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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  February 5, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PST

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with her through the whole thing. there were some tough years. i never lost hope. >> dana: then you married your new love of your life heather young and you have a baby boy together. he has just turned one. you celebrated at disneyland. >> tristan turned one year old. we were so happy. it's just incredible looking at my life today compared to where it was. >> ainsley: i love your show. i was watching season one yesterday. season two comes up. pick up your book. an excellent book. how you can end up overcoming all your struggles as well. thank you so much, god bless you. all right. have a wonderful day, everyone. we'll be back tomorrow.
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>> bill: we've got a big and violent storm soaking california. you have torrential rain turning roads into rivers. 11 million under flash flood warnings. we knew this was coming and it is as bad as they predicted. the rain continues into tuesday. we are keeping a close eye on that. we'll get you there when the sun comes up. worse than expected. that's how overnight the house speaker mike johnson describes the bi partisan border bill. the senate has been working on it for months. is there a path to passage? the golden question this morning. hope you had an awesome weekend. good morning from new york. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." so we were waiting for this bill text. it was out there for a while. yesterday senate negotiators released it. they are calling it the bipartisan border bill. speaker johnson declared it dead on arrival in the house. it includes provisions to end catch and release and make it harder for migrants to seek
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asylum. >> bill: he is urging colleagues in the house to take a closer look. >> some people are thinking that this is somehow like counting 5,000 people and releasing them every day. it's absurd. we increased detention beds, doubled the deportation flights. we add ankle monitors for people coming through that these family groups that come through to track any individual when we don't have capacity. all the things that we build into this to make it a much stronger system. >> bill: there is a lot to discuss with sarah huckabee sanders at the border yesterday. jeff paul is live in eagle pass. but we begin on the hill where the action is this hour with aishah hosni and reaction today. good morning. we begin there. hello. >> good morning, buckle up. the showdown is now officially on between the house and the senate. before this bill has been put on the floor over in the senate it all started last night with this
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bombshell tweet, that post on x by mike johnson that you mentioned. let's pull it up. it shook up everybody. i've seen enough. this bill is even worse than what we expected and won't come close to ending the border catastrophe the president has created if this bill reaches the house, it will be dead on arrival. majority leader steve scalise added let me be clear, the senate border bill will not receive a vote in the house. let's take a look at the provisions inside this massive border security package that includes $20 billion for border security as you mentioned. it ends catch and release for individuals. expands detention capacities for those families coming in, the kids. it raises asylum standards. now they will be asking the question could you have asked for asylum in a different country before coming to the u.s.? fast tracks asylum claims to a few months rather than years. and it actually increases adds
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money to expand the border wall by $650 million. also allows the president to shut down the border. a mandatory shutdown at 5,000 average encounters for seven days and 8500 in one single day. the last piece is causing heartburn in most chambers. the 5,000 is the number of encounters, not necessarily the number of people allowed in. those are the policies i just went over would still be working. i asked senator lankford on a phone call if there is still room for negotiation. he says he is open to amendments on both chambers. but it is not clear that senate majority leader chuck schumer will allow that. he could push a vote this week midweek calling the speaker's bluff. >> has to be bipartisan. the bill that you passed didn't get a single democratic vote in the house or senate. how will you get anything done?
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you want to make a speech as you admittedly say the border is in chaos? >> the border pretty divisive, right? if we didn't already have enough people up set about this, an impeachment vote on alejandro mayorkas could come as early as tomorrow. we'll know by this evening if that's actually happening. >> bill: all right. aishah, a lot to go through and you kick it off with the bullet points. we'll call it. thank you, nice to see you on the hill. >> dana: texas governor greg abbott hosting more than a dozen republican governors in eagle pass. the stand-off between them an the federal government. promising he won't back down against the feds in a showdown over shelby park. jeff paul is in eagle pass. >> in all the years of me coming out to the border this has been one of the most quiet periods. we've only seen a few smaller
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groups of migrants trying to cross into the u.s. over the past couple of days in eagle pass. texas governor greg abbott says a reason for that is the actions that his state is taking. he told that group of governors visiting texas yesterday there is power in numbers. >> we're here to send a loud and clear message that we are banding together to fight the insure we'll be able to maintain our constitutional guarantees that states will be able to defend against any type of imminent danger or invasion. >> governor abbott welcomed 13 governors to eagle pass on sunday. georgia governor kemp, arkansas governor huckabee sanders among the group. he delivered a border security briefing and they all drove out to shelby park. more texas national guard soldiers are there but putting up more barriers and more razor
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wire. he is limiting the federal government's access to the park to process any of those migrants who might try to cross. because the biden administration believes those very actions are unconstitutional, there is now this ongoing legal battle between the white house and governor abbott. many of these out of state governors say a big part of the reason for this trip was to stand with governor abbott and show support. >> it is very clear this is not just a fight that texas is having. this is a fight that all of us have to engage in. >> every state in our country is now a border state. they're coming to every state in the country and every governor having to deal with it. if our border is not secure, our country is not secure. >> governor abbott says he will not back down and that includes continuing building their own border fence. dana. >> dana: jeff paul in eagle pass. >> bill: arkansas governor sarah huckabee sanders with us back in little rock. good morning. you were at the border yesterday
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as we mentioned. thank you for your time today. listen to a lot of the reporting and doing reading. so much for root causes. does this bill stand a chance? >> you know, it doesn't look like it is going to go anywhere any time soon with house republicans pushing back against it. but i think one of the biggest things that is being left out is while we wait on congress to act, joe biden has the power to actually do things to help secure our border. he is just refusing to do so and instead passing all the blame and responsibility off on congress. he could right now reinstate the remain in mexico policy. continue the building of the border wall, and actually enforce the laws that are on our books, which would help secure our border. he has the ability to do that. he simply refuses to do so. in the meantime, because he is not and congress can't get a deal done, republican governors are stepping up. texas leading the charge. they own 66% of our country's
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border and they are putting the needed resources on the border to help protect our country and other governors are coming in and helping backfill with those resource and efforts and continue to do that. our country can't be safe if we don't have a secure border. >> dana: if joe won't, texas will. you were there yesterday with the other governors. i wondered if any of you have heard from a democrat governor who doesn't want to be named but agrees with you? >> they certainly haven't called me yet. i won't speak for all of the governors. maybe they've received some calls from democrat governors. but to my knowledge i have not heard of any stepping up and asking to be part of this process. but i expect that the governors you saw at the border yesterday, we will continue to send resources. we've committed. we had arkansas national guard troops on the texas border last summer. we'll do that again this year
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and continue to work with republican governors until this administration or we get to replace this administration with one who will take our border security seriously. >> bill: james lankford. republican from oklahoma knee deep in this thing for months now and early ore today on "fox & friends." want to play this. we've heard a little bit moments ago. listen carefully to what he supports in this bill. watch. >> the key thing here is changes to the asylum laws, build more wall, adds more detention beds and deportation flights, changes the ten year back load we're in now to weeks before people are actually deported. that's what the bill does. if you walk across the border today you can say i have fear in my country and you'll be released into the country for ten years. under this bill you walk across the border they say prove it. you have a higher standard of evidence. >> bill: if you enforce that it sounds good on its face. the other thing he said it builds more wall. this is a democratic president
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who would be signing this if it were to pass out of congress in its current form. when you spend the money on the wall is to be debated. a lot of that comes in 2025 and beyond. just on its face, governor, what do you like about what they have done inside this bill? >> i think anything that we're doing that makes it harder for people to just freely walk in. right now we have had under this administration completely and totally open borders. in the last month alone they picked up more people from the terrorist watch list than they did the entire four years of donald trump's presidency. so we have to put harsher and tougher restrictions in place. in the state of arkansas, we've taken and seized so much fentanyl it would kill 2.8 million people just in our state alone. almost the entire population of arkansas. i'm not saying there aren't some good merits of this legislation. but if they aren't going to take serious action at the
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congressional level then republican governors will continue to step up where the federal government is failing. i'm committed to being part of that coalition of governors that will keep fighting to make sure we have a secure border. >> dana: thank you, always good to see you. thank you for being with us this morning. >> bill: what is your read on it, dana? >> dana: another piece that might not sound that important of a headline but it was interesting that if you are somebody who comes across and claims asylum but if you're asked this question is there someplace in your own country that would be safe enough for you? if they say no and it's not true it's a way to get them out. a criminal record you could be immediately deported. that's not already the law is what's surprising. there are some things that seem to make a lot of sense. >> bill: a lot of it was tied to spending in ukraine and israel and spending in taiwan during an election year. if this is dead on arrival in the house, how do you work on
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those three other measures? what happens with those conflicts overseas? >> dana: they have a separate stand alone bill for israel. >> bill: sticky wicket in congress to be expected. and we'll see which move they make next. >> dana: indeed. >> bill: 12 minutes past on monday. let's get to this. so in case you missed it the u.s. and u.k. launched more strikes against iranian-backed militants in the middle east. tehran's proxies not backing down. who makes the next move? we'll get to that. >> dana: boeing identifying another problem with its planes. the latest snafu that could be putting production in jeopardy. >> bill: one for the record books. they call it an atmospheric river and she is churning in california slamming millions as we speak today. >> any time you see a mudslide there is debris coming down the road. >> they say if you leave we
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>> dana: a new glitch with some boeing 373 max jets to delay deliveries of dozens of planes. a big deal. the makers of the plane fuselage discovered who holes that may not have been drilled to specs. they had a door plug blow out that forced an emergency landing in portland. what story continues and we follow it for you. >> bill: the u.s. and u.k. launching more strikes against the houthis hitting dozens of targets in yemen. this is primarily a u.s.-led attack, however. this after the drone strike that killed three of our soldiers
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last week in jordan. the group remains defiant vowing to hit back harder. the biden white house walking a tight rope as we see on cnn sunday. >> the president has approached this with a straight forward principle which is that the united states will step up and respond when our forces are attacked and the united states also is not looking for a wider war in the middle east. >> bill: lieutenant general keith kellogg. good morning to you. in a general sense have these been effective or can you tell? >> yeah, bill, thanks for having me. no. these were punitive strikes, not deterrent strikes. a huge difference as the scope and style of these targets that they're hitting. it looks good on television. a lot of things blowing up. it is not preventing the iranians or any of the proxies from continuing to prosecute that attack. there is a huge difference between those two. punitive strike is when you go in and makes you feel good. blow up stuff.
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deterrent strike is when you go to an adversary and put something he values highly at risk. until you do that, and you raise your level of risk, you are not going to get any deterrence. they've domed it down. you want to get to a point where you say stop. you won't continue to do this. the only way you do that is put something at risk in iran. i can give you multiple targets that you can do this with. you don't have to go downtown in tehran. go to the oil facility. look at the spy ship in the red sea. you look at nuclear enrichment facility. a lot of things you can do. i understand, bill, when you do that you raise the level of risk and concern about widening the war. what they're doing now is they're widening the war they just don't understand it. >> bill: let me stop. we'll get in churchill, i don't want to cut you off.
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you don't see this group, right, in the white house, bombing iran, do you? the question keeps coming up. >> no. >> bill: i don't see it on the table, do you? >> no, bill, they're not going to go there at all. i know they're not. reminded of my two granddaughter they want my attention they grab my cheeks hard and listen to me. you want to yell at them listen to me. it won't go anywhere. historically winston churchill called world war ii the unnecessary war. during world war ii and why he called it that. if we had taken actions, the west, against germany early, they wouldn't have had to fight world war ii. that's where we're marching to. marching to a level of increased warfare, larger warfare and we haven't gotten ourselves out of that box and we need to or this thing will go really bad on us in the future. >> bill: afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world. we are throw for 20 years and
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what the houthi spokesperson said in yemen listed some of the other countries. our war is moral. if we had not intervened to support the oppressed in gaza. the american and british aggression against yemen won't go unanswered and we'll meet escalation with escalation. the saudis fought a war with the houthis for ten years. can we beat them? >> sure they did. i'll tell you one strike. you go after the leader of the houthis. he is the spiritual leader, the military leader. he does it all. you eliminate the leadership at the top they back away from it. the saudis never did that. we gave them support but they were doing the same thing we're doing now in syria and iraq and yemen. blowing up a lot of things but not going striking at the real heart and something that they hold at risk. in striking and targeting we talk about counter force and counter value targeting.
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that's what we talk about when holding things at risk. either people or facilities. we're not doing either. this is going to just continue. i don't see an end to it. you are right. this administration doesn't have the wherewithal and the intestinal fortitude to go downtown and make an end to it. >> bill: however, does it surprise you or bother you at all the commander-in-chief has not addressed the american people on this? >> this is huge that he hasn't done it. we all know better. he should have been out there right away not only when you lose the americans but the counter strikes that you are conducting. the fact he hasn't explained it to the american people is wrong. this is a pattern, bill. the pattern he has set previously. so it's in his dna. it is what he does. i have accepted it because i said he just is running true to form. other presidents have done things much differently. i don't care if it was reagan, obama, trump. they just handled it totally
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differently than this president. >> bill: thank you for your time. we'll talk later this week. keith kellogg, thanks. >> thanks, bill. >> dana: another dangerous atmospheric river unleashing its fury on california. a live report from that flood zone coming up. public outrage boils over after several suspects in the brutal beating of nypd officers are out on no bail. and believed to have skipped town. >> insult to injury, new yorkers we're been eve atlanta and have a heart. you give us the finger on the way out the door. thats not the way we should be conducting business and enough is enough.
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>> bill: 9:30 new york. 6:30 in california. nasty went hitting that straight. a storm pounding coastal areas with heavy rain, destructive winds. max gordon is live in l.a. with the sun about to come up. you won't see much of it today.
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good morning. >> good morning. the rain continues to come down here in los angeles. this is the second atmospheric river event that southern california has seen in a couple of days and the soil is absolutely soaked. it is giving way in some areas. you can see the debris that spilled down the roadway. the rain continues to come down and the water continues to flow. you can see this street here in laurel canyon in l.a. just inundated with water. now, this neighborhood apparently is home to some celebrities and as you can see around me, it is also home to news crews right now as people here come to document what's going on in los angeles. you can see also some of the rocks that have been washed down the street. some of these rocks checking them out, weigh hundreds of pounds. incredible to think of the fury and power of the water that's been rushing down these streets here. this has been a state-wide
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event. governor newsom declared states of emergencies in eight counties across california. mainly in central and southern california. here in l.a. we've seen tremendous amount of rainfall. yesterday it was the 10th wettest day in l.a.'s history. 4.1 i-of rain. some rain gauges measured more than nine inches of rain over the weekend. the rain continues to come down. evacuation orders still in effect in several counties. high water rescues are currently underway. a serious situation in southern california. back to you. >> bill: throughout the day today and tuesday as well, max, thank you. fox weather is your winter storm hq stream it on your connected device, always there and free 24/seven and download it now. thank you, max. >> dana: only one suspect in the brutal beating of the four nypd officers last week is currently held on a $15,000 bail. investigators say they're trying to track down all those who took part in the attack. some of them were arrested and
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released with no bail. officials say the worst offenders are still on the run. want to bring in new york congresswoman nichole malliotakis. great to have you here and a new york city council member. this story is getting a lot of national attention. do we know where these migrants are? >> well, basically rumor has it, because they are free, they're out. no charges, no nothing. they're out. try to find them, they're out. rumor has it california. that's what they say. how do they get from new york to california? they are free to roam as they please. >> dana: how mad is the the city council or not? >> i don't think the city council is moved at all. had it not been covered in the news -- i'm sitting here before you today -- they could care less. >> bill: so what we're learning, "new york post," we thought on friday that a faith-based group, so people who don't live in new york just so you know, the
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faith-based groups are run the interface for all the migrants throughout the city and they help them in all the different places. they thought they were helped on a faith-based group to get on a base. that's not the case. police have an idea where the men are. the fundamental question. if you are a democratic people in the city of new york today, what do you want to do? you want to allow these men to go ahead and di solve back into the border and cross into mexico and story is forgotten or you arrest and apprehend them, bring them back to new york city before a judge and get weeks of terrible publicity for awful policies? >> i know that new yorkers want to see these individuals held accountable. i think it goes back to the laws that bill deblasio passed in 2014 that prohibits nypd from cooperating with immigration and customs enforcement to have these individuals deported. literally a detainer request can be on anyone who committed a
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crime and they will release that individual back to the street if they don't go to jail. instead of deporting that individual, working with ice. they have denied every single detainer request. we know that thousands -- at least 1,000 individuals at these migrant encampments that have committed crimes in the city. everything from assault to robbery to grand larceny to stabbing and a murder. people should not there was a woman who slapped a police officer outside a shelter. also a dui arrest of a migrant that ended up biting finger of an nypd sergeant. these people are back on the street. pick pocketed eight times arrested and released to the streets to go to the luxury hotels rooms. >> bill: we saw the governor say if you mess with our cops you will pay the price. will she follow up on her own words? >> the one thing the governor of the state of new york has the
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ability to do is to actually fire people like bragg and she could do away with the law that was passed in 2017, 2014. this is all within her grasp. they're not doing anything. ask yourself why. why aren't they doing anything? i have held the governor of this state accountable for every single thing that's happened with the immigration and the illegal aliens flooding, invading our city since this started. okay? and yet they all talk the talk, nobody wants to actually do what needs to be done. you brought up a good point. as a democrat leader in a city and state such as new york, don't you want to actually do something so that there is finally a decent headline about it? no, they don't care. this is a whole new new yorkers. now, back in march of 2022, that's how they were titling them, the new new yorkers.
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so it's 400,000 new yorkers left the city of new york, we got new ones. >> dana: the other thing is, congresswoman, mayor adams has the new pilot program. $53 million that would go on cards basically. the mayor, these are the debit cards. not only will this money provide families with the ability to purchase fresh food for their culturally relevant diets and it's expected to save new york city more than $6 hundred thousand per month and is this a better way the try to deal with the situation? >> we could save taxpayer billionss of dollars if he stops offering free incentives. that's what attracting people to come to new york city. the president may have created the crisis but our mayor and governor help it perpetuate it by offering all these things. again, somebody gets arrested, they get released back into the street and go back to their
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luxury hotel room paid by taxpayers and receive a debit card on top of it. >> they'll got to 150,000 migrants here if it is successful. >> $7.3 billion we're over budget right now. 7.3 billion? how much more are we going to do of this honestly? with the city council we have right now overriding anything that the mayor is trying to do, to help protect our law enforcement is falling flat. we call upon the governor of the state of new york. i call upon my city council. it is time for real action and real common sense here and we aren't getting it. >> dana: great to have you here. the new york strong women. >> bill: you might remember this professor who threatened a reporter. she has fired from another university and tell you why. president biden pausing exports of liquid nation natural --
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>> bill: so now you might remember that former hunter college professor. here in manhattan, who pled guilty to holding a machete to a "new york post" reporters' throat a year ago. fired again. this time she says the cooper union let her go and claims it has to do with her anti-israel post about zionists. eric shawn is following her story. the ball bounces again. >> that it does. good morning. she has been accused of yelling at pro-life students, threatening that reporter with a knife and another woman named
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the nutty professor has been fired again. last spring new york's central college dismissed her. she was caught on video yelling at students who set up an anti-abortion table on campus. you see her there. she made headlines when a "new york post" reporter went to her apartment for an interview and she was seen holding a machete to his throat. she was arrested for menacing and harassment and fired. she took a plea deal that required 13 months of behavior altherr pee. then another manhattan college, cooper union. hired her to teach sculpture. they has been fired for a post criticizing israel. she told her students in part cooper union has fired me because of a social media post i made about zionists. this is fascism. you will learn about it in realtime. stay defiant. don't bite your tongue. it's the latest that engulfed
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american academia. speech first says left wing activists try to drown out conservative students. >> the regularity this is occurring is causing a decrease in student morale and want to engage in opposing ideas or debate. these are issues and habits we should be building in on in universities and throughout higher education. >> cooper union would not comment on the professor's employment situation. we were unsuccessful in our attempts to try to contact the professor. >> bill: i know you will try again. thank you. >> dana: don't go to her apartment, eric. >> bill: eric shawn, thank you. >> dana: president biden now facing pushback over his pause on liquefied natural gas. a group of congressional democrats joining republicans and business leaders in saying the president's move undermines his climate agenda, jeopardizes national security and empowers
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russia and iran. the "wall street journal" board calling it biden's worst energy decision. his lng export permit ban looks worse the more you examine it. we have a political reporter joining us. selena, will you tell us about pennsylvania and ohio and why it matters there to democrats. but it was bizarre to the read how this all came about. a lot of reporters were saying there is a huge tiktok push by younger americans who wanted this done and the white house said okay. the national security group at the white house said this is a terrible idea. biden did it anyway. >> yeah. it's to john fetterman's point a few weeks ago when he said if you get your politics from tiktok, you probably should rethink how you approach understanding what's going on in the country. i think that may be true for the biden administration. where they are relying on tiktok
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videos and pressure from young people. i know they understand they are use -- losing the youth vote. however, this decision to pause lngs, the most, safest that we have available at this time to transport energy, goes against his own climate change agenda in that it makes the climate worse because of the alternatives for exporting energy then relies on russia and iran and more importantly it relies on coal that is not regulated to the extent that energy is regulated in this country. >> dana: tell me about the democrats -- the political members of that class in pennsylvania and ohio and what they are thinking about what biden has done. >> so both senator casey and fetterman, both democrats. sent me a statement saying this
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decision really concerns them. the concerns lie heavily on jobs. there are 72,000 direct jobs in the liquid natural gas industry in this state. however, there are concerns about national security and concerns about us living up to our promise to the -- to our allies in particular japan, to supply lngs that they need for their energy. japan literally depends on us to be that supplier. the biden administration promised they would do that and now they have pulled back or paused that decision. what i think is fascinating to me is in his statement about this, president biden said something something maga of americans. extreme maga republicans and i would argue that john fetterman and bob casey are not extreme maga republicans, even chris
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coons has voiced his concerns along with former congressman tim ryan and former senator mary landreaux. their concerns are shared by other democrats in office now. >> dana: it could give republicans an opening. the merits of this policy are bad for the long term indeed. selena, follow her on x from "the washington examiner." you write for a lot of places. have a great day. thanks for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> dana reads sports. >> the 2026 fifa world cup be played? the winner is -- >> dana: soccer's world governing body scoring one for the garden state. the 2026 world cup final is coming to metlife stadium in
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east ruther ford, new jersey. however, during the event the stadium will be referred to as new york/new jersey stadium in order to comply with the rule against corporate names. whatever. all i know is that peter mcmahon, if you are at home listening, it's the final going to be right here. so you might see some standing in line for a long time. >> bill: he might camp out for a couple of hours. it means that much to him, do you agree? it will be a hot ticket. july of 2026. music had a big night last night. this year's grammys filled in lots of flashbacks. artists that brought down the house all these years later. let them play. ♪
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♪ >> dana: tracy chapman and luke combs bringing down the house. future performances with big time legends including joni mitchell. ♪ but now it's just another show ♪ >> dana: believe it or not. it was mitchell's first time performing at the awards. the 80-year-old took home the trophy for best focal bum and also this. ♪ that was billy joel playing his
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new song turn the lights back on. his first grammy performance in more than two decades, believe it or not. >> bill: good sounds and good stuff there. >> dana: i heard from someone this morning watching the grammys made her so happy. that's nice. i went to bed. >> bill: i don't think we heard biden or trump one time in the three-hour show. >> dana: refreshing. >> bill: they tried something new last night. the first court hearing wrapped up now for a group of current and former nhl players charged with sexual assaulting a woman in 2018. bryan llenas has the latest. >> the five current and former nhl players had their first court hearing waived the reading of their charges and due back in court april 30th. 2:00 p.m. eastern today london, ontario police in canada hold a press conference to provide updates about sexual assault charges against them. philadelphia flyers goalie carter hart.
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two from new jersey devils. flames forward and former nhl player have been charged with one count of sexual assault. mccloud faces an additional sexual assault charge of being a party to the offense. all five players claim they are innocent. the woman only identified in court documents at e.m. claims she was sexually assaulted by the men in june of 2018 when the players were 18 and 19-year-old teammates of canada's gold medal winning world junior hockey team. lawyers for the players have shown canadian news outlets two videos recorded the night of the alleged assault showing e.m. saying she was sober and the sex was all consensual. the woman claims she was forced to stay in the room and directed to make those videos. she went to police three days after the alleged incident. the police closed the criminal investigation in 2019 but reopened it in 2022 about the same time the nhl launched its
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own 12-month investigation. the commissioner said they'll wait for the criminal case to be completed before deciding what's next for these players. >> i have repeatedly used the words abhorrent, and unacceptable to describe the alleged behaviors. >> the woman settled a lawsuit with hockey canada in 2022 after the allegations, declined to take part in the nhl's investigation. >> bill: the story doesn't usually go when this way. see where it develops from here. bryan llenas on that story. >> dana: a dire situation in southern california. a dangerous and potentially life threatening storm battles with region with rain, catastrophic flash flooding. it has it all. the fox forecast center is warning an additional 1 to three inches are ex pekted with some spots possibly getting another eight inches. that creates a high risk of flash

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