the people responding to a swamp, to a establishment, to a large government that has forgotten them. the forgotten men and women who want their country back. they want to live secure. and the hits panic community, they're just like -- hispanic community, they want security, they want freedom. they're tired of cartel, of
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fentanyl, they're tired of being found in a bath bathroom or getting killed in georgia. they want safety and security just like every other american. so you're darn right donald trump is doing well with hispanic workers as will republicans across the country. elizabeth: so, bill, you heard what the congressman said, there were powerful speeches including from the brother of rachel morin, the mother of five children murdered last year by an illegal alien and ms-13 gang member, that's the suspect. let's listen to the speeches from the brother and from a mom whose respond was killed due to fentanyl poisoning in the border crisis. watch this. >> the monster arrested for killing rachel entered the u.s. unlawfully after killing a woman in sell, el salvador. joe biden and his designated border czar, kamala harris, opened our borders to him and others like him.
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empowering them to victimize the innocent. yet to this day, we have not heard from joe biden or kamala harris. [background sounds] they never apologized. >> my name -- family and i were living in southern california when president biden took office and opened our board ors. borders. my weston was 15. we did everything right. i had those conversations with him, and fentanyl still found my son. and on february 27th, 203232 -- 2022, our lives were shattered and our baby was gone. this was not an overdose, it was a poisoning. elizabeth: bill, emotional speeches there. americans are saying, enough. enough. shut the border. what do you say, bill?
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>> liz, thank you for having me because this is an emotional subject, and this hit really hard. what we're seeing from our president with afghanistan and the pullout and our g.i.s being murdered to the border and these people speaking and now fire chief comperatore that happened on saturday losing his life, from law enforcement failing to do their job. now, i'm not criticizing the individual men and women that put their life on the line. what i am criticizing are the appointed, the people in power. where they say the buck stops with them, it is the blind, willfully blind following the willfully blind. when we see director cheatle go up in front of congress -- i guarantee you sheath going to say i -- she's going to say i have to get back to you, and it's horrible and it needs to stop. elizabeth: congressman roy, bill
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stanton, thanks sister if joining us, gentlemen. still ahead, gop pollster chris wilson. the big fight over election integrity. the battle to protect the vote. what president biden wants and what president trump wants to do. and all eyes on trump's running mate j.d. vance tonight. he's going to address the rnc. we're coming up with all of this, we're going to cover it next on "the evening edit." ♪ ♪
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elizabeth: back with us now, chris wilson. sit tight. we would to get your reaction to president biden saying, if he is reelected he will do a new federal push. what g.o.p. senators warn is meddling in local elections. >> here is h my plan for first hundred days in second term, john lewis voting rights act. i did all i was able to do with economy of authority but we need the act we need to pass the freedom to vote
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act. i'll sign them both into law immediately. elizabeth: chris, he wants expand same day r registration, voted by mail, early voting, and no voter idea. >> he is doubling down -- if you play the same rest of strspeech the same threat of democracy rhetoric, and he is guaranteeing to take over elections, in any issue where biden attacks republicans almost guaranteed he is pursuing the most radical policies imaginable. she should have been supporting the save act. all but 5 voted to allow
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noncitizens to vote in an election, if there is a radical side of this, it is no question it is coming from yoblan joe biden and the democrats. >> trump is calling for paper ballots, same day voting and voter idea i.d. do you think it will work. >> we saw this in 2021, i worked on glen youngkin campaign. we had as many attorneys lined up to monitor the counties, you have to watch the process in a way that sun precedented. to go further, if biden got our way, our 250-year-old constitutional system would be replaced by election. who would write rules. to allow foreign citizens to vote. donald trump wants a system,
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that reassures americans that every legally cast ballot correctly counted, the fact you have joe biden calling for a different system or overhaul of the system that works in most states is outrageous to me. elizabeth: you are worried? final word. >> yeah. i would say i am worried if joe biden gets his way, democrats would never lose another election. elizabeth: thank you chris wilson, joining us tomorrow matthew whitaker, david webb. let's send it to dagen and sean "the bottom line." dagen: thanks emac. elizabeth: sure. ♪

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