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tv   Hannity  FOX News  November 7, 2023 6:00pm-7:00pm PST

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democrats. day from ohio. concerning the judge, please don't get to the bottom of it. the top was bad enough. i stand corrected. we will not be getting to the bottom of that. cathy from warrington plains, montana. the judge may not be able to gag trump, but those pictures made me gag. you and me too. matt from san marcos, texas. why the hate? front men are the crazy ones. i beg to differ. nathan from baltimore, maryland. do realize we drummers get all the checks, right? do you think that judge gets all the checks? i am not quite sure about that. vince from marilyn. what would happen if donald trump printed the photos on a t-shirt and wore more that to court tomorrow? don't give him any ideas. always remember i am watters and this is my world. welcome to "hannity".
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we begin with a fox news alert. election night 2023 is well underway. polls are closed in several key states where close races could serve as maybe a small preview of coming attractions for the 2024 election. in a moment we will take you live on the ground in virginia were governor glenn youngkin gop turnout strategy is putting put to the test. we'll state republicans be able to flip the senate and hold on to the house while a heavy lift for share but will bring you the latest results straight ahead tonight. plus we will check with kentucky where the race has now been called for the incumbent democrat andy beshear. we are also tracking another governor fosse race in mississippi. abortion referendum in ohio and a state supreme court race in pennsylvania. also tonight coming up, house judiciary committee chairman jim jordan will join us. we have a lot of breaking news with details from today's hearing with hunter biden's doj
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guardian angel turned special counsel david weiss and the former prime minister of israel will be here as well. we will have the very latest on the war in gaza and the brutality that is the terrorist group hamas. but first joining us with the very latest out of fredericksburg, virginia, our very own rich edson is with us. all eyes are on the commonwealth of virginia. what is going on there? >> reporter: good evening, sean. it's a real test for governor glenn youngkin. has turnout strategy and the republican agenda here to see if they can control both houses of the legislature to push that agenda through the state government. what you have got here is governor glenn youngkin who has visited fredericksburg, this district a number of different times over the past several weeks. he was here campaigning yesterday. it was one of his six stops he made to polling locations today. six total locations for the governor, about 156 miles when you talk to his team. on top of all that, you've got
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the governor down in richmond watching right now and has really been campaigning on the economy. republicans have also been campaigning on a number of different issues like public safety, education. democrats have hit abortion and hit gun control. on abortion the 15 week plan that republicans have two try to curb abortions after 15 weeks is something that they have really focused on in this state. they brought a lot of outside help to do and a lot of outside money to do. former president barack obama has recorded a robo call in this state. president biden, kamala harris have made endorsements in this race. a really national race here as all eyes are indeed on virginia as the returns begin coming in. the polls closed a couple of hours ago. sean? >> by the way, governor youngkin's plan, i like the idea of voting early and voting by male which republicans and conservatives have been
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resistant to do. certainly a shifting paradigm for the long term will be a good plan. i have basically given up on virginia as ever turning red again until governor youngkin came on the scene. he certainly put himself out there, but still a very heavy lift especially when you get into northern virginia where a lot of the d.c. swamp has moved into especially in the last 15 years or so. right? >> this is still a state that president biden won in 2020 by more than 10 percentage points. a year later governor youngkin won by about 2 percentage points. this is no means a solidly red state that it once was. republicans have had to challenge here education was an a enormous issue for glenn youngkin win he ran initially in 2021. republicans have made that an issue in the first two years of his term here. they have broadened that out to
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do with public safety and the abortion issue on top of that. but that is why this state is so important going forward to what we are looking at next year. i talked to governor youngkin about this earlier today. i said are the issues important in this state and what is at stake in this election going to set the table for the national election that's going to start next year and really has already started? he says it absolutely will. >> there is no doubt that this will have an impact regardless of how tonight might turn out in the commonwealth. thank you. some breaking news. ohio voters have past a constitutional amendment protecting access to a motion abortion extending statewide abortion rights. we will give you more details on that as our breaking election night coverage continues. let's check in with a host of special report, brett bret baier. this used to be the hammer big board. i don't know if they will like this. >> i am just sitting in. >> you are allowed to sit in.
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it used to be the hannity big board back in the day. >> listen, we have a couple races. the call in kentucky and ohio. we will just bounce around here. the two governor races, kentucky and mississippi. in mississippi the incumbent tate reeves is leading but by single digits so far. this is deep, deep republican territory, though. his democratic challenger brandon presley state utility regulator, cousin of elvis pressley. if he managed to pull off a win here, deep red mississippi would be all shook up. if you've got a check now here in kentucky because andy beshear wins this race, called over daniel cameron. he really outperformed 2019. in 2019 he ran against matt bevin and only won by 5000 votes. here he outperformed and coal country, the incumbent democrat.
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daniel cameron underperformed where bevan was in some of those places and some counties he was supposed to do better in. five statewide referendums. you talk about virginia. this is really interesting because we don't have all of the data yet. these are individual races and control of the house and senate. governor glenn youngkin wants to take over control of all of the chambers in virginia. in the house there is a slight republican lead 48-46. they are trying to hold onto that. in the state senate they are trying to pick up seats against the democrats. some early numbers in some of these races are looking good for democrats. in-state district 31 for example russ perry is ahead. that's a close race. one we are watching. you cannot call it yet but it's looking good on the state senate side for the democrats at this point. obviously glenn youngkin has a lot of legislative things he wants to do with the house and senate if he gets that in the
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commonwealth. the other win we are talking about was the one that was just called and ohio. there are two referendums. one is to legalize marijuana and the other is a yes vote on the state issue one that is individual reproductive rights, abortion rights in the state constitution. what this does, with the wind the yes one, it does bring up whether this abortion issue is as strong as it was in 2022 and what it portends for 2024 in a lot of these states. democrats will look at this and this win and say we need to put this on other ballots for 2024 to effect the turnout obviously in the upcoming election. that is what we have so far. way down mississippi numbers. waiting on missive to be virginia numbers. big calls in kentucky and ohio. >> we will check in throughout the night. appreciated. regardless of what happens tonight republicans and democrats now agree joe biden is
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in deep trouble. an nbc news pole put it this way. there is a five alarm fire among democrats as joe biden's support has bottomed out. if the presidential election were held tonight joe would lose an electoral landslide. that is according to the brand-new new york times poll. another pull from reuters shows that biden is near his lowest approval ever at only 36%. a sitting president frankly just cannot win reelection with those kind of numbers. voters also strongly disapprove of biden and's handling of the economy. so much for the bidenomics they have been pushing. real inflation, real difficulties at the highest mortgage rates we have had in decades. we don't have secure borders. national security concerns around the globe. american soldiers have now been attacked 40 times in just the past few days at bases in the middle east with almost no response from joe biden at all.
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barely any comments. meanwhile his own party is deeply divided over the issue of israel has biden's radical pro- hamas base is threatening to stay home in 2024. last but not least, americans are very concerned with biden's cognitive decline. it appears to be getting worse. that will only seem to continue as we march toward 2024 and one year from now as kamala harris would say. that's the significance of the passage of time. according to a growing number of democrats that are now begging biden to bow out of the race including former democratic congressman and senate candidate tim ryan. joe biden is clinging on for dear life as always. he values his own personal vanity above all else. unfortunately for joe and his fellow democrats, he is now so unpopular and incompetent that even his own weaponize justice department won't be able to push him across the finish line this time. we will have more on this veiled
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political strategy to get donald trump coming up. first here with reaction to all of tonight's top stories we have fox news contributor charlie heard and the cohost of outnumbered kayleigh mcenany. not sure what we can read into this. kentucky may be a surprise to some people because they thought that might have been a competitive race. however, on the issue of energy, the current democratic governor is at great odds with his own party, isn't he? >> he is. he ran away from joe biden. why would you not? you just went through the polling and it's a game of how low you can go for joe. one thing i would note, kentucky is a red state. ohio is a red state. mississippi, we don't know what will happen this evening. we hope that reeves pulls it off. it is a red state. tonight the midterm elections, the last few elections, we must recognize as a party. good polling does not always
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translate into resounding victory. it must be operationalized with the mail-in votes strategy and the voting early strategy with a get out the vote strategy to put a tail wind behind those very poor numbers for biden and good numbers for trump. one other point i would make. on the issue of abortion in ohio we continue the losing streak in the pro-life movement. every ballot initiative has been lost for the pro-life movement. as a party, sean, we must not just be a pro baby party. that's a great thing. we must be a pro mother party. we need a national strategy. i talked to mike johnson about this and we will eric tomorrow on outnumbered. legislation we must put forward to support women. it is out there. senator rubio has laid it out. we have to get trump behind it and the speaker of the house behind it and have a national strategy to help vulnerable women. the results of next years election could be determined by that. >> if we are really going to be
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honest about this, and i consider myself pro-life. that is not where the country is. i would say first try 15 weeks which seems to be where the country is. i want to stay with you on this issue. these issues will be decided by the states. you talked to the speaker of the house. i talked to the speaker of the house. it will not be an issue in the house of representatives. this is not decided any longer in washington, d.c. the state's will decide. if state's say that 15 weeks is the legal time period where women can have an abortion, then the other side of the issue there are many democrats that want no restrictions on abortion at all whatsoever. this should be a decision only between a woman and a doctor. i don't think that argument has been made enough by republicans. thoughts? >> no. if the language in ohio tonight, this is what happens.
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it is so loose, the language. the aclu will roll in. this is abortion until birth we are talking about. minors getting abortions without parental consent. as a party we must expose the extremity of the left. number two, passed legislation. tomorrow i want the house of representatives passing legislation for men to pay women child support from the moment of conception. legislation to make the child tax credit applied to the unborn. legislation to have women half access to the supplemental food and nutrition program up to two years after childbirth. these are things that could be done today that could make a difference. until we on this issue as a party we will lose again and again and again. >> charlie, let's get your thoughts on this. do you agree with me that probably the national consensus on abortion is about 12 to 15 weeks. first trimester, 15 weeks? >> i think you are exactly right.
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obviously kayleigh is right about this. this is what happens when you go for 50 years on unelected group of supreme court justices take this vitally important issue out of voters hands and make the rule by fiat in washington. thankfully we get it returned to the state's and voters. it's a difficult issue. we are working through it. this is the third election. it will be very difficult and awkward. everybody has got to try to find their voice on it. democrats demagogue the issue very effectively. >> democrats are trying to scare women into thinking republicans don't want abortion legal under any circumstances. i go back to pennsylvania 2022, the republican candidate for governor if i remember correctly, no exceptions for rape,, the mother's life or loss to a nonincumbent gubernatorial
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candidate, democratic candidate by a margin that was not seen since the 1940s. i have to believe that is an indication that the women in america, suburban moms, want it probably legal and rare and probably earlier than at the point of viability. >> absolutely. i think that what kayleigh said is so important. the republican position on abortion is shared by 80% of the population. the democrat position, which is abortion up to the point of birth, and in virginia you are talking abortion after birth where you put the baby on a table and keep the baby comfortable while people make decisions. it is crazy. it's nuts. that's the democratic position. that stuff is so wacko crazy.
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republicans have to learn as kayleigh said, have to learn how to talk about this and explain how wacko extreme democrats are on this issue. strictly pro-life people are not going to be happy with the end result. they will be happy to start with the 15 weeks. they will be happy to bring some sort of reasonable sanity to this because when democrats get their way it is full nine-month and possibly beyond. >> this is just breaking. the house of representatives will vote again tonight on the issue of censure for congresswoman tlaib. we are not sure exactly win. it might be in this hour. we will cover it for you. i want to go to the commonwealth of virginia. there is something that governor glenn youngkin regardless of what the results are tonight. before glenn youngkin won that race two years ago, i thought
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virginia was gone. i never thought it was even on the map for republicans. i didn't think it would be worth investing a penny in virginia. but he proved a lot of us wrong. he certainly put a couple of things on the map here regardless of what the outcome is going to end up being. that is that republicans in their reluctance and resistance to voting early, voting by mail, has to stop. the second part of this, and i know the rnc has adopted bank your vote. a smart strategy. the second part of it has to be is democrats have mastered in states that have legal ballot harvesting. they have mastered strategies. republicans aren't even in the legal ballot harvesting game. i have not seen any effort or movement at all to get in that game. i think they are making a huge mistake if they don't. whatever the results are tonight glenn youngkin was on the right track in terms of republicans trying to stop the bleeding and
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going into election day down hundreds of thousands of votes. i also think in those states where they have legal ballot harvesting that has got to be adopted by the republicans and they must equal the efforts of the democrats are surpass them. >> no doubt about it. he is spot on, glenn youngkin, to save vote early. we must vote early and embrace these laws. 50 days of early voting in pennsylvania. 50 days! when we don't vote early as a party, we all show up on election day and then rain happens and something happens with their kids. people don't show up. there are emergencies. you have to go early. one thing roddy mcdaniel pointed to me because she is on top of this. look at nevada. they have codified into law that every registered voter, you know what happens on the voter roles. dead people are there. they are not cleaned early and often. everyone gets a ballot. even people who aren't with us
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any longer. we as a party have to vote. 11 points donald trump is up in nevada. that doesn't matter until we vote and have an early vote strategy and play the same game as democrats. >> i agree with that. charlie, anything else we can glean from tonight regardless of whether or not republicans win the house and delegates in the senate in virginia. do you think virginia is back to at least being purple? >> i think virginia is going to be a difficult state for republicans going forward just because of what you are pointing out earlier about the encroachment of the swamp into more of virginia. but the bright spot of this is that glenn youngkin won virginia by taking an issue that was historically democratic, drilling down into it and exposing the fraud that democrats were perpetuating on parents through education. he did a very good job of it. i would argue there are a lot of
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issues that democrats claim to take credit for in virginia and elsewhere that you can go after them on. you have to do it smart. obviously kayleigh is right. it is not just enough to be right on the issues and to expose how democrats are bad on the economy. they are bad on education. they are getting bad on immigration. they are bad on all of these things. it's not enough to win the argument. you have to win the battle which is coming up with the plans to win on election day and win on early voting or whatever the rules allow. you've got to play by those rules and you've got to win. >> kayleigh, charlie, thank you both. we have another fox news news alert. the house is now planning to hold a vote any minute maybe to censure anti-semitic congresswoman tlaib. we will take you there live in the house as it happens.
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also coming up hunter biden's special counsel david weiss testified before the house judiciary committee today. jim jordan will join us live next to tell us what happens behind closed doors as we continue.
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a big day on capitol hill today where david weiss the special counsel investigating hunter biden was grilled during a closed-door interview with the house judiciary committee. here is committee chairman jim jordan after that interview. take a look. >> he was specifically asked did you ever request special attorney authority under section 515. mr. weiss response was yes in the spring of 2022. that gets to the heart of the
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matter. he requested. he never had that authority throughout the time, yet he pretends that somehow he did. >> jordan also broke more bombshell news last night was shocking new evidence on the federal government censorship campaign ahead of the 2020 election. we know that the fbi was leading with big tech week after week after week in the months leading up to the 2020 election morning big tech they may be victims of a campaign, disinformation campaign. we learned that. we learned that in fact the disinformation campaign had everything to do with hunter and may have everything to do with joe biden. in fact, when they knew the truth they never told the truth. by the way, the government, we learned, was censoring information from a lot of other people including me, yours truly. mollie hemingway, governor mike
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huckabee, newt gingrich, tom fenton and so many others. really? wow! here with the latest is house judiciary committee chairman jim jordan. congressman, sorry to ask the selfish question first, but i feel my privacy has already been invaded. that is why i have not had an e-mail account for years and years. it seems like the government is perfectly fine with releasing my private text messages with paul manafort, my private text messages with people that work for the government, my private text messages on january 6th. so i don't really have privacy. they were censoring me. our government was involved in this. do i have any recourse in this legally? >> we have introduced legislation that would give you some records and would hold these people accountable. that is something we are pursuing. here is the real take away. the censorship industrial complex was bigger than we thought.
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it wasn't just big government working with big tech to limit your speech and limit tweets and posts on facebook. it was big government, big universities and big tech all working together to limit speech. it was disproportionate. listen to all those conservatives, it was disproportionately conserving. president trump, members of congress. go down the list. that's who they went after. here's the kicker. it was all true stuff. in some cases it was satire, a joke. it was all true and yet they went after it in this organized fashion where they limited the reach it would have and the visibility and filtering they did. they took things down. that's how egregious this was. >> let me ask you about david weiss that you had an opportunity to grill today. we learn from the irs whistleblowers and they took contemporaneous notes that mr. weiss said he had no power to bring any charges,
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investigative charges to hunter biden in jurisdictions outside of his own. correct me if i am wrong. didn't mr. weiss and didn't merrick garland testify to just the opposite? >> merrick garland said he had ultimate authority. david weiss this summer told us three different things in a 33 day time period. june 7th he said i have ultimate authority to determine when and where to bring charges. june 30th he says actually i don't. my authority is limited to my u.s. attorney district of delaware. july 10th he writes lindsey graham and says i have not saw special counsel authority but i have had discussions with the department of justice. today under oath he said something different because he was directly asked. did you ever seek special attorney status and his response was yes. as i pointed out earlier today, yes in the spring of 2022. he saw it but was never actually given that.
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yet he maintains that somehow i still had the authority even though i asked for it and they never gave it to me. somehow he still had it. his story does not stack up. the story that does hold true and has never wavered his gary shapley and mr. zigler. the whistleblowers. everything we learned today confirms what mr. shapley and mr. zigler have come forward and told us. they stood up to a couple hours of cross-examination from democrats in the oversight committee. their story has checked out with every witness we have deposed. >> that means that before congress one side lied and one side told the truth. both sides cannot be telling the truth. i tend to believe the whistleblowers, the ones that took contemporaneous notes. i tend not to believe the people that we know that have been active and involved in protecting all things biden family. so i thought if you lied before congress you could get arrested for that and be charge for that.
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am i wrong? >> you can. it is tough to prove. merrick garland misled us. david weiss certainly misled us with his initial response to me on june 7th this summer. that changed in a one month time period. what he said today didn't back up what he told us in those letters this summer. >> when will we get the transcribed interview in full? >> in a couple days. it will be ready in a couple days and we will make it available. there is a lot of questions he wouldn't answer. he stuck to the authority but there were a lot of questions he didn't answer. there is a lot of that in the transcript. but where he did i totally confirmed other witnesses we talk to and what mr. shapley and mr. zigler have testified to. their story has never wavered. the testimony has never changed. the white house has changed multiple times about this investigation. the department of justice has changed multiple times as well. >> my understanding is that you and chairman comer and others,
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are we getting near the point were biden family members will now be subpoenaed? if so, what biden family members are we looking at? why did the white house say today that the $200,000 loan repayment from joe's brother, that they are not going to provide documentation. that is what they are saying. that proves that joe actually gave a loan that had to be repaid. i would think that would be easy to produce, wouldn't you? >> you would think so. maybe they don't have it. that is consistent with the white house. there are a number of people we want to talk to. hunter biden's other business partners. we want to talk to james biden and hunter biden. we want to talk to the guy that stepped forward and paid taxes out of the goodness of his heart. he paid several million dollars of taxes that hunter owed. we want to talk to that individual. we want to talk to the folks that bought hunter biden's art.
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those subpoenas will be coming and some will start i believe as early as wednesday or thursday of this week. >> do have any doubt that joe biden was active in these business deals? do you have any doubt that joe biden lied about what he knew? do you have any doubt that joe biden himself benefited financially? do you have any doubt that joe biden took specific actions when he was vice president that benefited his family members which would be the very definition of the bribery statute in this country? >> there is no doubt he told us things that were not accurate. he said he was never at dinners or talk to hunter biden's business partners. we know that is false. we had that from devon archer in a deposition. we know that is false. we know that joe biden specifically weighed in relative to burisma and the executives who were under pressure after he gets a call from his son. a few days later he goes to kyiv and starts to fire the
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prosecutor. we all know that happened in burisma and ukraine. it share looks like they told us things that were not truthful. >> jim jordan, thank you. we appreciate it. next we will take you to capitol hill. lawmakers on both side of the aisle are preparing to rebuke radical congresswoman tlaib after she seemingly called for israel to be wiped off the map. more disturbing examples of anti-semitism all across the globe. the former prime minister of israel bennett will be with us tonight. we will watch results around the country on this election night as we continue.
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breaking news tonight out of capitol hill. a vote to censure radical
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anti-semitic congresswoman tlaib could happen at any moment after she touted a slogan calling for israel to be annihilated. this is a well-known phrase, a well-known anti-semitic phrase. from the river to the sea. joining us is chad. here we go again. it doesn't get any more clear in terms of the anti-semitism in that statement. >> this has been a big divide that they have had in the democratic party with rashida tlaib. many democrats who i talked to today indicated they did not like her language. there were sum that voted against bringing this to the floor earlier today. jared moskowitz a jewish member and democrat from florida said he voted to table or killed this resolution earlier today but he would vote to censure. i should note that in the past half hour or so they made the decision to go ahead and put this on the floor and censure her tonight. she is the first house member in
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history to be censured. it takes a majority vote. the last one was centered was adam schiff from california back in june. there was another effort by marjorie taylor greene to try to censure rashida tlaib tonight. they pulled that from the floor. some democrats thought this for tat, there was a resolution to try to censure the republican congressman from florida. this was something put together by the democrats earlier today. jacobs the democrat from california. we believe they will withdraw that as well because democrats don't want to get into this for tat. sometime after 10:00 is when the house of representatives will vote to censure tlaib. there is something different about this resolution. usually when they censure a member you have to appear in the well of the house and you stand there and the speaker of the house wraps the gavel and says you have been censured. if you look closely at the text of this resolution, that is not in there. that's not the way they censured charlie wrangle in 2010.
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that's not what happened with adam schiff or there was a party in the will of the house where many democrats came to the well and rallied around him. you couldn't hear what the speaker was saying. this will look a little bit different. once you have been censured and once the vote is closed she is censured and that is entered in the journal of proceedings of the house of representatives. that is it. she will have been censured. >> thank you for that hitchhikers guide to all things censured especially with congresswoman tlaib. for weeks thousands have taken to the streaks echoing tlaib's anti-semitic rhetoric. sadly these rabid anti- israel riots are getting worse and so are the chants from the protesters. look at what they were screaming outside of joe biden's white house this weekend. [ yelling ]
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>> does that sound familiar? those are words echoed by some of the pilots on 9/11 as they killed 2977 americans. here with reaction is the former prime minister of israel not tolley is with us. good to see you. for the life of me, i do not understand the united states of america. israel stood strong with america post 9/11. you guys never wavered, ever. this is the worst terror attack in their israeli history and we have an american president president and administration pressuring israel to put a pause on defending your homeland, defending your country. has that been happening? >> i want to explain, sean, the meaning of pause in the war. right now we have embarked on the inevitable work to eliminate hamas. there is no way we can accept
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the terror state that did what it did on our border. the moment we paused in the middle of the war, it gives time for our enemies to replenish themselves, to rearm and freshen up. and in effect it lengthens the war. every day of pause is another two weeks of war. that means many more dead people on both sides. it would be tantamount to january of 1945 that the allies told germany, you know what, we will pause the war for a few days. take your time. we don't want to hurt civilians. the war would've continued until 1946 or 1947. the best way to save lives is to accelerate the war, beat hamas in this whole nightmare will be over. >> let me ask you, mr. prime minister. this is important to me. doesn't the net result have to be the elimination of not only hamas but hezbollah and lebanon?
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doesn't the net result have to be that neither lebanon or gaza can no longer be launching areas for the hundreds of thousands of rockets? i have been there when they have been fired. i've been in the terror tunnels. doesn't this have two and with those areas no longer being a launching pad to attack israel with rockets? does it have to come to an end. don't you have to destroy all of this network of terror tunnels? i have been in them. doesn't that have to be part of the equation too? at some point doesn't somebody need to deal with the head of the snake, that being a run, that is orchestrating all of this with the proxy wars? >> i think you are absolutely right. we have an octopus of terror. the head is around and the arms are hezbollah, islamic jihad. terror cells around the world. those who are fueling it are sitting in teheran and they feel immune. what we need to do is ultimately
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hit to run. when i was prime minister of israel, according to foreign sources, when they messed around with israel, there were commanders of terror units that were assassinated in the heart of teheran. there was a drone base in iran that was bombed. that is what we need to do. fighting just the arms of the octopus doesn't really make sense. >> mr. prime minister, i have about 30 seconds left. we have seen from the river to the sea. we have heard that. i never thought i would hear the words gas the jews, f the jews and all of this anti-semitic rhetoric in the united states on college campuses, the halls of congress and worldwide. i have never been one to use nazi analogies, but this sounds eerily like the 1930s to me. all that i have learned in
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history, i have no idea that this level of hatred existed. what is your reaction to it in the 30 seconds we have. >> sean, me neither. i never imagined that on the ground of the united states of america we would here people chant effectively killed the jews. that is what from the river to the sea means. that is where the state of israel is. there is a response. there is one way to do away with anti-semitism in america and our war with hamas. that is total victory on hamas. defeat them, hit them, kill the terrorist. by doing that, this whole thing will change. >> mr. prime minister, our prayers are with israel and the people of israel tonight. prayer is for victory. not for a cause, but for a victory. straight ahead more evidence on the witchhunt against donald trump is completely backfiring. that is straight aheads an.
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it is election night in a number of states across the country. here with reaction is stephen miller. former white house chief of staff reince priebus. let's get your take. >> well, number one, incumbents that are popular are going to win. number two, republicans cannot keep stumbling and bumbling on abortion. number three, we can't keep losing close races. >> how do you stop bumbling on abortion? what is the answer? >> number one, the republicans have to clear up this issue across the state's with clear lines. like a 15 to 20 week abortion
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ban with exceptions for life and rape and make it clear. you look at states where that is set in stone and we don't have these problems. we don't have these problems in florida or georgia or north carolina. part of that is because of that particular issue. i also agree with what you said earlier and that we have to be clear about what we don't believe. what we don't believe is in abortion and the second and third trimester it is wrong. guess what? 80% of americans agree with that. we have to stick to the 80% issues. and yet to do that we can take that issue off the page. >> i will give you the last word on all of this. your take, stephen? >> let's stay on this point. republicans need to learn how to talk about abortion in a way that is going to appeal to suburban voters, single mothers, married mothers, women across
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the political spectrum. president trump's emphasis on having the exceptions for rape,, lack of mother worked. his emphasis on the barbarism of late-term abortions worked. look at how trump trounced in ohio compared to the results tonight. republicans need to understand as president trump did how to talk about abortion in a way that wins elections. then we have to combine that with ballot harvesting on the ground operations, door-to-door canvassing. to be able to succeed in 2024. >> we appreciate you both. stephen miller, thank you. reince priebus, thank you. when we come back we will check in with bret baier for the election results across the country. that is next. stay with us. type 2 diabetes? discover the ozempic® tri-zone.
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♪ with fastsigns, create custom graphics that get tails and tongues wagging. ♪ fastsigns. make your statement. all right, we're tracking election results all around the country in the mississippi governor's race as well as virginia, the legislature, and
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brett bayer is back at the big board. >> yeah, just, i just got some results in the referendum. ohio now legalizing marijuana. 56-54. you talked about abortion, that is about the same, 56-44 putting the individual rights into the state constitution. that may have other ramifications. virginia we're looking closely at the state senate. the republicans trying to take over the democrats. it looks like democrats are well positioned in a number of these races at this hour and they could probably hold on to the senate. likely republicans hold on to the house in the virginia race. the question now is the governor's races. you look at the call made in kentucky. a strong win especially in coal country and it comes back to mississippi. 43% of the vote, tate reeves has
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about a 15 point lead over brandon presley. this is a runoff state. they have to get 50% plus one. if presley was able to do that there would be a lot of suspicious minds in mississippi because it is a deep state. >> by the way, i have to give you credit. you have suspicious minds and "all shook up." thank you. thank you. that is all of the time we have this evening. live audience shows, we give away a lot of free footballs. let not your heart be troubled, why? greg gutfeld standing by will put a smile on