tv FOX and Friends FOXNEWSW January 31, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PST
3:00 am
mayorkas, you can impeach him, but he is a useless idiot or useful idiot. if you replace mayorkas another mayorkas that simply backfills at this point. you mentioned coming beaten in times square. i mean, this was done by four people here illegally and now they are on the street right now and you see the video on your screen without bail. they are released in alvin bragg's new york. in ti tish james' new york. here is the bottom line, until you resume wall construction and until you resume the remain in mexico policy and until you stop catch and release this is going to continue to happen. so you replace mayorkas, that's fine. those policies need to be reversed at this point. >> the fact they are talking about impeaching trump before a second term evan happens is mind boggling. >> joe: joe, thank you. "fox & friends" now.
3:01 am
>> steve: thank you very much, todd. 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. last day of dry january, januar. it's been a long month, folks. welcome to "fox & friends." fox news alert. overnight, impeachment tar heels against dhs secretary mayorkas have moved ahead in the house. >> carley: as cities reel from the border crisis, lawrence is in denver and spoke exclusively with the democrat mayor there. >> every hotel room we have in the city of denver is full. we are at 5,000 people in shelter and we have more coming every day. i think our city is very close to its breaking point now. >> brian: an 11-year-old is safe this morning after terrifying footage shows her escaping an attempted kidnapper. look at this. "fox & friends" starts right now. and, remember, your mornings are better because you have chosen to be with friends, meaning us. watch. ♪ ♪
3:02 am
>> all right a fox news alert on this wednesday morning. the house homeland security committee yesterday advanced articles of impeachment against dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas in an overnight vote that got heated. it was strictly along party lines. >> secretary mayorkas' actions have forced our hand. we cannot allow this border crisis to continue. we cannot allow fentanyl to flood across our border, criminals to waltz in undeterred. we cannot allow a cabinet secretary with no regard for the separation of powers, the rule of law, to remain in office. >> any shortcomings that mayorkas may have, frankly are your fault. he is asking for authorities to do more, to have more border agents, to have more resources. and so his limitations are caused by you. >> steve: it was a marathon session. 13 hours long. eventually mayorkas called the allegations baseless in a letter to the committee. the next step is an impeachment
3:03 am
vote on the house floor. >> carley: as that battle unfolds in washington look at this insane video a group of migrants in new york city are arrested after attacking nypd officers in times square. five were arrested. and four are already released without bail. >> brian: all right. the brawl started when two officers were trying to break up a rowdy crowd near a migrant shelter on 42nd street. while a arresting one of the men the others said hey i'm not going to sit there. i will jump in and start kicking and start punching the officers. after all i don't long in this country anyway i can beat up an nypd officer. what will actually happen in the manhattan's d.a. office saying it is investigating the incident as police search for five other men involved. every part of this incident could have been avoided if you didn't allow 67,000 people to call new york home who don't belong here. and what happened is instead of being grateful. they are creating chaos. they get free food. free laundry. they could do whatever they want. free shelter. and when they start fighting
3:04 am
each other nypd comes to enforce the law, they beat up the cops. so try to wrap your head around that. >> steve: actual number according to the the "new york " and they had this story exclusively, 172,000 migrants have come to new york city since, you know, in the last year and a half. 172,000, 67,000 are currently in shelters, obviously if these guys were over by the migrant shelter, you can connect the dots. they were probably livings there here wants the thick. and by the way, they did bust in all five people, two 19-year-olds a 21-year-old and a 24-year-old. of course all single males. and weren't we told a while back the people being let across the border were all in family units? anyway, one of those migrants, apparently has two open cases for assault and robbery. you know, he has already been arrested twice. in november he punched and pushed and bit a nordstrom rack employee who said hey, you can't
3:05 am
steal that $130 item from the store, pal. he didn't like that. he bit the person. in december, he punched with a closed fist a loss prevention officer down at the big macy's on 34th street and he was trying to pull off another robbery with two other people. how hard is it to get deported in this country if you are breaking the law and beating up cops? >> carley: that's the question. this story, this video that you are seeing right here, it's the cross section of so many things we talk about every single day with all the issues in cities and countries across the country where it's attacks on police, it's the illegal immigrant crisis. it's also the bail policies that are contributing to all of this. and, yeah, like you said, steve, one guy already has two open cases so he is now a repeat offender. you just have to think about the mentality of these -- this group of five people who by the way are claiming asylum. >> steve: they have all been released stopped and released.
3:06 am
>> carley: because of that it's behavior people are not afraid to get deported. if you were, and you know you came here illegally and you are on thin ice, you are going to hide. you are going to be quieted, mind your ps aqs and these people are attacking police officers. thankfully they are okay. >> brian: what you said is a cross section of everything. cross section of let's open up the border. let's not remain in mexico. not pressure other people to keep their people there not make sure the cartels don't decide to give up drugs in order to get back into human trafficking. and let's not put up the wall it. all comes into the major cities. you want to blame the republican governors for allowing these guys to get on buses and go to major cities? don't. look at mayorkas and joe biden. and look at their policies and executive orders that reversed donald trump's policies and it goes right back to those illegal immigrants on the streets beating up our cops. >> carley: also the cross section of the downside of sanctuary cities, right? if this happens in a place that didn't have sanctuary city policies. they would call ice and those people would get deported.
3:07 am
>> brian: ice defanged and sanctuary cities one of the first things he did forget it unconstitutional. the courts pushed back and said he can't do that. >> steve: one of the big sanctuary cities is where lawrence jones has been dispatched. he is in denver today. and lawrence, you were talking to the mayor there about their sanctuary status because right now it's at the crisis level. they got the highest number per capita of migrants in that city you are standing n america. >> lawrence: good morning, family. a big interview with the mayor here, mike johnson. and to go to the people that are seeking asylum, i asked the mayor, i said what are you going to do when a lot of these folks are on the street. because you guys just don't have the resources and he gave me this story of one of the migrants that came across the border illegally that she was a police officer in venezuela. and i said, mr. mayor, you got realize that not all of them are going to have that background. not all of them are going to be
3:08 am
people that are law abiding citizens. i mean, their first act was breaking the law. and i think it really came to the point of understanding a mayor that wants the best for his city but also has this loyalty to the ideology of letting migrants across the border. i also talked to him about the breaking point of the city. this is what he had to say. watch. >> every hotel room we have in the city of denver is full. 5,000 people in shelter. we have more coming every day. we have to reactivate the policy we have always had which is you can come and stay for leant of time but it can't be forever. >> lawrence: at what point does your city reach its breaking point. >> yeah. i think our city is very close to its breaking point now. we have been talking to leaders in d.c. around the country about why we need to take action here. we have successfully welcomed almost 40,000 migrants in the last year. we know what it takes to do this successfully. we just need that help and the things we need are yes we need federal dollars but the most important thing is we need work
3:09 am
authorization for folks when they arrive and resources at the border so you can add more security at the border and help process those asylum claims so the folks that do arrive here can work. the challenge we have is you will have someone arrive in denver admitted on asylum claim but their court date for asylum case is six years away and they are in denver for six years without the ability to work and support themselves. >> lawrence: i give the mayor a lot of credit. we reached out to these liberal city mayors every single day asking them, you know, to come on the program. to make their case our audience and not a lot of them do it. he chose to do it. later on in the interview i asked him did he have a message for greg abbott now that he has the pressure now. the first thing is very critical what he says we are going to show you later on in the program. we also asked them do you regret being a sanctuary city? would you change that? would you do anything different? we asked him about that and he is going to tell us about that later on in the program as well. >> steve: i can't wait.
3:10 am
>> lawrence: a lot of credit to the mayor, showing up and answering the questions. >> brian: right. >> this is a complete circle. we defund the cops. we don't back them. now we break the border and tell the cops to wrangle them up and create some semblance of order and they are getting attacked. the people who opened up their arms, now are losing their cities. i hear in denver nobody wants to live there anymore. you can't get a hotel room. it's a fraction of what the city was before. so don't tell me you got a big heart. think america first, your goal is to make the people of denver, make their lives better. not welcoming the world and demand federal funding for it. by the way, the federal funds doesn't come from the president wants pocket. it comes from federal tax dollars in a country that's $36 trillion in debt. it's nuts. >> steve: lawrence, we are looking forward to seeing more of your interview with the mayor. we are going to play it all three hours long right here on "fox & friends." >> brian: colorado is using resources to make sure donald trump is not on the ballot. that's the key keep donald trump off the ballot. that's your number one issue.
3:11 am
>> carley: that mayor johnson seems like a perfectly reasonable guy saying that the asylum claims lasting six years long is crazy. we have to fix that we have to secure the border. is he also talking about work visas which could be an incentive. if you are the mayor of the city and you have to spend all these taxpayer dollars on illegal immigration you can understand where he is coming from with that. >> steve: they're trying to do the same thing in new york state where they would let 4,000 migrants take state jobs. work for the state of new york. we are going to talk about that. a little later on. >> brian: can i say one thing he? might be reasonable, but he is not logical. he might be a nice person, but he has to play this out. what he is doing is not working. these people can't live on the streets. he has got to say there is no more right-to-shelter policy. whether it's returning the buses and creation a backlog and telling the president to pick up the tab by doing what he is doing now, he does not deserve any credit. give him credit for sitting down with lawrence. that's about it.
3:12 am
>> steve: he has been dealt a tough hand. >> brian: because of his policies. >> steve: what he is doing is trying to navigate the tough road that joe biden has given. all of the mayors. >> brian: he is on board with joe biden. now he can't deal with his own policies. it's not our problem. >> carley: going to hear more from him and lawrence later on in the show. >> steve: indeed. >> carley: former trump administration official is fighting for his life this morning after being shot in our nation's capital on monday. mike gill a father of three was attacked during a deadly night of carjackings in d.c. the suspect hopped in his car, shot him, and then ran off. police say the same gunman is responsible for at least three other carjackings, leaving one victim dead. the suspect was killed early yesterday morning in a shootout with maryland police. and we're now learning one of the three kansas city chiefs fans found dead in the friend's backyard was frozen in a lawn chair. the other two were apparently lying down. the brother of one of the fans
3:13 am
who is demanding answers says the new details, quote: paint a picture that we didn't have from the beginning. police are not investigating the case as a homicide. jordan willis, the host of the watch party, where this happened, is not facing charges so far. in washington, sources say the justice department is investigating missouri congresswoman cori bush over claims the democrat misused government funds that were supposed to pay for her security. but the squad member insists she's the victim. >> right wing organizations have lodged baseless complaints, peddling notions that i have misused campaign funds to pay for personal security services. that simply is not true. >> carley: bush has reportedly spent $756,000 on security since the 2018 election cycle. she is a big defund the police advocate. new overnight, a gas pipeline explosion rocking western
3:14 am
oklahoma causing flames to shoot 500 feet into the air. the fire torching nearby electrical lines in a small community right near the texas state line. officials set up a staging area at a safe distance away while working to turn the gas off. look at that my goodness. >> steve: that is crazy. >> carley: just hours from now five top tech ceos will face tough questions on capitol hill over the damaging effects that using their apps has on the mental health and well-being of kids and teenagers. the heads of meta, x, tiktok, snap and discord will be on hand as parents of children affected sit right behind them. a mother who is going to attend the hearing will join us in the 8:00 hour. and helping to stiff person syndrome causes muscle stiffness and painful spasms. the singer saying quote this last couple of years has been such a challenge for me. the journey from discovering my condition to learning how to live and manage it.
3:15 am
but not to let it define me as the road to resuming my performing career continues. i have realized how much i have missed it, of being able to see my fans. and those are your headlines. she got knocked down but she is trying to get up again. >> steve: that's right. a lot of people love her. and she obviously wants to get back. all right. meanwhile, it's time for the weather. for your local forecast. here is j.d. >> janice: hi, good morning. if you like it warm, we are going to see warmer temperatures feeling like springtime. current temps 34 in fargo. 37 in chicago. potential warm lows. so overnight lows that we are going to hit in terms of record 200 plus potential new recorded next couple days. feeling more like may 3rd for billings, montana yesterday 62 degrees. rapid city 65 for the end of january? which is more like may 13th. and there's your forecast today. so the central u.s. looks good. those warm temperatures,
3:16 am
certainly for much of -- i would say two thirds of the country. then we have this area of low pressure. that was our clipper system that dove across the ohio valley. we are seeing it develop across the atlantic. we could see sprinkles of showers here and mountain snow. and then the west coast. that's our next big system. that's going to bring the potential for flooding rainfall especially for california and feet of snow for the mountains. great news for the skiers. unfortunately going to cause some short-term problems as the system moves eastward. we will continue to keep you up to date. all right, steve, carley, brian, nice to see you. >> janice: good to see you, janice. >> steve: the groundhog how are going to see on friday is completely mixed up with these warm temperatures. >> janice: he is going to deliver a perfect forecast. >> carley: as he always does. >> janice: he always does. >> steve: terrifying moment for 11-year-old in arizona. take a look at this video. surveillance footage shows the moment a man tried to apparently kidnap a young girl as she was
3:17 am
walking to school. >> carley: my gosh, chasing her. >> brian: todd piro joins us in studio. >> todd: as a parent you watch that and heart sinks, that girl so lucky as the suspect is known to police and has a violent criminal history. take a look again. the home surveillance video out of glendale showing a driver pulling up next to the 11-year-old girl as she was walking to school on friday morning. joseph hops out of his car and starts chasing that girl who manages run away. police later arresting ruiz and charging him with king. during his arraignment prosecutors argued against his release citing his violent criminal past including when he stabbed his own mother in the neck. of the elementary school, the girl goes, to alerting parents about the incident saying quote the police reported that they had a person of interest in custody while this is good news, glendale police still plan to have an increased presence in the community next week. ruiz is being held on a $25,000 cash bond. keep it here, later this
3:18 am
morning, we are going to talk to a glendale police official about this frightening incident. you know, you think about, making that decision do i let my kids walk to school? do i not? i think when we were growing up the answer was obvious. you could walk. it was fine. when you see that your heart sinks, your heart gets in your throat and you think to yourself it's not worth it. i'm going to take my kid because we can't have something like that happen to him or her. >> steve: that man lives in the same apartment complex as the young girl. so it could be like that's the guy from my neighborhood, wait, why is he chasing me? >> todd: even more frightening when you think about it in those terms. so many of these cings are people who have had contact with the victim. just absolutely frightening all around. looking forward to your interview with that police official coming up. >> steve: all right, it is, indeed. thank you. also coming up on this wednesday joe biden says he knows what to do after that deadly iranian proxy attack that killed four brave heroes. >> steve: okay, yes.
3:19 am
what's he going to do? three days now? where's the action? we will talk to congressman derrick van orden coming up next. >> carley: pro-life activists could face 11 years in prison after praying outside abortion clinic. >> brian: roy mcilroy has a message for liv golfers. he might be changing his tune but i don't want to give it all away. ♪ ♪ players only love you when they're playing ♪ women they will come and they will go ♪ ...may put you in one of those... ...or even worse. too much? that's the point.
3:20 am
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 hi, i'm sally. i'm from phoenix, arizona. i'm a flight nurse on a helicopter that specializes in trauma. i've been doing flight nursing for 24 years. as you get older, your brain slows down and i had a fear that i wouldn't be able to keep up. i heard about prevagen from a friend. i read the clinical study on it and it had good reviews. i've been taking prevagen now for five years and it's really helped me stay sharp and present. it's really worked for me. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription.
3:22 am
3:23 am
i think he's having a midlife crisis i'm not. you got us t-mobile home internet lite. after a week of streaming they knocked us down... ...to dial up speeds. like from the 90s. great times. all i can do say is that my life is pre-- i like watching the puddles gather rain. -hey, your mom and i procreated to that song. oh, ew! i think you've said enough. why don't we just switch to xfinity like everyone else? then you would know what year it was. i know what year it is.
3:24 am
. . . . >> brian: unbelievable. that's all he gives us. that's all the information he decides to relay with the chopper blazing in the background, president biden claiming he has a plan without saying what it is after an iranian backed drone attacked and killed three u.s. troops in jordan, wounded 40 more, many
3:25 am
serious. one of at least 166 such attacks since october 17th. targeting u.s. bases in the middle east. our next guest knows all about fighting the war on terror retired navy seal derrick van orden. congressman, he says he has a plan to pay back those though killed our people over the weekend. are you confident that's a good plan? >> no, i'm not. listen. >> the biden administration projecting strategic weakness around the world since they took office have made the world a much more dangerous place. it's that simple. two of my navy seal brothers are lost at sea. interdicting a dow transporting conventional weapons to the houthi weapons. we had three of our soldiers killed. 40 injured as you mentioned. suicide attack by iranian proxy. the folks the mullahs running iran right now are not intimidated by president biden that's a very deep, serious issue for a nation and as a world. >> brian: "the washington post" came out and said hey, there has got to be retaliation.
3:26 am
what is your plan? what is your plan overall. you hit the houthi rebels a number of times. nothing has changed. you hit can a tab, hezbollah they hit us back. iran continues to our people are under stress 160 attacks. "the washington post" editorial is asking for plan. day care, what do you want to hear from the administration. what would you do directly after those attacks over the weekend? >> i would eradicate the can he tab hezbollah. they need to be removed from the face of the earth at this point. that's the only way that they are going to stop attacking us. we need to support the government of yemen against their war with the houthi rebels. so. >> the biden administration will lead us to that. we need to strike these proxies exceptionally hard. the proxies to send a message that we're not going to tolerate this any longer. again, i have zero confidence in the biden administration to handle foreign or military policy in an effective manner that does not make the world a
3:27 am
more dangerous place. i hope they are paying attention. you have to strike these proxies, send the message to iran if you fund filibuster that's going to attack us we are going to have a further conversation. >> brian: consistency you just told me about. what was the plan in afghanistan ended up in epic fail there was no plan. we have given them $8 billion since we gave them all our military hardware and they took the country back. what is the plan in ukraine? we are winging it, therefore, you. >> there is in plan. we are always reacting. whose job is it to come up with a strategy? >> it's the secretary of defense and the secretary of state in con expwrungs with the commander-in-chief to lay out an effect military and foreign policy and they have failed to do that, and no one can deny that since they have taken office, in fact, yes, the united states government has given the taliban over $8 billion since the biden administration abandoned thousands of american citizens and our allies to the
3:28 am
taliban. has anybody heard about any of those hostages that the taliban has took? has anybody heard about the american hostages that hamas took in gaza? no. the biden administration has failed across the board. it's time for real plain talk. they got to get their act together. do you know what is going to solve this problem? someone in the white house other than joe biden. >> brian: unrwa this organization had 12 people take part in the october 7 a tack. 150 funding hamas and terror organizations along the way. we have pulled back our aid. among the people who says give it back is bernie sanders and now this can a ferrari group. what do you think we should do with this u.n. organization who is there for aid? >> they should not receive a single nickel from the american taxpayer. received $121 million this fiscal year. the aid they pulled back is $300,000. that's the real money still given $121 million this fiscal year. they normally get 3 to
3:29 am
$400 million from the united states. that's where those tunnels came from in gaza. that's where the rockets come from in gaza. that's where these drones are coming from. it's money being funneled to them through the united states, through the u.n. and through all these different avenues. the united states government is literally paying our enemies to kill our allies and american citizens and it just has to stop last two years of the trump administration they realized that and gave them $2 million. this year they gave them money. they don't care. they are more upset that people found out about it. admiral kirby says don't tar the whole organization because of a handful. i'm pretty sure it's more than a handful. congressman, thank you so much for joining us today. >> you get. have a great day, brian. >> brian: carley has breaking news. >> carley: stolen legendary player. found burned in a trash can yesterday. surveillance video from last week shows a truck driving off
3:30 am
after vandals cut the statue off at the ankle. wichita police investigating the case say the statue probably is not salvageable. wow. six pro-life demonstrators are found guilty by a jury in nashville yesterday. prosecutors say the activists violated the freedom of access to clinic entrance act. the group was protesting outside an abortion clinic in 2021 where they prayed and begged women not to get an abortion. august six of the peaceful protesters are now facing up to 10 and a half years in prison with sentencing set for july. wow. pray for those people. those are your headlines. coming up, the biggest names in big tech on capitol hill today to talk about kid safety. kurt the cyberguy on what mark zuckerberg plans to say. but, first, a "fox & friends" exclusive. lawrence jones is in denver talking to the democrat mayor about fixings border crisis in his city. that's next. >> you got 8,000 migrants that are using an e.r. emergency
3:31 am
services and they visited 20,000 times. and residents are saying they are being turned away. how do you handle that crisis. >> we have both humanitarian crisis here and now we have a fiscal crisis which is we are a welcoming city. we are a citiy where we don't want to have a mom and 2-year-old sleeping on the street in a tent 10-degree weather that's what happened when people arrive in a t-shirt' a'd sandals and no support. symptoms can sometimes take you out of the moment. ♪ swelling, and fatigue. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses.
3:32 am
serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to. thanks to skyrizi, there's nothing like clearer skin and less joint pain, and that means everything. ♪ nothing is everything ♪ ask your doctor about how skyrizi could help with your skin or joint symptoms. learn how abbvie could help you save. meet the jennifers. jen x. jen y. and jen z. each planning their future through the chase mobile app. jen x is planning a summer in portugal with some help from j.p. morgan wealth plan. let's go whiskers. jen y is working with a banker to budget for her birthday. you only turn 30 once. and jen z? her credit's golden. hello new apartment. three jens getting ahead with chase. solutions that grow with you. one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. look who saved slider sunday again! here we go... (♪)
3:33 am
a perfect king's hawaiian slider. tastes good too! king's hawaiian slider sunday... the only way to sunday! the ball is out and there's a pile-up. -let's go! -get in the pile! ugh, i'll deal with this tomorrow. you won't. it's ripe in here. my eyes are watering. i'm a busy man. look how crusty this is. shameful. ugh, it's just too much. not with this. tide. tide can tackle any pile. that a tackle pun? just clean the pile, ron. okay. this too. that was easy. when stains and odors pile up, it's got to be tide. (sigh) if you struggle with cpap... you should check out inspire. no mask. no hose. just sleep. inspire. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com hi, i'm chris and i lost 57 pounds on golo. golo isn't complicated.
3:34 am
i don't have to follow a restrictive diet, and i don't have to spend a lot of time making meals. using golo was truly transformative. it was easy, and inexpensive. ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ ( ♪ ) with the push of a button, constant contact's ai tools help you know what to say, even when you don't. hi! constant contact. helping the small stand tall. the chewy app has everything for pets. hungry pets, itchy pets, scratchy pets, and most importantly, your pet. every day great prices and 35% off your first authorship order. right to your door. download the chewy app.
3:36 am
♪ >> brian: fox news alert right now. overnight. the house homeland security committee moves ahead on impeaching dhs secretary mayorkas handling or lack thereof of the border crisis. >> steve: next the full house is going to have to vote on it. that could happen as soon as next week. >> carley: it comes as cities like denver struggle with the overwhelming migrant surge. that's where we find lawrence jones who got an exclusive interview with the democrat mayor there. hi, lawrence. >> lawrence: hey, good morning, family. talk about living with the
3:37 am
consequences of your decision. and there's no city and no mayor that's had to endure the consequences of their decision to be a sanctuary city than denver. i had the opportunity to talk to the mayor yesterday to get his thoughts on the current crisis and what would he do differently? here's that interview, watch. >> so, mr. mayor, you got a tough challenge now. you got 40,000 migrants, that's 9 highest per capita for any city in the country. >> yes. > >> lawrence: at what point does your city reach its breaking point? >> yeah. i think our city is very close to its breaking point now. we have been talking to leaders in d.c. around the country about why we needed to take action here. i think we have successfully welcomed almost 40,000 migrants in the last year. we know what it takes to do this successfully. we just need that help and the things we need are yes we need federal dollars but the most important thing is we need work authorization for folks when they arrive and we need those resources at the border so you can add more security at the border and so you can help process those asylum claims so the folks that do arrive here
3:38 am
can work. the challenge we have is you have someone who will arrive in denver been admitted on asylum claim but their court date for asylum cases is six years away. they are in denver six years without the ability to work and support themselves. that means we have to supports them. that's not weigh that want to do or we want them to do. >> lawrence: let's talk about the work authorization. are you concerned that passing something like this will only incentivize more people to come across the border to take that route. >> this is why i do think you have to do both sides together. border policy and enforce the policy. part of what is in this proposal is a path to both manage that entry at the border in a way that we can maintain. >> lawrence: i have been back and forth to denver. your folks are very compassionate. nice people. always very welcoming. [laughter] >> lawrence: i don't think i ever witnessed them so outraged right now. i don't think it has anything to do with being anti-migrant. they just feel like the priorities where the migrants are being prioritized over them. i was looking at the numbers with the healthcare system.
3:39 am
you got 8,000 migrants using the er emergency services. and they visited 20,000 times. and residents are saying, they are being turned away. >> we have both humanitarian crisis here and now we have a fiscal crisis, which is we are a welcoming city. and, also, we don't want to cut core city services. right now we are in this dilemma. where we can't get any help from the federal government on work authorization on on controlling entry or are on the ability provide resources to cities. >> lawrence: february 5th is the day unless you and council extends it where it looks like you guys are going to cut off. it's goings to be a cap of the migrants that are going to be able to use the facilities. what's going to happen then when they are not able to be sheltered? they will be on the street, i'm assuming. and are you concerned about that? >> so we have always had a length of stay policy here, which was generally individual adults could stay for 14 days and families could stay for 37 days. we paused it ofor about four to six weeks during very, very cold times november and december.
3:40 am
every hotel room we have in the city of denver is full. 5,000 people in shelter and more coming every day. we have to reactivate the policy we always had. you can come and stay for a length of time but it can't be forever. >> lawrence: do you believe that some people on your side of the aisle, and maybe you include it because you are in support of sanctuary cities, share some responsibility in this crisis? because people came by invitation. >> i think it's clear we have a broken immigration system. i think both parties for four years own that because we failed to come up with a solution on that. >> lawrence: you have a little critical of governor greg abbott and him busing the migrants here but it seemed like if as someone who has been covering the border for years there was no attention on the crisis until he started to ship migrants to other cities. then suddenly it became a national emergency. >> i do understand why he is busing them. i think his take is that no one state should have to carry the entire weight of this newcomer population. >> lawrence: do you agree with that. >> i think no one state or city
3:41 am
should. that's the same why we approached it. sending people to three cities new york, denver and chicago. i think in the same way that no one state should carry, no three cities should also carry it. >> lawrence: i know you met with alejandro mayorkas on the 18th, the homeland security secretary. >> i did. >> lawrence: is he being intreechesd now the articles have been written. how do you feel? ddo you believe he is holding some type of responsibility for what is happening at the border. >> i think he understands the crisis. he has met with me multiple times. he has laid out the path we need here which is he knows the problem -- he is the one who said we need nor security at the border. we need the people. we need the ability to process quickly. >> lawrence: he said they have control of it though that they have operational control of the border. >> we are seeing the largest global migration in history right now from both south america and other parts of the world. this is not a just a united states phenomenon. but i do think this is why he is clearly saying i need more resources at the border. and there are folks on our side that won't like the fact that a lot of these dollars are going
3:42 am
to go to enforcement at the border. this is where you expect people to meet each other halfway centristen republicans and leaders in the party yeah i'm 100 percent on board a plan to entry. provide the resources for cities and straits that are struggling and to move the country forward. i think there is a path here. and i think mayorkas is pushing for it and folks like senator cornyn and senator lankford is working hard to get to that deal. >> lawrence: guys, we are going to have a teacher had here in denver seeing the crisis firsthand later on in the show next hour. i can't wait to have her here. guys, i was looking for that big moment where he said damn, you know, we messed up on this. we didn't get that but it was a different tone toward the governor of texas. >> steve: right. >> lawrence: sounds like he realizes the weight. >> brian: what is so interesting is that number one i love the fact that he sat down with you. smart guy, obviously. just his policies are all wrong. he does not see that pressuring these other countries to keep their people in their country,
3:43 am
pressuring mexico to remain in mexico, telling mexico you keep 20,000 troops on your border like you did in previous years, or you are going to get some tariffs. he does not see the ripple effect. that's what this administration did. they did all the pressure on those countries to stop the mass migration. he thinks it's just because of climate change or people getting tired of their countries or poverty. all those elements existed prior. >> steve: he is saying essentially that the joe biden is going to do this, we need the money. so lawrence, ultimately they are waiting for the paycheck. >> carley: governor act says he has bused 103,000 migrants from texas to blue cities across the country, which is really moving the needle. now you have a democrat mayors and governors speaking out. and it trickles up to joe biden who is now officially called this a crisis. there is no way he would have said that if abbott wasn't busing these people across the country. sharing the burden. >> steve: great job in denver and more with lawrence for the next two hours and 15 minutes.
3:44 am
also happening today in d.c. big tech ceos are going to be grilled on capitol hill over child safety on their platforms. lawmakers say what's going on? plus, the first ever brain chip implant on a human, how the patient is doing. and -- >> carley: it's a bird. it's a plane. it is actually both. a new drone can pass for an eagle and go undetected on covert missions. whoa. kurt the cyberguy is up next on our tech news. >> brian: fans weigh in on favorite part of the super bowl and top answer isn't the game. what a shocker. >> carley: commercial. >> brian: cut away to taylor. >> carley: the dip. >> brian: we can speculate ♪ (crowd cheers) sore throat got your tongue? mucinex instasoothe sore throat medicated drops. uniquely formulated for rapid relief that lasts and lasts. that's my babyyy! -ow!
3:45 am
get mucinex instasoothe. it's comeback season. after last month's massive solar flare added a 25th hour to the day, businesses are wondering "what should we do with it?" i'm thinking company wide power nap. [ employees snoring ] anything can change the world of work. from hr to payroll, adp designs for the next anything.
3:46 am
3:47 am
it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. ask your doctor about breztri. ♪ ♪ ♪
3:49 am
>> janice: good morning, everyone. look at these temperatures, feeling more like springtime. do you like it? do you like it allot? weapons, thursday, friday start to get in on warmer temperatures in the northeast which we haven't really gotten a handle on. here are the potential record highs today for the upper midwest that includes you and minneapolis, fargo, grand forks, saint cloud. feeling more like the end of march, early may for some of these cities today into the 60's for wyoming and 46 for north
3:50 am
dakota. there are your forecast highs so, again, much of the country feeling those above average temperatures. some cases 5 to 30 degrees above what they should be for this time of year. and steve, you were talking about pu punxsutawney pennsylva. will the groundhog see its shadow? stay tuned "fox & friends" 7:30 when it happens. >> steve: doesn't each seem like we had much of a winter to start with. >> janice: we still have more to come. i'm definitely predicting 6 more weeks. okay? >> steve: we'll find out. let's discuss on monday. >> janice: sounds good. >> steve: thanks, j.d. five of the top ceos for tech world in the country will be a question on capitol hill over the damaging effects that using their apps have had on the mental health and well-being of america's kids. the heads of meta, x, tiktok, snap and discord will defend their records with children and with parents of children, actually sitting right behind
3:51 am
them. kurt the cyberguy is here to join us live. kurt, we have been talking for a long time about the impact of social media. and in a lot of cases, it's fun to look at. cat videos are sometimes hilarious. the downside is substantial. >> the downside is enormous. these ceos all know it. they all know how social media, technology has grand devastating effect on children. it invites all kinds of harm into our lives. and we, so far in this country have decided all right, we're going to let these big tech companies police themselves. it's clearly not working. >> steve: right. >> today that hearing is going to be interesting because mainly this is a show. why? big tech spends more money on lobbying than any other organizations in the world in d.c., so they got these politicians all wrapped up. and you're going to have these parents behind them just trying to get some measure of safety brought to the landscape, some
3:52 am
form of regulation, some form of thoughtful foot forward so we get a little handle on this. why is it the kids in for god's sake china kids have a better life against. they don't allow this garbage we are allowing in this country. >> steve: average age of a member of congress is a significant number. it's not like in the teens or 20's. like the people who use these apps. and so these congressman and women are going to be asking questions they don't really understand like about an algorithm. what the heck is an algorithm? because we have talked about lou the algorithms, particularly with tiktok are designed to make it so intoxicating. you can't just put down your phone. >> exactly. even for example, a parent of a girl who became anorexic and then was on social media and instagram was pushed, content and photos, encouraging her to be even more anorexic. it's caused so much harm. at the same time, these
3:53 am
companies know they are doing it. they will say hey, show us your algorithm. no, that's our secret sauce. that's our business secret. look what europe did. it's brilliant. they went and said all right we don't have to look at your algorithm you are going to show this independent body and they will tell us whether your algorithm is harmful or not and we won't let the secret out of the bag. is that fair? they agreed to it. >> steve: let's see what happens on capitol hill. we got two more stories and we only have one minute. elon musk company has implanted this chip in somebody's head. >> september we are here saying who wants to do this? >> steve: apparently the person is in stable condition. ultimately, 15 seconds. what is it supposed to do. >> if you are disabled or if you have some other form of disadvantage mentally in life, this would enable your brain to combine with this chip and then control a smart phone or other device. >> steve: ultimately, it was aimed at q quadriplegics in hops
3:54 am
that they might move one day. >> this is a huge guinea pig experiment we will find out what really happens here. >> steve: a dutch company has created a drone that looks like an eagle. >> looking up in the sky this will look like an eagle, it will look like a bird. it is not spy technology flying over your house momentarily. wing span 6.5 feet. >> steve: looks real. >> goes 37 miles per hour. all kinds of surveillance devices on it. cameras, you name it. pay load. it can fly over an hour between charges. it's a smart invention for reconnaissance but kind of dangerous if it gets in the wrong hands. >> steve: no kidding. all right. cyberguy. thank you very much. for all the information about technical stuff, i always go to cyberguy.com and you should, too. kurt, thank you very much. >> good to see you. >> steve: let's see 7 minutes before the top of the hour, brian. >> brian: talk a little bit of sports and begin with golf. roy mcilroy turning the page after months of criticism tour's
3:55 am
planned liv golf saudi backed. he now says is he opposed to sanctioning golfers who defected to the saudi backed tour and wanted to come back to the pga tour. >> i don't think there should be a punishment for -- i'm -- obviously i have changed my tune on that because i see where golf is and i see that having a diminished pga tour and having a diminished liv tour or anything else is bad for both parties. >> brian: wow. that is a major change. rory's comments coming after notable golfers like jon rahm and tyrell left the pga tour for liv golf. what is your favorite part of the super bowl? new poll says more people are interested in the party than the game. over half of americans say they tune in for the halftime show 45% say they look forward to over-the-top commercials mostly followed by drinks and of course the food and snacks a little
3:56 am
disappointed in america. can i just say? all right. meanwhile to this: fox news alert. this just in nearly one year after the train derailment in east palestine, ohio, president biden is going to finally visit that small town next month. peter doocy just broke that news. he will join us at the top of the hour. ♪ i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema, and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. i move so much better because of cosentyx. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. so... - we're engaged! - we're engaged! congrats carol! your youngest finally popped the question. but now, you're really going to have to get those new dentures.
3:57 am
after all, you need a smile that matches the moment. so this might be a good time to mention that aspen dental can create natural looking dentures in no time. just for you! and that comes with $0 down plus 0% interest if paid in full in 18 months. helping mothers of grooms look their best. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner. my name is sister monica claire. because of tiktok, i've created a community where people can feel safe asking questions about spirituality.
3:58 am
i try to provide a really accessible way of them learning about religion and spirituality, that's not intimidating. somebody in the comments said, i have no idea how i got on nun talk, but i'm not mad about it. i'm going to teach you how to pray. i'm going to teach you how to meditate, how to connect with a higher power, because we need that. we need strength and comfort. when it comes to clogged gutters, you might say i've seen it all: leaves, spinners, wiffle balls, you name it. because any gutter open to the elements is gonna gather debris and clog over time. and that can cause all kinds of problems. but get leaffilter and the problem is solved. leaffilter's patented technology keeps debris out of your gutters for the life of your home, so you never have to deal with clogged gutters again. i hate heights. every few months i'd have to go up there and shake and wobble. so we got leaffilter. all the stress is gone. it really gives us peace of mind, knowing that our gutters are clog free for life.
3:59 am
i would recommend them in a heartbeat. i used to cringe every time it rains. now i'm on the porch with my coffee. home inspectors, roofers, general contractors. all kinds of pros recommend leaffilter. and i'm one of them. so when experience matters get leaffilter. call 833.leaf.filter, or visit leaffilter.com today. - i got the cabin for three days. it's gonna be sweet! what? i'm 12 hours short. - have a fun weekend. - ♪ unnecessary action hero! unnecessary. ♪ - was that necessary? - no. neither is a blown weekend. with paycom, employees do their own payroll so you can fix problems before they become problems. - hmm! get paycom and make the unnecessary, unnecessary. - see you down the line.
48 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on