tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 10, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PST
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block has lots of issues that they want addressed. beware the media telling us what we're doing. >> carley: joe? >> joe: i don't even remotely know where to begin here carley. >> this is a program that falls under the abc news division. think about that. these ladies are warning us about the media telling us how to think and then literally telling its audience, you know, how to think. you got to love this doozy from joy behar quoting trump on things he absolutely never said he said, quote, i'm going to put you people away. i'm going to take all the journalists and take all the gay folks and i'm going to move all of you around and disappear you. i mean, the lowest common denominator apparently has a basement here. i don't think anybody takes this group seriously and nor should we guys, girls. >> carley: thank you so much joining us ending our show. we appreciate it. >> thank you. >> carley: "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ >> steve: good morning, it is wednesday morning on this
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january 10th, 2024. this is the 6:00 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" eastern time. coming up, 2,000 high school students here in new york city forced to go remote today because their classrooms are being taken over by migrants. >> ainsley: plus, florida's governor ron desantis making this prediction about iowa during last night's fox news town hall. >> we're going to do well here. i think iowa rewards the intensive approach where you are showing up in 99 counties. >> brian: he did do just that talk about a super commuter, a journalist who works in new york city pays less to live in ohio and travel to work than it would to rent an apartment in new york city like a shoebox by the way. >> ainsley: i believe it. >> brian: in manhattan. i commuted to d.c. this morning as a personal experiment while steve and ainsley insisted on staying in new york city. "fox & friends," according to reports starts and i think i remember right now and just also keep this in mind, mornings are
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better with friends. now watch this animation. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brian: fox weather alert. deadly conditions causing problems coast to coast. in the southeast four people dead, several others hurt, a the region is battered by possible tornadoes and heavy rains. >> steve: in the florida panhandle, they were incredibly hit hard. this footage showing widespread damage from a twister that swept through panama city in the panhandle. look at that. meanwhile the northeast also got soaked. right now more than half a million homes without electricity throughout the region as you look at saddle
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wick, new jersey, which is felony flooding. in the great northwest states like idaho getting buried by what's called a bomb cyclone. our meteorologist janice dean is here with the fox weather forecast. >> janice: going to be busy not only today but the next couple of weeks as we have this trajectory of storms that form in the west. they move across the central u.s. and the potential for not only/but more winter storms for the northeast. here are some of the winged gusts. hurricane force winds in watertown, new york, long island, dunkirk, new york, buffalo, new york. that was the big concern tonight overnight and into today with the power situation. speaking of which, new york, 147,000 without power. pennsylvania 117,000. up and down the east coast including florida power outages because of the storm system. the worst of it is over in terms the rain. we will get snow on the back
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side of this and gusty winds later on today. but this storm exits up into canada and then we watch the next one waiting in the wings. so here's our fox model as we go through the afternoon and the evening. we will get some snow great lakes on the back side of this but then clears out for a moment because the next one moves in. so we still have wind advisories in effect for the morning into the afternoon and into the evening. if you still have a flight out of the northeast, there are going to be delays because of the winds next winter storm is looming starting tomorrow. gulf coast in through the southeast. tornadoes again a possibility, a probability. and then we're going to deal with that area of low pressure moving sort of in the same track as we saw this past winter storm. main lay rain event along the coast and interior sections we will see some snow. the one behind this could bring our first winter storm for the east coast. stay tuned. talking about des moines caucus day on monday, and look at the
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temperatures. the coldest airline of the season is going to come in from the artic, polar plunge here. what's the big polar vortex is what they call it. it is going to be moving in. so here are some of the daytime high temperatures for des moines, cedar rapids. the bottom line is below zero and with the wind chill in some cases negative 33 on sunday. so, bundle up all the folks that are going to be heading out to des moines to iowa for the caucuses and we will keep you up to date. but, yeah, the coldest air of the season arriving just in time for iowa. >> ainsley: many are worried about voter turnout. thank you so much. because of these storms that barreled through new york last night. you have city leaders concerned about the migrants that were living at the floyd bennett field. about five miles from james madison high school. so they said, you know what? we are worried the temps are going to collapse because of the rain and all the winds. let's move them into james madison high school second floor into the gymnasium. let's tell the kids, the
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students there, tomorrow, which is today, this morning. we are going to go remote. they displaced 2,000 students at that school who don't come from the best economically -- economic situation. you're out and we're going to move these migrants in. >> steve: that's right. the neighborhood that they transferred these migrants to is a majority minority location for the most part. for the kids who go to madison high school, 63% come from economically disadvantaged homes. 52% are minorities. taxpayer cost per student. this is for every kid in new york city. look at that it costs $45,000 for every kid in new york city. what's interesting about the decision to go ahead and take and, you set it up perfectly, out at that air former airstrip that they have placed these tents. rather than drive the tents into the ground with stakes. they can't because they're on a
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runway. and they can't break the concrete. what they did is just used heavy stones and things like that. there was a storm on december the 18th apparently winds up to 50 miles per hour. bolts took loose from tents and migrants were horrified. yesterday, the city said all right we're going to move them into this particular high school and all those kids who go there normally will have to study remotely. >> it's unbelievable how much these kids have to pay the price not only economically disadvantaged overcrowded classrooms kids don't speak english. even language it's a different language. on top of that asked to stay home and do the zoom learning which we know is absolutely detrimental to advancementment of then we find out they are going to go to the classroom for how many days and then they have got to clean the classroom so it's probably the rest of the week. now, according to a statement from the city.
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they said they had no choice. the health and safety of migrants in our care is a top priority. to be clear, this relocation is a proactive measure being taken out of abundance of caution to ensure the safety and well-being of individuals working and living at the center it. makes me wonder what they're doing on randall's island on turf fields. they also can't drive spikes into turf fields i would hope. they i would imagine a location also a bit challenging literally is an island where are those kids going to go? on top of that, that was brought up byron desantis last night. here's an example of a concerned new yorker without kids, watch. >> i hope it's just for one night. that's one night too long. it should be -- they shouldn't have even been to this country. they should have came here legally like everyone else. i'm from israel it. took my 16 years to get my green card. why should they cut the line in front of other people that have been working really hard to get their citizenship in this country. they are already getting free
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new york ids, they're getting free shelter. free food. free clothing. everything is for free. and it's on our taxpayers. not anybody else's. >> ainsley: another neighbor said 1900 people getting thrown into my neighborhood half a block from where i live. we don't know who they are. they are not vetted. a lot of them have criminal records and background and we don't even know. students and teachers don't even know when they're going back brian and steve. the students learning, what about their learning? it's so disruptive. one of the council women a republican for the city said they should have been placed somewhere like the park slope armory. my question is out of all the places in new york city why would they place them in high school and make the students suffer? >> brian: you know. they don't want to put them in park slope it's rich. the rich people don't want illegal immigrant in their gyms, in their houses and in their complexes. you put it in work canning class community that's the key. they don't have much much a voice. long island places like
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brentwood working class community. heavily spanish who doesn't really have a lot of political sway. but this is a major story buried in debt right now. cops and firefighters. now additional fee force illegals, guys, they keep on coming to the port authority. no one is stopping them. >> steve: well, here's the thing it. could have been so much worse. currently the city of new york is housing 60,000 migrants they didn't take the migrants from randall's island because it's not prone to flooding. they were worried about the flooding out there at floyd bennett field. >> brian: i guess not the winds. >> steve: they weren't. the other is a runway with a lot of open space. but, here's the thing, in this particular neighborhood, where they moved all of those migrants
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in brooklyn voted for joe biden. >> ainsley: this is his crisis. >> steve: this morning they are furious about what has happened. they are now motivated to think this guy doesn't know what he is doing when it comes to migration. it's curious. there was something circulating on twitter yesterday. a fellow by the name of tom diaz said and haven't confirmed this but apparently he had heard that lee zeldin from new york has received formal media training. is he being vetted to serve as donald trump's vice president. what that would mean is that donald trump is interested in trying to flip new york state, you know, from going democrat as it has for decades to red. and an issue like this, with lee zeldin as his vice president, if this rumor were true, i can see exactly where that's coming from. >> ainsley: that would be interesting. it's really new york city that causes our safety to be so blue.
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other areas in upstate. place out on long island that are very republican. >> steve: this is where the migrant problem is a mess. >> ainsley: this is joe biden's crisis. when you are going to the polls, remember this is his crisis. you didn't know much about the crisis before probably because you didn't live in texas. now the rest of the country is discovering what his crisis looks like because many of these migrants are moving into your community. they get free housing. they get free food. they -- everything is for free. >> brian: laundry. >> ainsley: they don't pay for anything. when you look at what we are paying per student to go to school in new york city, more than 45,000 a student. and they are being kicked out and someone else is moving in that didn't come here the right way. i love the soundbite of the man who said i'm from israel took me more than a decade to get mere. we did the right way. >> steve: migrant kids ending up with an education that cost taxpayers 45,000 per kid. >> ainsley: good point. >> steve: look at the river and seat migrants coming across with the children. your heart breaks for it.
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the number of kids that wound up in new york city schools. just remember, see an invisible 45 k on each one of those kids. >> brian: nothing wrong but thinking about your country first but also nothing wrong with those kids. i'm watching 7-year-olds get off the school bus go into a will hoovment it's a tough situation. we have nothing against those kids. they are put into this situation. their parents thought it would be a great idea to come to measure. we just can't absorb it and our president can't understand it. governor desantis knows new york story is a national story. listen to him last night. >> you talk about putting americans last. you're having these kids -- you are depriving these kids of in-person education to be able to house people that don't have a right to be here to begin with? that's joe biden's america in a nutshell. so i think it's disgraceful that that's happening. so, this has been one of biden -- probably the biggest failure just simply because he has more control over this. there is certain things the president may not have direct control over. he is causing this. he could stop it and he is
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chooses not to stop it. >> steve: is he absolutely right. that was taken -- that soundbite came at a west des moines, iowa town hall after the town hall he had last night here on fox. tonight on fox, 9:00 p.m. eastern time. donald trump is going to sit down with bret and martha. you are going to want to see it is must-see tv. >> ainsley: did you see the hecklers last night with martha. >> steve: yeah. >> brian: on your point with lee zeldin. another person is elise stefanik from new york getting popular by day. she going to be on in a couple hours right here. word is that she is a finalist to be a running mate should he get the nomination. >> steve: ask if she is getting formal media training that's what lee jeld is. >> brian: lee doesn't need any training is he experienced. >> steve: that's what i'm saying. is he apparently getting the training. all right. 6:14 here now in the east. coming up fallout over secretary lloyd austin's health issues. the white house unaware of his
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cancer diagnosis until yesterday. >> nobody at the white house knew that secretary austin had prostate cancer until this morning and the president was informed immediately after. >> steve: how is that possible? coming up the calls for accountability straight ahead. >> brian: not even trying to cover for him either because he can't do it. growing violence inside classrooms. an ohio teacher attacked by her student now left with brain damage. what's going on in america's schools? >> ainsley: and tall and order. one husk yes, sir scapes the pet shelter to get a midnight snack not before breaking out his furry friends. >> steve: jail break ♪ put your heads on my shoulder like this ain't our first time ♪ girl, don't worry about
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a tv station interrupt ago live broadcast. [shouting] [gunfire] >> carley: terrifying. police arrested the 13 men responsible for that attack. but the country has been in safety emergency since monday after a high profile gang leader escaped prison. boeing's president and ceo leading all-employee meeting yesterday saying it's company's fault after a door panel flew off a 737 max 9 jet mid-air. >> approach this number one acknowledging our mistake. we are going to approach it with 100 percent and complete transparency every step of the way. >> carley: he says the company will work with the ntsb to determine the cause of last week's taferg incident. boeing's 737 max planes have been grounded worldwide for
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immediate inspection. presidential candidate ron desantis making a prediction at last night's fox news town hall about how his campaign will father ifarein monday's iowa ca. >> we will do here rewards the approach showing up in 99 counties. i have answered questions from everyone in all corners of the state. >> carley: coming up next hour, we have a voter panel share their thoughts on the race. and how about this? interesting story here. vice president kamala harris created her own signature candle scent and she apparently won't let anyone have it, including her successor in california, according to the "l.a. times." quote, senator alex padilla whose staff called and asked her to produce 125 candles using harris' scent for an event he was hosting. harris' office gave padilla permission to produce a similar candle but asked that he use a different scent. harris' candle features a
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jazmine fragrant. they reportedly often given out as gifts that sounds lovely and strange at the same time, ainsley. >> ainsley: i was going to say that's very weird. she won't share the candle scent and the vice president has a candle. >> carley: not many people have their own signature candle. >> ainsley: we need to focus on the country and not t the candl. thank you so much, carley. ohio teacher underwent brain surgery after 15-year-old student attacked her while hallucinating on drugs. this a growing list of violent encounters after a new study found 33% of teachersy threatened by students during the pandemic. the next guest says it is the direct result of social isolation from school closures. clinical psychologist dr. kevin gilliland joins us now. dr. gilliland, thanks for being here. >> good to see you, too. good to be here. ainsley: what is happening? we heard the story. could you imagine these teachers don't get paid a lot. they are there to make this
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world a better place for our students. they get punched in the head by a student hallucinating. now she had to have her skull cap removed and have brain surgery. why is this happening? >> i'm going to go back to the story in the last segment. so, we just displaced students for migrants. that was our best decision-making? and then you say oh we are going to be proactive. so you thought ahead and made a stupid decision. and i'm sorry, it's asinine because what we know for sure is these young adults are already behind. and now you are going to send them home for remote learning for another week? look, i feel for what you guys are going through. i'm in dallas. so i'm in texas. we have been wrestling with this issue of how do we help these individuals and their children but also take care of our current children because we are behind. so when you connect the things that we talk, about right?
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we got to connect these two conversations of rising mental health rates in our young adults like anxiety and depression and then the isolation and distance learning, which is not great for everybody. and eliminates community. what do you expect to happen when those things get connected? we have problematic behavior. one of those is substance use. and another is agitation irritation, fighting with peers, parents, and teachers alarming rate. then you are taking substances where you hallucinate that's always bad for you. >> ainsley: at school. of the rise in student misconducted after the pandemic has gone up. it's 46% in -- 46% of all schools have seen a rise in fighting and threats between students. 56% of schools reported frequent disruptions because of student misconduct as well. i mean, these numbers are staggering. what do you think the real core is? because they are saying this is post pandemic. we have seen violence. we have been reporting on this
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for decades now. we have seen school shootings now. you know, teachers are worried not only about the pandemic and having to learn how to go virtual but also terrorist attacks and their kids beating them up. when i talk to a high school teacher, i'm always like in the back of my mind thinking wow, how do you do that? because the students now, they are so violent. what do you think the reason is? is it lack of faith? families aren't going to church on sunday? have you done any stories like that or any studies? i'm sorry. >> i think it's multiple things break down in the family unit. some parents not all are asking school to do what they should be doing multiple things that feed into this. when you have teachers scared to do their job and half are thinking about changing jobs or changing careers, we have a looming crisis and i work with a lot of teachers, school superintendents, and this is the major concern for them, is the
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isolation of mental health rates? absolutely. are we underresourcing not just students and teachers but parents and administrators. we have to shift how we approach education we do it in business all the time. we're not doing it to meet the clear challenges and demands of these young adults send you home for another week that some migrants can stay in your high school. >> ainsley: you don't know what stress is. you are not paying bills yet, just wait. i feel like high school and college were very fun but also very stressful. you don't know what you are going to do with your life. there is a lot of pressure to get a good job and you want a better life for yourself than you had. even though my life was wonderful. i didn't want to worry about bills and i didn't want to stress out my children. >> and now, with covid, you have moms and dads that are at their
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limit child care all week not only does it hurt these kids psychologist i'm already bad at math. now i have to figure out child care and now you have to help with you math. >> ainsley: parents can't do it. second grader does better on math problems than i do. thank you so much dr. gilliland. appreciate. >> it good to be here. >> ainsley: calls for transparency after secretary austin's cancer diagnosis was kept secret. >> how can anybody be certain that the administration would not go to the same lengths to keep secret problems with president biden's health? >> if you could logically argue, and you can't, but, if you could arguably argue -- >> he's 81 years old. >> wait a second. >> ainsley: this all happening while unrest in the middle east continues to unravel. so we're going to have a live
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report about that coming up next. as the cost of living hits high sky rates. some are taking to the skies to get to work. one super commuter who comes in weekly from ohio joins us next. plus, "fox and trends." a 91-year-old woman on tiktok shows us it is never too late to date. >> i went on five first dates. this is how i met them. you might be wondering how many i kissed. i kissed all of them. [laughter] es, i want to keep it real and talk about some risks. with type 2 diabetes you have up to 4 times greater risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. even at your a1c goal, you're still at risk ...which if ignored could bring you here... ...may put you in one of those... ...or even worse. too much? that's the point. get real about your risks and do something about it. talk to your health care provider about ways to lower your risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. learn more at getrealaboutdiabetes.com
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that high school in the next hour. then right here after the 10:00 a.m. eastern time. the house homeland security committee will hold the first impeachment hearing into secretary mayorkas over his handling of the border crisis. then, at 9:00 p.m., the fox news town hall in iowa with g.o.p. front runner donald trump as the caucuses are only five days away. the caucus is on monday. we're going to bring you live coverage right here on fox. steve, over to you. >> steve: we will indeed. ainsley, thank you. meanwhile the pentagon and the white house responding to major backlash after calling defense secretary lloyd austin's prostate cancer procedure an elective surgery. lucas tomlinson details. >> doesn't look that way, steve. many people asking this morning when is removing cancer an elective surgery. white house officials say not only were they kept in the dark
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defense secretary's absence last week. they didn't know it was cancer surgery until yesterday. >> nobody at the white house knew that secretary austin had prostate cancer this morning and the president was informed immediately after we were. >> of course, accountability has always been the hallmark of military service. critics are wondering why the general command under tyisha did not take calls before he went under the knife. yesterday iran's proxy forces in yemen launched largest drone and missile attack in the red sea to date. it took three u.s. warships and a british destroyer to shoot down 21 drones and missiles and for only the third time in history, f-18 super hornets scored air-to-air kills. back at the pentagon the officials admit they botched this issue with austin. >> i think, again, we recognize the need to be better, when it comes to transparency.
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and as a senior dod public affairs official, we'll work very ladder with our senior staff to make sure we're doing due diligence and meeting the standard that the public expects and is communicated very loudly throughout this process. >> the white house is launching a review of cabinet protocols. the republican chairman of the house armed services committee has launched an investigation. our own dana perino will break this all down in the 8:00 hour. stay tuned, guys. >> ainsley: thank you, lucas. some of the biggest concerns here what else have they hidden from us or what will they hide in the future. he was under anesthesia. you are knocked out. what if he was needed for some sort of a security breach or some sort of an emergency here in our country? he should have told someone. i'm so sorry he has prostate cancer. i'm sorry for what he has gone through. he did the robotic surgery, it seems. based on some articles i read this morning. also, why did he say it was an
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elective procedure? yes, he made the procedure to do it. doesn't every patient make the decision to have their surgery? this is prostate cancer. >> steve: i agree it sounds bigger. i was reading today in the "the washington post," apparently this can be considered elective surgery because you choose when to do it. >> steve: anyway, the headline here is okay, so the white house hears that he has had this surgery o in surgery out of commission. the white house did not tell joe biden for five days. how is that possible? keep in mind, remember a couple scales ago we don't actually tell the president everything because there is omuch that comes into the white house. we just tell him stuff he needs to know. you know what? this is something he needs to know that is why yesterday in the brady briefing room there was so outrage. our correspondent peter doocy
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was actually in the front row. and he asked how can we trust not only is he 81 years old, but, also, the president, we get the president's schedule every day out of view for days on end. several days in a row. here is peter with john kirby about this big mess. >> if the administration is going to go to such great lengths to keep secrets about the defense secretary's health, how can anybody be certain that the administration would not go to the same lengths to keep street problems with president biden's health in the future? >> if -- if you could logically argue -- and you can't -- but if you could logically argue. >> he's 81 years old. >> wait a second. just give me a second here, bub. i will get there if -- if the
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administration made some sort of machiavellian effort across the board to keep this from getting public, then i think your question has merit and certainly is a fair one. i don't think it's a fair one because that's not what happened here, peter. what happened here is the secretary of defense for whatever reason, i can't answer the question why, that information wasn't shared. wasn't shared widely in the department and certainly wasn't shared with the agency. it's not good. certainly not good. clean-up is why, again, we want to learn from. this. >> steve: yeah, bub. >> >> brian: cup they will thing that's clear it's impossible to cover for him. impossible. what does it say with the president of the united states with the middle east about to explode like we haven't seen since the 1970s that he could not want to talk to his secretary of defense? the secretary of state not having to talk to the secretary of defense. with the houthi rebels targeting our ships with the decision to blow up three boats the week before he evidently decided on
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elective surgery, which is like saying c section is elective surgery. sooner or later the baby has to come out unless he wants to slowly wirther from prostate cancer. i don't buy anything that's elective surgery. what kind of administration has to communicate so little that you could let this slip by for two weeks in the middle of multiple hot wars? as michael waltz said in case of nuclear attack, you have 15 minutes to make a decision to answer back. we got iran with nuclear weapons it seems on the cusp. we know that the biggest increase of nuclear weapons in the world is maybe our number one enemy. china. a hot war with russia and ukraine. hypersonic missiles raining in to kyiv and the chief of staff doesn't tell or deputy he is out for days? if this isn't fireable. nothing is dysfunctional white house politics aside than this week. this is your job interview and you are failing, mr. president. and mr. secretary of defense as
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a general, you have failed your military training. you should be fired and you should resign as soon as you get out of your hospital bed. >> ainsley: the house armed services committee chair mike rogers now is -- he has announced a formal inquiry into the lack of transparency surrounding his hospitalization. also the chief of staff for the white house has now asked everyone on the cabinet to release their protocols. they have until january 2nd to talk to their agencies and find out what the protocols are in case something like this happens again. if you are in an emergency situation, who is taking over for you? i'm surprised we don't know that already though. that should have already been -- they should have already known that. >> steve: the pentagon has thrown a couple people under the bus. interestingly enough, we reported this yesterday, joe biden called the secretary on saturday night when he was in the hospital to talk to him. the president was not told why he was in the hospital. >> ainsley: i know. >> steve: the president never even -- >> brian: total dysfunction. >> steve: anyway, more on this later. >> brian: coming up, trump's immunity claims get a frosty
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reception in court according to some. as we learn the district attorney in donald trump's georgia case, listen to this, fanny will fani willis elicit aa prosecutor who she hired out of nowhere held a 8 hour meeting with joe biden's department of justice. isn't that interesting? fox news legal editor carrie could you pack urban who was in the courtroom yesterday said there were r. dangerous implications for the future of the justice system, next. >> steve: and, as the cost of living hits sky high rates, some are literally taking the skies to get to work. one super commuter who lives in ohio and works here in new york city details his routine coming up next. save save school pride. nebraska fans stormed the court after the huskers beat the nation's top-ranked team perdue.
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>> brian: welcome back. donald trump's immunity claim getting a frosty reception some say in court. a federal appeals court. three judges, they seem of arguments he is making that he is impugn moon to criminal charges in the election interference case against him because he was president at the time. meanwhile, huge story, more allegations will the georgia d.a. going after donald trump
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accused an illicit romance prosecutor hired. out of nowhere same one had two 8-hour meetings with biden white house counsel and billed the city for it. our next guest was in the courtroom. the trump courtroom yesterday. fox news legal analyst, you know her welkery kupec urbahn joins us now. first off your reaction to the three junction. how you perceived their questions pureght aside the fact the question of whether what the former president did around the election january 6th, whether that's criminal or not. putting that completely aside. this question of whether a president, once they leave office is immune for prosecution during not criminally.
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everyone understands the implication of how difficult it would be for any president to govern knowing that someone is always looking over their shoulder and the possibility of being criminally prosecuted upon leaving office and there were also questions put to doj along those lines as well. >> brian: one of the questions what if you kill somebody? you are president can you kill somebody. call seal team 6 in and assassinate someone? s that watt extreme example. if i fought in the iraq war and i felt like george w. bush lied. can i go sue george w. bush? can i bring him on criminal proceedings? that will be the worry. joe biden has a lot of things that he could be susceptible to. go ahead. >> one of the questions that judge henderson asked the department of justice was how do we issue a decision in the way that you want us reject immunity for president trump without opening the flood gates basically for political enemies as a license to prosecute each other once you leave office. it's a very fair question.
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>> brian: kerry, i want to ask you about this explosive. the georgia case which the president could not pardon himself if he actually became president again. there is a story out now that's not been denied that fani willis is having afternoon affair with nathan wade once married evidently getting a divorce now. hired out of nowhere to be the special counsel for this to do a lot of the investigating. it looks like he met with the department of -- with the department of justice officials with the white house. if this is, in fact, true and we have seen the invoices in the daily mail that he invoiced that he be paid for this. not only having an affair using state money where he got paid $600,000 and going on vacation together, this is also interesting because you can no longer deny that some collaboration between the prosecution of donald trump and joe biden's white house. >> assuming this is true. >> this is a problem from a public corruption standpoint for sure which siren nic because i believe his title includes something about being the anticorruption prosecutor looking at donald trump.
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and, you know, certainly, from a legal perspective, it raises questions of corruption and unfair process potentially. but, in the court of public opinion, it's even more problematic, especially if he went to the white house for two, i believe, 8 hour meetings according to receipts, expenditures about what? because his job is investigating trump with respect to georgia. we're waiting to hear from the white house what they have to say about this. i believe in the past they have denied collaboration with any of these entities looking into trump. this raises new questions for sure. >> brian: she wouldn't answer the question, fani willis, are you talking to jack smith about this case? have you ever spoken to him about this case she would not answer. that tells you a lot. donald trump will probably be posting about this at some point today. kerri, thanks so much. thank you for going to the courtroom and having your own firsthand account. appreciate it. carley, you have the other breaking news. >> carley: i certainly do. a case of paw and order. a husky named king is caught on camera breaking out of his kennel for a midnight snack.
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look at king right there. he's a hungry guy. opened the door with his paw, heads to the lobby to chow down on kibble. king tripped an alarm. >> police showed up. spoiled the party. he did clean up. how nice of him. college basketball we go. nebraska cornhuskers pulling up one of the biggest upsets of the season top ranked purdue with a stunning 88-72 win. fans celebrating by storming the courts. >> here comes the fans onto the court. >> carley: this is nebraska's first win against a number one team since 1982. those are your headlines, steve. people in nebraska are waking up happy this morning. >> steve: they're indeed. carley, thank you very much. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: as the cost of living skyrockets more americans going to great heights, literally to save some dough including our next guest who works in this building.
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a so-called super commuter who travels from columbus, ohio, to this building in new york city where he works every week. he writes about his decision to embrace a life of chaos in a new piece in the "wall street journal" "wall street journal" correspondent chip cutter joins us now. good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> steve: you used to live here in new york city. prices through the roof. pandemic hits. you decide you want to be near your family in ohio. you move there. then the "wall street journal" says okay. pandemic over. you got to be -- work three days a week. you hatched a plan. >> i thought is there a way that i can keep my toe in both worlds. and so i said is there any way that i could use everything that i have learned about credit card bonuses and airline frequent flier miles over the year and commute from living in columbus, ohio, keeping my apartment there and keeping my job that i love here at the journal in new york. so what i have been doing every week is commuting back and forth. >> journal is a money paper and you look at the big screen, you look at the rents.
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it's less than half to live in columbus, ohio than it costs here in new york city. i thought we were going to take that graphic. it's extraordinary. so you. your plan was i'm going to save a lot of money. frequent flier miles use those to stay at the nicest hotels in town. >> seems kind of great, right? fly in early in the morning 6:00 a.m. flight here for the first meetings of the day. you go about your day. do you your work and in the evening i thought oh i would check into this great hotel in lower manhattan, had this historic a trim. >> steve: wait a minute, too many points. >> quickly i divide decided this isn't going to work. started downgrading. staying at different hotels i got to the point at the end of this process checking into a different hotel sometimes every single night in a week. property surfing. trying to find the lowest price i could. this was the reality of it where it's not always that gorgeous. sometimes you are hotel out at jfk just trying to find the cheapest price. >> steve: checking in after the
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pilots and flight attendants from the airport. so tonight he you are going to fly back to columbus. weather permitting. is it worth it? >> to me it has been worth it. it's been a bit of an adventure. >> steve: you are near your family. take walks with your sister and short drive to your parents. >> exactly right. to say me that's been really special to see them not just on holidays and weekends close to my family like that. it's been, to me it's been sort of a thrill to see whether i could do this or not but, of course, been harder than i thought and i'm not sure how much longer this can continue. >> steve: when you see chip cutter at the airport, say i see you are a super commuter. good luck i hope you stay in a nice hotel tonight. >> thank you so much. >> steve: works in this billing. go to work. forced to go to work in new york
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dupixent helps you du more with less asthma. and can help you breathe better in as little as two weeks. dupixent is an add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma that's not for sudden breathing problems. dupixent can cause allergic reactions that can be severe. get help right away if you have rash, chest pain, worsening shortness of breath, tingling or numbness in your limbs. tell your doctor about new or worsening joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines, including steroids, without talking to your doctor. ask your specialist about dupixent.
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