Skip to main content

tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  November 8, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST

6:00 am
>> watch fox all day. 9:00 high stakes senate hearing on the border. the middle screen. hearing on free speech in college campuses and ivanka trump on the stand. >> bill: as you mentioned it will be high noon on the hill for secretary mayokas.
6:01 am
given the news around the world with the middle east on fire the border issue hasn't gotten the attention it needs. he testifies on the senate side. migrant encounters hit the highest levels ever recorded. we're monitoring that. we want to start with what has been a big blue night for the democrats. they overcame the president's dismal poll numbers racking up some big wins on election night. question, what does it mean for 2024? we'll chew on that for some time. good morning. >> dana: i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." chances are that mayokas will say the border is closed. >> bill: good chance. >> dana: i think he will probably say that again and again. let's talk about politics. big night for democrats. kept the governorship in kentucky. >> also in virginia democrats kept the senate and flipped the house. those results have denied republican governor glenn
6:02 am
youngkin's bid to control government in the state of virginia. the commonwealth there. it was a race heavily defined by abortion. >> dana: reproductive rights were on the ballot in ohio. the seventh state to protect access to abortion since the supreme court everyturnd roe v. wade. >> bill: president biden calls it a win for democracy. his poll numbers continue to flounder. there is a ton to get to. let's start in chicago with garrett tenney who begins coverage there. good morning, garrett. >> good morning. this is another big win for abortion rights and it shows that more than a year after the supreme court overturned roe v. wade this is still a big motivating issue for voters. even in red states like ohio where republicans currently control the legislature and most major state offices. voters overwhelmingly voted to enshrine abortion rights in the ohio constitution, 56 to 43%
6:03 am
guaranteeing a woman has access to abortion up to the point of feet all viability. that will be determined by her physician. the measure also overturns a state law banning abortions with no exceptions for rape or incest that was being blocked by legal challenges. both sides were implementing lessons learned from the mid-term elections and pro-life groups were op mystic a win would give them momentum heading into next year. >> that would give the pro-life movement some momentum going into 2024. and would be the end of the abortion industry's winning streak on ballot measures in the state. we have seen a lot of success in ohio, throughout this campaign. we have been more pro-active and aggressive. knocked an more doors in ohio and i think in ohio we found a winning strategy that can be applied in several other states going forward in 2024.
6:04 am
>> pro-life groups will have to re-evaluate the strategies. several more states are expected to have abortion on the ballot. president joe biden is trying to grab onto that success and energy issuing a statement that says in part ohioans and voters across the country rejected attempt by maga republican elected officials to impose extreme abortion bans. this dangerous agenda is out of step with the vast majority of americans. florida, south dakota, missouri and arizona are among the states expected to have abortion on the ballot. but as we saw last night in other races, it is likely going to be an issue in races across the country. >> bill: you are playing hurt today. i feel like i need a cup of tea and you deserve one. thank you, garrett. the senate leadership fund american crossroads. steven, we have a ton to get to. give us your view of the results from last night as we chew on them today. >> absolutely.
6:05 am
it was not a great night for the republican party especially in virginia and kentucky as you have discussed. there is no way to sugar coat it. in addition republicans have a continued problem with politics of abortion. we've been saying since june that the party will have to start to deal with that more effectively or more election nights like last night. i do think that the pro-abortion forces are able to create this choice between no abortion access and abortion access and voters will go in that direction to counter that republicans will have to talk about what they believe in, which is some amount of abortion access. quite a lot under a 15 week limit versus absolutely no legal protections for the life that's inside the womb. unless that happens, unless republican candidates and politicians really start to talk about where they are and persuade people they aren't going to win on that issue. >> dana: i thought that youngkin tried to be up front on it.
6:06 am
tons of ads, 40% of the ads were about abortion in virginia from the democratic side. glenn youngkin was willing to talk about it. he didn't shy away from it. that didn't work, either. >> i think he has a great message on it and one that does connect with voters. the problem was in many of these campaigns you had unrelenting advertising by the democrats accusing republicans in many cases falsely of supporting no abortion access whatsoever. and there wasn't a lot of response on the airwaves pushing back on that. republican candidate would run and ad or two and deal with it generically. that's a false attack. they wouldn't say where they stand. it is something you have to dig into and say where you are and why you stand for it. that didn't happen. >> bill: there will be deep analysis on this. ohio is different from virginia. virginia is different from ohio.
6:07 am
virginia went between 1964 and 2008 not voting for a democrat for the white house. barack obama changed that and they've only gotten blue ever since. i this i the anomaly is when youngkin won in 2021. it stunned everybody but we have to recall, steve, that it was three months after the withdrawal from afghanistan, which was fresh on the minds of many people. and just a quick answer on that before i move on to some abortion issues here. >> that was some of it. the other part about glenn youngkin when he ran two years ago he focused just entirely on quality of life issues. not an ideological campaign. he was very focused on making life better for virginians and people responded to that. i think when we get more in the ideological issues it is harder to connect with voters and sometimes we're preaching to our own choir and don't realize nobody else is listening to what we're saying. >> dana: let me ask you another question. we're getting lots of messages this morning.
6:08 am
some people say the republicans have a fundraising deficit. and also others are saying they have a get out the vote problem and early voting is a problem. are all three true? can all three be remedied? >> i have think all of them can be. i'm not -- i haven't looked at the voting patterns to determine whether we fell short on early voting. we do have a fundraising challenge, republicans versus democrats, it's true across the board whether it's low dollar fundraising, democrats are able to raise a lot more money. on the abortion issue one of the reasons they want to push that button is it has raised hundreds of millions of dollars over the couple election cycles. we do everything we can to try to level the playing field for candidates. candidates as well will have to step up and do as good a job as they can on fundraising to be able to compete in a general election. >> bill: looking at 2024 we did the research late yesterday. battleground states considering
6:09 am
some sort of abortion issue on the ballot next november. arizona, colorado, nevada, pennsylvania, maybe iowa, maybe florida in some form or another. nothing official just yet. those are the ones considering it. something we have to look at 12 months from now. thank you, we could go on for hours and like to but there is a ton to get to. thanks. >> i could, too. >> dana: thanks. >> when she chants from the river to the sea she believes it. she believes israel should be eradicated. after a long string of anti-semitic remarks and hate-filled rhetoric censure is a good consequence. >> you have no place in the united states congress if you can't condemn it. >> dana: the house voting to censure rashida tlaib over her anti-israel rhetoric. the final tally 234-188 with four members voting present. chad pergram live on capitol
6:10 am
hill with more. this is unusual. >> good morning. rashida tlaib is now the 26th member in house history censured for their conduct. bipartisan lawmakers including 22 democrats voted to sanction her for anti-semitic language. >> when you utter the phrase from the river to the sea, you aren't simply calling for the creation of a palestinian state, which is fair game. but you are calling for the destruction of israel as a jewish state, a line that no member should ever cross and so it's the right of congress as an institution to vote for a censure that condemns hate speech. >> she said she didn't call for the -- that language is part of the hamas charter. throb said she add vow indicated for peace. >> my criticism has always been of the israeli government and
6:11 am
netanyahu's actions. no government is beyond criticism. the idea that criticizing the government of israel is anti-semitic sets a dangerous precedent. >> gop georgia representative marjorie taylor greene authored a second resolution but the house dropped that last night. she won't revisit an effort to discipline greene for anti-gay comments. >> censures have become -- i think we need to bring down the rhetoric, to bring down the temperature and so i won't be introducing it. >> democrats also withdrew a plan to penalize gop florida representative brian mast comparing palestinians to nazis. the house wrestled with five censure resolutions for the past two weeks. it seems that's over in the
6:12 am
house for now. >> dana: chad pergram on capitol hill. thank you for that. a house democrat who voted yes to censuring congresswoman tlaib and he will join us live later this hour. [explosions] >> bill: on the battle rolls. israeli troops taking fight forhamas inside gaza city. they surrounded it yesterday as we learn that president biden said to have pressured benjamin netanyahu for a three-day pause. does bibi listen to that? he may not budge. check this out. >> it has been 30 days, every day is like eternity to me and i can't wait any longer because i know that he was shot. >> dana: beautiful mother's son is being held by hamas pleading for action. we'll talk to her in a moment. >> bill: chicago city council meeting devolved into chaos. what was going on here?
6:13 am
a migrant crisis costing that city tens of millions of dollars and that's just the beginning. >> but the problem is they will put 200 people in a facility with an unknown number of bathrooms, unknown number of bedrooms. we simply don't know. that's the black box the city of chicago has created. i've never been healthier. shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older.
6:14 am
shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. -ahh, -here, i'll take that. woo hoo! ensure max protein 30 grams protein, one gram sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals, and nutrients for immune health. (♪) so many hotels... [yells] [yells] [yells] trouble booking the family vacay? come on. comfort has free hot breakfast for the whole fam! they have waffles! and splendid pools! cannonball! ♪ with fastsigns, create custom graphics that get tails and tongues wagging. ♪
6:15 am
fastsigns. make your statement. the first time you connected your godaddy website and your store was also the first time you realized... well, we can do anything. cheesecake cookies? the chookie! manage all your sales from one place with a partner that always puts you first. (we did it) start today at godaddy.com
6:16 am
if you're a veteran wife, homeowner, and the family bookkeeper, you're the first to know when high rate debt is stressing your budget. but your family's service has earned you a big advantage. the va home loan benefit. with the lower rate newday 100 va cash out loan, you can pay off high rate credit cards and car loans. and can save $6,000 a year. that's real money you can use to take care of your family and home.
6:17 am
6:18 am
6:19 am
>> bill: lower manhattan, another day, another day for a trump to be on the stand. this day it's ivanka trump. she will take the stand in about 40 minutes now. civil fraud trial where a judge is overseeing that entire case. she is expected to be the last witness for the state before trump's team would take over and present their arguments tomorrow on thursday. court resumes at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. she is already there and arrived already. waiting to see whether or not she gets into the courtroom past the set of cameras and if there is a comment or two we'll pass it on to you. meanwhile to this. >> do you as a resident of the city of chicago believe that we should remain a sanctuary city? it's a simple question. [shouting no] >> dana: boisterous crowd in chicago city hall furious over
6:20 am
the flood of migrants pouring in from the southern border and coming north. [shouting] >> dana: protestors were blasting their representatives and demanding the city's sanctuary be put on the ballot. things didn't quiet down until a recess was called and adjourned. voters say the last word is up to them. >> good government requires consent of the people. what the mayor needs to do is lay out a plan publicly. he needs to submit it to the city council. and then the people can be heard through their elected representatives and then we'll get to a consensus or an understanding of what the city is going to do. >> more than 20,000 asylum seekers have arrived in chicago since august 2022. probably not going to end if the policy doesn't change. guess what, bill? next summer the democrats have
6:21 am
their convention right there in chicago. >> bill: we'll be there for that come august of 2024. talk about the money right now. this is the tip of the iceberg what they will experience. >> dana: and winter. >> bill: new york is a perfect example. look at us, okay? see what we're going through. see what's coming your way. >> dana: winter in chicago and new york is no joke. these people need shelter, an on going problem. >> bill: authorities in california ruled the death of a 69-year-old jewish man to be a homicide. paul kessler died after an injury he suffered from a pro-palestinian protestor hit him in the face with a bull horn. he then fell to the ground, hit the pavement. smacked his head on the pavement in addition to the smack in the face. the mainstream media down played his death as just another altercation. just watch here. >> 69-year-old man who suffered a head injury at a pro-palestinian and pro-israel demonstration has died. >> authorities are investigating the death of a jewish man after
6:22 am
a confrontation with a pro-palestinian supporter. >> california is trying to come to grips with why 69-year-old paul kessler lay dying after a confrontation. >> bill: the police came out yesterday and gave a long explanation there in california. this is the statement from the holocaust memorial in jerusalem calling out the world's silence on violence against jews. ventura county sheriff's office has yet to call it a hate crime. the holocaust started with words and small-scale violence. today we're once again seeing public apathy and validation of anti-semitic rhetoric and violence. see how the story changes in california as we go through it, if it changes at all. 22 past. meet this woman. >> we don't have a list of the hostages. we don't know their condition. i don't have anything. so i need your help.
6:23 am
i'm so proud of being an american, being an israeli as well. but i do need you now because there is nothing helping me now. >> dana: doris leber in an emotional plea for help during a news conference held by house republican leaders. you saw her live on "america's newsroom." her son guy has been missing since the hamas terror attack on the music festival october 7th. many of the atrocities carried out that day. doris joins us now. thank you for being here. after you gave the press conference yesterday with house republican leaders, you then went on to have many meetings. i think it would be helpful for us to understand what was the reception that you were getting and you asked for help. do you think you will get it? >> i hope so. it's help that i need. i need action now, you know. we've been waiting for over a
6:24 am
month now and nothing is progressing. so this is a time to take action, anybody that can influence or do anything, there is no more time. there are babies there, elderly, sick people that need attention and i need my son back. >> dana: you certainly do. what would action look like to you? >> what do you mean? >> dana: when you say you need action. obviously we want the hostages to be released unconditionally and immediately. that should be the number one action. when you say you would like to see some action, does that mean congress -- our congress passing some support in terms of resources or are you looking for additional types of action that would be maybe more something kinetic on the ground that would help get them out? >> both. anything. anything that can help. negotiations must be conducted
6:25 am
or started or shared with the people because, you know, we're lost here. we have no information whatsoever about our loved ones. and we were meeting with very powerful meetings from both parties and yeah, that's my plea right now. we need to do something. it's, you know, the sympathy that we got is heartwarming, no doubt. but it's not a time to sit and, you know, be sympathetic, it is a time to see what we can really do to get some kind of progress here. >> dana: representative ritchie torres is from new york and he had some comments that i think are very interesting about cease-fire versus hostage release. listen here. >> i find it troubling that more energy has been spent calling on
6:26 am
israel to enter a cease-fire rather than calling on hamas to surrender and release the hostages. >> dana: as we have a relationship with qatar and we could put more pressure there perhaps. i know the state department is doing their thing. you met with members of both parties and you felt that the support was there. do you think that the pro-palestinian perspective on capitol hill or in washington, did you find that to be small or was it troubling? >> that's -- it's good to have, you know, voices heard out and everybody has his own voice. but at this time, this is not a question of pro-palestinians or pro-israel. it has nothing to do with it. there are civilians. a human right laws and they were crossed.
6:27 am
so it's everything together. i don't think it's helping. the pro-palestinian problem is, you know, goes back and it's probably something that will not be solved. i wish it would. in israel today, a quarter of the population are arabs if they are christian or muslim and we live very good together and i really hope that would be the case, but that's left for politicians or, you know, diplomacy. >> dana: you want your son back and we want that for you as well. doris leber, thank you for joining us today. >> bill: god bless you, doris. unprecedented testimony. special counsel sat down for a closed door interview yesterday with the house judiciary committee. never happened this way before.
6:28 am
so what did they learn about the investigation of hunter biden? we'll check in on that plus this. >> i call upon my fellow colleagues from both parties to say yes. we would stop the holocaust. we will not stay silent as the 21st century holocaust unfolds before our very eyes. >> bill: another history making moment. the house voted to censure the democrat rashida tlaib, the only palestinian member of congress. 22 democrats broke with the party in the final number including our next guest. brad schneider out of illinois. we'll talk to him about why he voted that way coming up.
6:29 am
i'm sarah escherich, i'm the life enrichment director at independence village, the senior living community in waukee, iowa.
6:30 am
everybody here really, really make you feel like family and that they love you. our goal with tiktok was to enrich the lives of our residents and just to be able to show people what senior living can be like. i think i am a tiktok grandma. my kids think i am. i mean, we're the ones that are being entertained. time goes faster when you're having fun. ♪ ♪ ♪ we're building a better postal service. for more on-time deliveries. and easier, affordable ways to ship. so you can deliver even more holiday joy. the united states postal service. delivering for america.
6:31 am
6:32 am
6:33 am
>> loans. she will attempt today to distance herself from the company but unfortunately, the
6:34 am
facts will reveal that, in fact, she was very much involved. we uncovered the scheme and she benefited from it personally and ms. trump will do all that she can to try to separate herself from this corporation but she is tied to the trump organization and to these properties that she helped secure financing for. so you cannot hide from the truth and the facts will be lie the truth and the evidence. so we look forward to her testimony. thank you. >> bill: that from a moment ago. here is a video of ivanka trump walking into court here. bear in mind as you watch this from afar, real estate on the island of manhattan for decades has yielded billions and billions of dollars to hundreds of people in this city.
6:35 am
a case of this matter has never gone to court. it's the first one of its kind. so ivanka trump heads in and see what she has to say starting at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. we want to go inside? got it. dana. >> dana: the idf announcing troops have reached the heart of gaza city as questions mounts about israel's plans for the territory when hamas is finally defeated. mike tobin from southern israel. hi, mike. >> i want to tell you first that the evacuation of northern gaza has really picked up with intensity and with numbers. we see the palestinians coming out waving white flags pushing people on wheelchairs and carts and carrying whatever they can. to give you own idea how it picked up on sunday 2,000 people went on the evacuation corridor. monday 5,000, yesterday 15,000. the corridor was open again today. we don't know how many people are left. the problem they have is once
6:36 am
they get south of the evacuation line, the refugee camps are overwhelmed at this point. no place for people to stay. meantime the israeli ground forces are picking up intensity in the northern half of the gaza strip. israel says they have another high value target. a guy who was integral in developing weapons. they took out an anti-tank cell and a cell that fired rockets into israel. israel's military leaders say they are operating in the heart of gaza city and tightening the noose. prime minister benjamin netanyahu is getting pushback after he said forces will provide security for an indefinite period of time. the u.s. pushed back against the idea of an occupation. >> dana: thank you for the update. >> i can't believe i have to say this but palestinian people are
6:37 am
not disposable. the cries of the palestinian and israeli children sound no different to me. what, i don't understand is why the cries of palestinians sound different to you all. >> bill: that from tuesday, just yesterday. rashida tlaib, parents were born in the west bank. she was born in detroit, michigan. the house has voted overwhelmingly to censure the only palestinian american congresswoman over her anti-israeli comments. our next guest a democrat who joined republicans in a rare rebuke is with me now. so all republicans, 22 democrats. go ahead and explain to us, you are jewish, right and you voted to censure her? >> i am. we hear the voices of people in gaza and israel. the civilians who are always caught in the middle of a war. we are doing everything we can. i spent an hour on the phone
6:38 am
with an egyptian ambassador saying we need to get safe zones and aids into southern gaza to take care of the civilians caught in the middle. here is the thing. hamas started a war on october 7th with an invasion murdering, slaughtering, raping and torturing 14 israelis and taking 240 people captive and holding them hostage. as long as hamas controls gaza there will not be peace for palestinians or israelis and why israel is defending itself, secure its borders, protect its citizens and rescue hostages. when representative tlaib uses language from the river to the sea that is not coded language. it was the chant that rallying cry of the plo in 1964 before israel took control of the west bank in gaza. the rallying cry and still is today of hamas. calling for the destruction of the state of israel and murder of jews. so when a colleague elected
6:39 am
representatives and have an expectation to measure our words. to be consider at and to think about what we say and when we make mistakes to stand up and correct them. and when a colleague refuses to do that and throwing gasoline on a fire, that needs to be countered in a drastic and the record needs to be corrected. this was the forum to do so. >> bill: i understand the point you are making. the river to the sea comment she made she tried to clarify. the jordan river to the eastern mediterranean sea. all of israel. she said from the river to the sea is an aspirational call for freedom and peaceful could existence. my work in advocacy has centered in justice and dignity for all people no matter faith or ethnicity. you don't believe her based on your vote. >> i won't question our desire for peace. the statement from the river to the sea palestinian will be free is a rallying cry. it is an aspirational rallying
6:40 am
cry for the destruction of the state of israel and has been that way for more than 50 years. and that's why to use it cavalierly to put it on a video and put it out in the world and social media where she gets millions of people to see her interpretation, she doesn't interpret it for hamas. hamas says it clearly they want to destroy israel and their actions back up their words. we saw that on october 7th. hamas leaders have said what they did on october 7th they would do over and over again and why it's so important that israel defeat hamas, eliminate their ability control gaza and after that let's give the palestinians in gaza to build their own communities and an area free of terrorism, free of the control of hamas. but building schools, hospitals and industries lifting up the lives of the palestinian people. >> bill: hamas had its chance. 17 years they ruled the strip. here are two democrats who disagree with you.
6:41 am
some strongly. watch. >> i rise in opposition to this censure resolution anti-democratic and utter waste of time. thiss -- the resolution offered against tlaib is all about censuring her for her political speech. literally nothing else. >> bill: final question. i have 30 seconds. this issue is dividing your party. can you resolve it? >> we can certainly resolve this. the issue is we all stand to everyone in congress believes in free speech but free speech as an elected official carries responsibility and can't go without reputation. from the river to the sea is a call for genocide and the murder of jews. simple as that. >> bill: will you talk to her? >> i will talk to anybody. >> bill: if you do we would like to have you come back and happy to have another conversation. brad schneider, democrat from
6:42 am
illinois. thank you for your time. >> it's children, it's innocent people. [shouting] >> is the white house's view that these actions should be condemned? >> we're not going to go into specifics on that. >> dana: turning a blind eye to the plight of the jewish people. white house press secretary refusing to condemn protestors for tearing down posters of israelis held by hamas and now she is in damage control mode. joey jones is standing by to talk about that. texas becoming ground 0 for mexican drug cartel activity. fox news is on the ground and we'll bring it to you ahead. (♪) (♪)
6:43 am
(♪) my late father-in-law lit up a room, but his vision dimmed with age. he had amd. i didn't know it then, but it can progress to ga, an advanced form of the disease. his struggle with vision loss from amd made me want to help you see warning signs of ga. like straight lines that seem wavy, blurry, or missing visual spots that make it hard to see faces like this one, or trouble with low light that makes driving at night a real challenge. if you've been diagnosed with amd and notice vision changes, don't wait. ga is irreversible. it's important to catch it early. talk to your eye doctor about ga and learn more at gawontwait.com
6:44 am
this is your season to smile -- to raise a toast and gather together, to wrap up the fun and round up the gang.
6:45 am
to help get you ready, your aspen dental team is celebrating 25 years of affordable care with an epic anniversary savings event. right now, new patients without insurance get a free full exam and x-rays. plus, everyone can get 20% off their treatment plan. but hurry, because while the season won't last, the memories you make together will. aspen dental. book today. veteran homeowners. are you applying for a car loan? the monthly payments can be expensive. with an affordable home loan from newday, you can pay cash and own the car or truck of your dreams. >> dana: secretary mostly cloudy is facing a tough round of questions on the endless chaos on the southern border. he always says the border is
6:46 am
closed. the war in the middle east -- we'll keep an eye on this and bring you everything relevant. >> bill: hamas terrorists stealing food from children in gaza while leaders are living in luxury with billions of dollars in money. that's all according to israeli embassy. eric shawn is watching the story live in new york. what did you find out? hello. >> unbelievable. the people suffer on the horror of hamas in gaza. for the terror groups leaders is the high life. private jets, lavish hotel suites and fancy mansions. two leaders worth $4 billion each. the guy on the right is political leader, i've interviewed him. the guy is worth $3 billion. this video from the israeli embassy to the u.s. says hamas earns more than $1 billion a year.
6:47 am
take a look this man. these guys get a cut of all that. he can play table tennis. squeezing in a work-out at a treadmill in qatar. the u.s. treasury department says hamas's global financial et new york is crypto currency, real estate, legitimate businesses and tax and extort money from gaza residents. the foundation for defense to democracy says hamas leaders from enriched themselves on terror money. >> it is really the numbers are shocking looking at the sheer amount of money that some of these terror chiefs have been able to sock away. there is no accountability because there is no accountability in these countries that support terrorism. >> reports say hamas leaders have enjoyed the luxury of the four seasons hotel in qatar. rooms go for as much as $1500 a night. the company tells us four
6:48 am
seasons confirms that one is not living or staying at the four seasons hotel doha but we asked about the other hamas leaders and so far the four seasons has not gotten back to us about whether they're checked in or have used their hotel in the past. he blames qatar on turkey for codling hamas leaders qatar will revisit the relationship with the terror group after the war. turkey where some other hamas leaders continues to back hamas. >> bill: says something when the four seasons needs to put out a statement. thank you for that. eric shawn here in new york. thanks. >> these are innocent civilians in israel. >> why do you think this is acceptable? these people are kidnapped. >> go colonize somewhere else. >> what are you doing? [shouting] . >> anti-semitism on american
6:49 am
streets. posters of people i had capped by hamas are being torn down and shredded. >> is the white house's views these actions should be condemned the pulling down of them, or that that's a form of peaceful protest? >> from last week, right? >> 30 million videos have gone around. >> i won't go into specifics on that particular thing. >> dana: with us now retired u.s. marine bomb technician joey jones. karine jean-pierre had to issue this correction saying as a result of the hamas terror attacks communities and families are grieving. for the past month the families of those who have been taken hostage have lived in agony. tearing down pictures of their loved ones being held hostage by hamas is wrong and hurtful. it was interesting to many that she had to take that back in terms of getting the right answer and coming back with a tweet like that, joey. i think joey might have lost our
6:50 am
feed. he is staring at me, bill. i guess i will answer my own question, yes that's surprising that you can't say yeah, that's wrong. don't tear down the posters. now we have it. >> bill: this as the israeli ambassador to the u.n. on the rise of anti-israel rallies and meetings that have taken place. if you followed what the u.n. has done here, they are no friend of israel. they've given them literally the heisman on this. here he is. watch. >> when university presidents facilitate terrorists supporting rallies, we must call for their resignation loud and clear. whoever stays silence after the massacre of children does not hold the moral credibility to educate children. >> bill: we heard that from some family members on the hill who
6:51 am
have family members being held captive and hostage. >> dana: these are civilians and children. >> bill: when the two brothers got on. they look like twins and fighting for their family and he said the united states,, europe, if you don't eliminate this threat you are next. it was powerful. mike turner is coming up to talk about that. >> dana: she wrote a piece -- she runs the free press, she wrote in tablet about dei. diversity, equity, inclusion. it is not about that. it's arrogating power to a movement that threatens not just jus but america itself. she goes on-i started to notice the whole system rested on an illusion. a worldview that replaced good and evil with a new rubric. it replaced lots of things. cover blindness with race obsession, ideas with identity.
6:52 am
persuasion with public shaming. the rule of law with the fury of the mob. dei is not about the words it uses as camouflage. it is about arrogating power. >> bill: excellent piece. it is time to end it for no more compelled speech. no more going along with the little lie for the sake of being polite. she felt this 20 years ago but count define it. >> dana: she writes so beautifully about it. we'll pay attention. >> bill: we'll get joey back. he is out there somewhere. ivanka trump is at the courthouse moments ago. she will take the stand in minutes in the civil fraud trial against her family. we'll check in on that. the f.b.i. raising alarms about the risk of a terror attack. house intel committee chair michael turner out of ohio, republican, on the state of our national security and what we need to pay attention to now. what can i do to make a better cotton crop? we believe that the best products
6:53 am
are made in america and come fresh from the family farm. and produced under the most sustainable farming techniques. from our sheets to our blankets and quilts this is a product that can be passed on. it could be a family heirloom. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 20% off your order with code fox 20. [city ambience sounds] [car screech] [car door slam] [camera shutter sfx] introducing ned's plaque psoriasis. [camera shutter sfx] he thinks his flaky, red patches are all people see. otezla is the #1 prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. [ned?] it can help you get clearer skin and reduce itching and flaking. with no routine blood tests required. doctors have been prescribing it for nearly a decade. otezla is also approved to treat psoriatic arthritis. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it. serious allergic reactions can happen. otezla may cause severe
6:54 am
diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people taking otezla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. [crowd gasp] ♪ with clearer skin, movie night is a groovy night. [ting] ♪ live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla. ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. which hotel? ah! did somebody say “which hotel?” i'm great at this. dance to your faves in the spa-like bathroom!
6:55 am
or enjoy local craft beers, with breathtaking views at the cambria. let me be direct... you're watching football wrong! what do you call a guy in face paint that can't get the game? ...a clown! sorry, what app was it again? no, no. just give me a second... amateurs. ohhh! sorry, everybody. directv sports central gives you access to every game... ...so you never have to compromise on gameday. ...was that necessary? i was just illustrating a point. - oh. visit directv.com for up to a $400 reward card. okay. - [speaker] at first, just leaving the house was hard. - [speaker] but wounded warrior project helps you realize it's possible to get out there - [speaker] to feel sense of camaraderie again. - [speaker] to find the tools to live life better. - [narrator] through generous community support, we've connected warriors and their families with no cost physical and mental health services, legislative advocacy, career assistance, and life skill training for 20 years,
6:56 am
and we are just getting started.
6:57 am
>> bill: we're keeping an eye on
6:58 am
this right now. courthouse downtown manhattan. in minutes ivanka trump will be on the stand against the family company. nate foye is live outside the courthouse and what we can expect today. >> we're waiting for ivanka trump to enter the courtroom. she will be the final witness the state will call before resting its case at which point former president trump's lawyers will present their own witnesses to present the former president's defense. keep in mind that ivanka trump was originally a co-defendant in this lawsuit but a state court removed her from it because the statute of limitations ran out. ivanka is expected to testify about the valuation of her apartment as well as the role she played as a former executive at the trump organization in securing loans. just moments ago new york attorney general james said what she expects to happen today
6:59 am
while entering the courthouse. listen to this. >> she will attempt today to distance herself from the company but unfortunately, the facts will reveal that she was very much involved. we uncovered this scheme and she benefited from it personally. >> just after midnight this morning take a look at this. the former president himself posted on truth social quote, it is letitia james and the judge who are fraudulent for setting such low valuations in order to undermine and discredit my financial statements there by making me look bad. election interference. now they're trying to bring ivanka into the case. president trump himself testified on monday called it a sad day for america. trump attorney habba tells fox after ivanka's testimony is over they plan to ask for a mistrial that the state hasn't proven its
7:00 am
case and bias. they can't discuss the specifics of that because of the gag order in the case that was expanded to now include attorneys and not just the parties in the lawsuit including the former president. ivanka's testimony is expected to last into tomorrow, bill. former president trump's lawyers will question her because they don't want to make her have to come back to new york from florida later in the lawsuit. that's unlike what happened with eric and don, junior where there was just direct examination from the state. trump's lawyers will likely question them again when they present their defense later. but it didn't happen last week. with ivanka that will happen later this afternoon or tomorrow. >> bill: we'll watch it. nate foye in lower manhattan. >> insuring the safety and security of the american people must be more than just a talking point. we owe those who protect our country better. we owe them the funding, resources, and support needed to

61 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on