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  FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  June 2, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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election, woe is me, we can't win. the opposite affected think it will backfire. that said, my thinking people saying it doesn't make happen. we just celebrated the people who died from memorial day, died to prevent this and preserve our nation. it's not asking too much voting today to make sure donald trump is elected and biden is defeated. that's our role, a duty, we are patriots. not just go, thomas paine and paul revere, whatever control you have in life, whatever your background whatever you do, you could influence ten, 20 people ♪ ♪
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[national anthem] ♪ ♪ ♪ if. [national anthem] ♪ ♪
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will: good morning and welcome to fox and friends on this sunday morning. will cain can irk rachel campos duffy and pete hegseth. we are glad to have you this morning. it was a big night last night in new jersey. former president donald trump made a public appearance if at ufc in newark. if he was met, by all accounts, by an overwhelming applause, an overwhelming welcome. rachel: what i was hearing was a staggering outpouring of support for him. i've never been to one of these events. what is the crowd like? if is this a play for men or young men? what's the demo, in your view? because i know you went a few months back. will: i went to ufc new york where donald trump also made an entrance, and at that fight at madison square garden, he came out with kid rock, many if other people, and it was thunderous.
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rachel: right. will: it was thunderous, the reception he received. american bad ass playing by kid rock, and from what i'm hearing as a well, last night joe rogan mentioned it, he is the upc commentator, it was staggering. that crowd is very male, it is most likely one that leans into, that is a supportive base of donald trump. but this is him showing, i think, a fighting spirit coming out of that conviction because here we have a fighting sport, and here's a message that the i will fight. a. rachel: he's the fighter. absolutely. we were with him last night for our interview, and what's fascinating is his energy level. so before he saw us, i learned from his team he was at a fundraiser. then he add had an interview with us. then he left us and went to another fundraiser, then he went to a dinner, and then he went to this ufc fight i think starting at 9:30 p.m --
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pete: because one of the questions we asked him -- good morning -- rachel: good morning -- pete: what's the first thing you do when you can get up in the morning, and he said i just love life. i don't sleep much -- rachel: he said i don't do that as a badge of honor, not bragging about it, it's who i am. pete: it's true, most of us couldn't do that kind of day. rachel: certainly, his opponent can't. and if they thought that verdict or all of these trials are going to slow these guys down, he takes advantage -- pete: again, another new york city if appearance. will: rachel mentioned it, we did sit is down with donald trump yesterday. we ended up speaking with him for an hour and a half. we talked about his reaction to the verdict. we with talk thed the about whether or not he would use, and i think one of the most interesting moments in the interview, whether or not he would in turn use the doj to pursue his political opponents. in the past he has said he would
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look to deweaponize the department of justice, at a various times rachel asked, i came back and asked again, and he said i can't answer that question, i don't know. it's very difficult. he goes that has been my position in the past, but this box has been opened, this pandora's ooh box, it's hard to know that if some of these people that are pursuing using the department of justice shouldn't in turn have that used against them -- rachel: right, yeah, you're right. in the past he would say success is my revenge, and we caught him a day after that verdict and he was, like, i don't know, i've got to think about that a little bit. anyway, we asked him about just a general reaction to everything that's happened, to the conviction, to how his family's dealing with it. here's what he had to say. >> well, look, you know, fighting for the constitution, i'm fighting for the same thing that you three are. i watch you all the time. same thing that you do, you fight for your freedom, you fight for your country. these people are sick.
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they're sick. they're deranged. i talk about the enemy on the outside and the enemy from within. you have russia, you have china. if you have a smart president, you with always handle it quite easily, actually. we have a lot of advantages. but the enemy from win, they are doing damage to this country. they want open borders, they want high interest rates. they know want to quadruple your taxes, quadruple. all my life i watched politics, and it was always, like, politicians want to lower taxes, not quadruple them. there's a sickness going on right now. so we're doing really well. it was a tough venue. we tried to get out of the venue, we tried to get out of the judge. we tried to get out of both, wouldn't even think about it. we had probably maybe the worst area in the whole country for me in terms of -- i'm sure if i sat down and explained it to that section of the world, we could probably make progress, but one of the worst sections. and and they always bring them in these sections. you know, d.c., places where
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republicans, not just me, republicans get virtually no votes. but with the good news is that i think we've set a record beyond all records for fund raising. that's like a poll, and another one just came out just before i got in that we're 6 points higher than we were before. so i don't know if that holds up. i mean, i'm just not sure. but people get it, it's a scam. and the republican party is really, they're stuck. they stick together in this. they see -- it's weaponization of the justice department, of the fbi. and, or you know, that's all coming out of washington. you may think it's bragg. take a look at who who opened the case. i'm not allowed to talk about the it because i have a gag order. i'm probably, i guess the first presidential nominee and the the leader that's not allowed to talk. maybe they're doing me a big favor, who knows? [laughter] but i'm not allowed to talk, i'm gagged. nobody's ever heard of it. it's all coming out.
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it's weaponization. they do have it in south american countries. you know a little bit about it, right? rachel: that actually leads me to my question. i think for a lot of americans, what's happened to you feels foreign. it's never happened here before. but for hispanic-americans, people coming from latin america, this feels very familiar. in those countries people are imprisoned. they're on house arrest, they're told they can't run for office. what is your message -- and, by the way, i think a lot of hispanic-americans, i hear from them, they're scared about what they see. what's your message to them about what happened to you and about a how squared -- scared they are that our country is turning into the countries that they left behind? the corrupt countries they left behind? >> and they are scared s and they're great people. very entrepreneurial, great energy. and as a you know,, or i'm doing very well with them beyond -- >> [inaudible] >> i think a little bit. if they have always liked me,
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and i've always liked them. i've done well from the beginning. in 2016 i won the entire border along texas, and they're all, like, 8 a 5%. 885%. and it's been great from the beginning, and now i think i'm leading over this guy that can't put two sentences together that's destroying our country. look, he's the worst president in the history of this country, and he's a danger to the country. and, you know, they have misinformation. donald trump is a threat to democracy. it's just words. he doesn't even know what it means. it's their slogan, i'm a threat to democracy. i'm the opposite. will: mr. president, or i want to return to the verdict and explore something you said several times. you've referenced these people. i'm sure you've seen the video of bide when he gave sort of a smirk finish. >> terrible. terrible. bragg didn't want to do the case. he said there's no case, and and how can you have a witness like so and so. i'm not allowed to mention the name, can you believe this? this guy's allowed to have television shows, i'm not
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allowed to mention -- it's so unfair. but regardless, you know, you have to really play the hand that you're dealt. then you had a jury that was from, you know, a certain persuasion. would have been hard to do no matter what. but i did absolutely nothing wrong, i mean, or absolutely. think of it, you know, i hate when they say bookkeeping, this and that. it's not. it's called, think of it, expense. i used the word expense, legal expense. i pay a lawyer who wasn't a fixer. he was a lawyer at the time. i pay a lawyer. and he's a lawyer. it's called a legal expense. a bookkeeper without ever speaking to me because she did the right thing who's been with me for years mark it down as a legal expense. in other words, i paid a legal expense. and they say that's a fraud. what am i going to call it? did you ever see a ledger? did you ever study can accounting? the line's about an inch long, about an eighth of an inch wide.
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you can't write a story. and then they indict you and go to a grand jury, and they don't use mark smith's testimony because he's very persuasive. this judge didn't allow him to talk. they shouldn't have allowed certain people to testify. it was totally wrong that they did that. so everyone tells me this is the easiest case they've ever seen to overturn, but they don't care, because they want it to last until after the election. so far my poll numbers have gone up. pete maybe can explain if it. maybe will can. they're smart in texas, right? but poll numbers have gone up substantially. i don't know if that's going to remain that way. will: you changed your tone at some point during the triecialtion i would say maybe a bit more hopeful, and toward the end something to the effect that even mother teresa couldn't be acquitted with this jury.
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were there moments where you saw that it was headed in a a certain direction? >> well, when you object to something, your lawyers object, good lawyers, professional lawyers, good records, nice people, you know? if i've had a lot of lawyers that weren't nice and sometimes you're better off that way. these are really fine people. they'd object, not accepted. not accepted. not accepted. when the government, meaning the d.a., bragg, when he said something, already, good, that's fine. go ahead, more, more, more. but the main if thing is this was turned down by the southern district. this was over years, this could have been brought seven years ago. they tried to rush it because they wanted it before the election. this could have been brought seven years ago. a case like this has never if been brought before, and there's never been a case where a tate has gone after federal elections. southern district turned it down. we got clearance from the fec, federal election commission.
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clearance. they're suing, but they gave us clearance are. but the charge -- i mean, it was, like, a weird charge. a little of this, a little of that, do a little of -- pete: set the arraignment date for four days before the rnc -- >> that's part of the game. pete: it is. someone suggested you could appeal straight to the supreme court because of the special nature of this case. when it comes to the -- [inaudible] and a judge could decide to say, hey, house arrest or even jail. >> i'm okay with it. if i saw one of my lawyers the other dayen on television all in all, you don't want to do that to the -- you don't beg for anything. it's just the way it is. think of it. they have all my books, hay went to -- for five years they sued me getting my tax returns. at the end of five years, they got 'em. the supreme court actually gave it to them. that was the end of it. that was it. they never found anything. they hired the best accounting
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firms. i had a pure gold firm, they called it gold-rated firm, i don't know what it's supposed to be to. who knows? but with all this, for years you heard about -- rachel: never looked into the clinton foundation. >> and they never if went all the way with the. clinton foundation. they never went all the way with the clinton foundation which is sort of interesting, isn't it? so that could happen. i don't know that the public would with stand it, you know? i'm not sure the public would with stand for it. pete: -- house arrest or -- >> i think'd it'd be tough for the public to take. at a certain point, there's a breaking point -- will: how can you do this, not to mention rally after rally, the energy, but maybe the question isn't how do you do this, or but how does your family do this? all the obstacles, these are things you care about, your ambitions for the country. what about everybody around you? >> in many ways, it's tougher on
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them than it is me p. heir good people, all of them. everyone. i have a wonderful wife who has to listen to this stuff all the time. they do that for this reason. they do that, all these salacious names that they put in of these people, and i'm not even allowed to defend myself because of the gag order. think of it. but they put this stuff in to create havoc. these are bad people. i know everything they're doing, i know every move they make, i get it. but a lot of people don't. it's tougher, or i think it's probably in many ways it's tougher on my if family than it is on me -- pete: howe's melania? >> she's fine p i think it's very hard for her, but she's fine -- will: what about barron? people are starting to focus on barron. >> he's amazing. he's tall, good looking, he's a very good student. he's applied to colleges and gets into everywhere he goes, you know? he's very sought after9 from the standpoint if he's a very smart
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guy. he's a very tall guy. and hah he's a great kid. he's cool. he's pretty cool, i'll tell you. you know, it's very interesting though, colleges, you know, six months ago you looked at a college and you sort of want a certain college, and then you see all of these colleges are rioting -- rachel: yeah. >> and their -- and maybe you want to go to a different college because there's plenty of colleges that we also like that are different, and they don't riot. will: that's the first part of our interview with former president donald. again, it was an hour and a half interview, that's a 10-minute chunk, and throughout the morning we'll be playing different portions of that. i think, pete, your question -- we rode home together last night i told you one of the things i wanted to ask donald trump, i didn't ask him and i don't know what kind of answer it would have received was how do you feel after the splerkt if do you feel angry? hopeful? vengeful? but you asking that question about him potentially campaigning if jail, i think it
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would have given me some insight into what the answer to that question would have been because he was very calm about it. he was, like, i don't care. pete: i'm okay with it. will: i'm okay with it. i don't think the people will stand for it, but he seems totally at peace with what is coming his way in terms of lawfare. rachel: i think that is also a factor, the fact that they've done everything they can to this guy. i mean, what's left? if i mean, or it's like remember when he used to tell african-american voters, what do you have to lose? he's a little bit, he's already this far in. they've put the entire weight of the intelligence agent shes, the doj, the fbi, they've spied on him, they've put his kids through legal hell as well. i mean, it is -- they've rifled through his waif's bedroom -- wife's bedroom. they've done everything. andso i think the fact that he's stillen standing, standing with these numbers, standing after this interview to a ufc crowd that is described as a staggering ovation for him, i
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think he, i think there's some confidence that comes from having withstood all this and you're still standing. they can't -- all of those forces still have not brought him down. pete: and you can tell, you can sense sitting in that room that there was a bit of a pivot if point in that there were a few moments where he did say i'm not sure about that. wow, things have sort of changed. like, he was at a peace with himself and the moment but definitely reflecting on, okay, what does this say about our republic, about my approach, about what this campaign will look like. because, yes, they just went out and convicted a former president on nonsense. you mentioned the word breaking point and what is the breaking point. what could the public put up with in this case -- rachel: i do wish he had had more specifics on how he planned the rein in the doj, the fbi, some of these force, intel. there weren't a a lot of specifics and a i was a little disappointed because truly
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congress is funding a lot of this. they just resigned this fisa agreement, so i just think there's a lot that congress could be doing, and i wish he'd given us more specifics of what he wanted. pete: later on he does mention a couple of departments he would like to sew gone. there's a lot to this interview. will: we did look for specifics on his policy when it comes to ukraine with. all of that a coming up later in the show. by the way, the campaign is saying they're expecting $150 million to be raised in the coming days. we're going to turn now to a few additional headlineses. if -- the nypd is stepping up security today for the annual israel day on 5th parade if. >> we are not going to allow any uni laulfulness -- unlawfulness and any disruption in the city. >> there'll be increased security, more police personnel out there. you'll see more of our special
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operations and and our counterterrorism assets. will: police e say no credible threats have been discovered yet. the launch of boeing's starliner was scrubbed again less than four minutes before it was set to take off on its first crewed mission. the countdown clock stopped ticking after a ground system computer ran into a problem. >> switch is not ready, clock stopped at t-minus 3:50, so at this time we've completed our recycling a back to t-minus 4 and holding configuration is and ready to proceed with the scrub. will: nasa announcing it's passion up launchinged today to give engineers more time to investigate the computerrer issue. a u.s. world war ii veteran's getting a warm welcome after landing many paris yesterday to mark the 80th anniversary of d-day. many people cheering and waving american flags. that group of 66 veterans and 2 rosie the riveters will that head to the american cemetery
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today to pay transcribe the butte to the the americans -- tribute to the the americans killed in france. pete: former president trump veals his next steps after the verdict while hunter biden now faces a trial of his own tomorrow. criminal defense attorney lexie criminal defense attorney lexie rigden joins us next live. if a thing of the past. because only tempur-material eases your pressure points in a way no other mattress can. for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic adjustable mattress sets.
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♪ pete: some have suggested you could appeal straight to the supreme court because of the special nature of this case. when it comes to the legal maze that a you're still facing, and the judge could decide to say house arrest or even jail, how do you face -- >> i'm okay with it. i saw one of my lawyers the other day on television, oh, no, you don't want to do that -- you don't beg for anything. it's just the way it is. will: in an exclusive interview with "fox & friends" weekend, donald trump telling us that the he would be okay with house arrest or even jail as he vow toss quickly appeal his conviction. criminal defense attorney lexie rigden joins us now. lexie, thanks for being with us. what do you think is the likelihood that sentence ifing one month from now results in donald trump being confined in
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some way, whether or not that's house arrest or jail? >> >> you know, i don't actually think that that's likely. he's 77 years old, he's a first-time offender, this is a nonviolent crime, so i think it's a more likely outcome probably like something like a probation. and then also, you know, the authorities have to also keep the optics of this in mind. i understand that they took him to trial and it was a divisive decision to even do that, but it's different taking him to trial than actually confining the leading presidential candidate days before the republican national convention. so, i mean, that would be a very significant thing, and i think it would be, it would look really, or really bad for bragg's office, the judge, the democrats in general. so i also think that that probably, even if they're not saying it, it has to come into play. in. terms of just the legality in new york, i think probase is the most likely outcome -- probation. will: we asked hem about this yesterday, but there's a conversation about appealing directly to the supreme court.
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the supreme court can intervene. they're not usually likely to intervene early in an appeals process. what do you think about that prospect in order to expedite the ultimate outcome of this verdict of his team going directly to the supreme court. >> >> i think any options are on the table. he has had a very legally aggressive strategy in every case, and expect supreme court as a we have seen has taken up some of his cases. but the supreme court certainly doesn't have to, and the vast majority of cases do not get heard by the supreme court. so i would expect that in the normal course he would have to appeal if it through the normal channels and then, you know, we'll go from there. will: all right. we're about a to have another trial, lexie, tomorrow. jury selection quinns in hunter biden's federal -- begins in hunter biden's federal gun trial. tell us what what we should expect. >> the trial of hunter biden is not probably going to last very long. the evidence against him is a are pretty straightforward. he filled out a form allegedly
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falsely saying he was not addicted to drugs in order to get a firearm and there's a lot of evidence that, or in fact, or he was addicted to drugs at that time. i don't can expect it's going to be a long trial. given how quickly the donald trump jury was picked, and he's far more high profile than hunter biden, i don't think it's going to take an inordinate amount of time to pick a your. i've heard speculation there's a last minute dole on the table. that is always a possibility. you could enter a plea deal as the jury's being called up. but i think that's probably unlikely especially with everything that's happened in the past with this case with the collapsed plea deal, so he's going to be going to trial, most likely, and one of the issues that the defense has telegraphed they're going to use is the definition of what an actual addict is and whether he should have known what addict actually means in terms of filling out that form. will: so whether or not that admission, as he has admitted at times to being an addict,
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whether or not he's familiar being the definition of -- with the definition of being an addict will be the defense for hunter biden? >> well, he was in rehab right before them -- before then, so how recently does he have to have taken drugs or engaged in the activity in order to consider himself an addict. this is very, very nuanced, there have been motions about it, so that's just one of these things the defense is trying to seize upon in terms of this case. will: all right, lexie rigden, thanks for being with us. this morning 1,000 people are climbing 104 stories to honor the 9/11 first responders, and if adam klotz live from the annual tunnel to towers climb. adam: i took the elevator to get up here, will. a lot of folks didn't. we're looking at finishers coming through that door. everybody cheers when they finish the 104 flights. right behind me, these are a bunch of folk employees that went on the run.
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we're going to talk to frank if siller and some of the runners, we're going to get to the bottom of it when we come back. [applause] ♪
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[announcer] with clearer skin girls' day out is a good day out. live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla. pete: this morning 1,000 participants are set to honor the lives and sacrifices of 9/11 heroes by climbing 104 stories up 1 world trade center for the tunnel to towers foundation. adam klotz is live from the annual tower climb along with tunnel to towers' chairman and our friend, ceo frank if siller. adam, take it away. [applause] adam: pete just tossed it to us, frank. frank, i had no idea, you throw a party up here in reality, don't you? >> yeah. it is a great celebration, for sure. thank you, fox. thank you, fox! [cheers and applause] adam: this is the fox team that just can did it. it's 104 floorses. tell us why we're out here. >> well, look, we have to remember what happened almost 23
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years ago when we lost 2,977 souls. in the stairwells above the north tower and the south tower, think of all the firefighters, one of which was my brother, that was saving people's lives. and if today we're honoring the stairwell, the story of the stairwells like captain billy that told his men and women, go, his fellow firefighters, go, i'll catch up with you later, and stayed with an injured person and knew he was going to die and die, he did. we're honoring these great heroes. adam: so these are employees at fox that they came up the stairs, they're raising money. a lot of focus are raising money. how much money are we raising, where does the money go, what are we doing with this? >> the money goes -- we have a nice little surprise. later on we're going to be doing it live on your show for a great family. we pay off mortgages for fallen first responders that die in the line of duty. we a take care of the
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catastrophically injured service members, i saw joey jones, i think you saw him come up on his short legs. it was the incredible to see him do this climb, 104 stories. i had my daughter elizabeth do it, my son justin, my daughter-in-law courtney. but, you know what? my brother's two children, two of his five children did it, genevieve and steven, young stephen. it means a lot to my if family. adam: i'm getting the sense of this each as you tell the it, you've built quite the community. tell me a little bit about that. >> well, or or i'm going to the to tell you, all these people are becoming part of my family, for sure. it's incredible how many people have joined us on this journey to make sure that we take care of the greatest of all americans, those who are willing to die for you and for me and everybody else here. and if when they do, tunnel to towers is going to be there for those families that are left behind. [applause] if. adam: we appreciate them, and we appreciate you for doing it. fox family, how did that feel? was that really hard?
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>> yes. adam: it was easy? was it easy? we felt if really good about it? yeah? if would you guys do it again? >> [inaudible] everyone's coming back next year, pete -- >> -- you have to raise twice as much. adam: okay. we're going to raise twice as much money next year, and we're going to be back here. pete: adam -- hey, frank, great to see you. i recognize lot of those folks there. it's been a wonderful partnership between tunnel to towers and the fox news channel. adam, say hi to those folks. a lot of great americans. visit t2t.org, and we're going to check back in with adam all morning long from the tower climb. and moving on, trump slamming biden's energy agenda vowing the u.s. will be energy inaccept dependent in his -- independent in his second term. >> we were energy independent, we were soon going to be energy dominant. writ the russian part-timeline because of the fact, very simple, e wanted to supply them with the energy.
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pete: shark tank investor ken o'leary react -- kevin o'leary reacts coming up. ♪ ♪
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economy? >> so weapon doing great. we were energy independent. i didn't want the russian pipeline to be built because i wanted to supply them with energy. the whole thing was all -- we're going to make a fortune. we have more liquid gold that -- than any country in the world. i'd do an war many actions which is as big as saudi arabia, some say it's bigger, and biden closes it up in his first week. the first department of interior, the woman -- the person many charge closed it in her first today in office. ronald rah reagan tried to get it, he tried to get it, everybody tried to get it, bush, i got it. they closed it up. i'll reinstitute it very quickly. of it'll happen very fast. so think of it, we were rocking if rolling, we were energy independent. we were soon going to be double the size. we were in third place when i took the over. you were leading -- you have to see a graph. russia, saudi arabia above them,
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russia second, we're third and then we go like this. i mean, we were going to be energy dominant. we were doing things, the way you have to soft it is -- solve it is through growth. rachel: in a "fox & friends" weekend tv exclusive, donald trump slams biden's economic and and energy agenda while sharing what his own would look like if he wins the white house. pete: here with what that means for you and your wallet, kevin o'leary. kevin, thanks for being here, on the set. >> great to be here. yeah. pete: he went straight to energy. how central is energy to an economic rebound? >> well, first of all, you can't have a robust economy without energy, it's the core. so energy security and independence is a very good mandate, no question about it. the debate we have raging in the country is what energy. is if you go back just a few months to the climate meeting that happened in dubai, i attended that meeting. it's the first time the world finally said, okay, there's no such thing as transition out of
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oil, there's only diversification to other energy sources. so probably for the next 2020 year -- 2000 years we're going to to need oil, maybe longer, can and we have it in the united states. we could be 18-21 million barrels a day if we wanted to. you heard trump mention anwr, sr. and let me tell you why that's interesting. anwr is a ea remarkable asset. it's in alaska. think about this. back in 1978 what norway did is they said we've discovered a ton of oil offshore. we're going to charge a small royalty off every barrel in perpetuity and put it against national debt. we have a big debt in this country. anwr could shove a portion of that problem in a big way because you open it up and say, look, we're going to charge a 6-7% royalty on every barrel, but it has to be by law -- this is the key, because you know how politicians -- rachel: take more and spend it. >> -- it has to be put against the national debt.
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rachel: i love it. >> i think that mandate would get a lot of people saying why don't we do that so solve erik -- to solve this debt problem. i understand the whole ranging debate about green and climate and everything, but this is america we're talking about. we need energy -- rachel: i think it's a super clever plan. social security the -- it's the kind of plan i could see donald trump saying we're going if to do no. i read your article in the daily mail. it was fantastic. you nailed the problem economically for america. you said baa if nana republics are bad for business, and you talked about the american brand being dragged through the mud and the kind of reputation we're getting internationally. explain to our viewers how that affects business. >> so i was over in london fund raising. as you know, i'm trying to buy tiktok so just trying to get my ducks in order for this deal that'll probably happen in january. and it was at the same time the
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porn star stuff was coming. and, you know, talking about salacious sex and condoms and if all this stuff, no one understood what the heck to do with campaign financing. but why was it happening? and it really dominated the conversation at institutional meetings asking me, or what is this? is that really america? because we don't -- g20 countries, g7 countries, you usually do not do this former leadership because you're protecting the sovereign brand, the mother egg of the united states of america, the white house. regardless who's anytime. doesn't matter. any president. finish you really have to a raise the bar. maybe if they burdened somebody or were accused of that,, maybe you bring a trial, but you look at any g7 country, they protect the sovereign brand. we have somehow stopped doing that. and, look, i'm not saying, you know, i don't want to get partisan about it. a i'm just saying we should protect the brand of america and and think about this whether you're a democratic accurate or a republican, what are we doing to ourselves, is the question. and then a remarkable unintended
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consequence that i want you to think about here. you know, just 24 months ago trump had about a third of his party starting to think about swapping him out because he was controversial, and they thought maybe we need new leadership in the republican party then bragg brings these charges and immediately the entire party coalesses behind him. all of a sudden a, i know this sounds crazy, but i believe it to be true. history will look at this five, ten years from now and say how did trump become president again? alvin bragg was the king maker. he did it for him. i know it sounds perverse, but that's what he did. so that's called an up intended consequence. i don't know if he's happy about that, but that's how he'll be marked in history. will: kevin, you bring up the other people in the republican field looking to the replace him, he talked about that with us yesterday. he talk talked about he's the only one that could be in this environment and come out
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preserving the brand of america. >> these are bad people. these people are sick. and they do things that are so destructive. i mean, look what they did9 from the day i got there. and i don't know, you know, a lot of people said we have no choice but the to elect trump, republicans, because he's the only one that can withstand this. don't forget, if it weren't me, they'd be going after somebody else, and i know a lot of the competition. they wouldn't do so well. [laughter] they wouldn't be doing so well right now. they'd be saying, mommy, take me home. [laughter] this is brutal. for instance, the 51 intelligence agents, just like they say i'm guilty, and all this information was from so many years before the election. rachel: right. that clip, what he talked about there mission to what you were, what we were talking about with what what alvin bragg did, all of this is hurting the brand of america, correct? so i just am curious, why do you think -- who are these people?
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why are they willing to wreck with america for him? what is it about donald trump and his policies that -- this is unique. we've never seen anything like this. >> i would ask everybody regardless of your politics to to think about the big picture and what america means to the rest of the world. it's the largest committee on earth, it has the best legal system including the appellate system which trump will now go through, and if there was something wrong with his trial, the appellate system will catch it. that's what people believe. it attracts more foreign capital than any economy on earth because of the transparency. you want to think beyond trump, beyond bragg, after biden. what did we to ourselves here, that should be the question. and when this sentencing occurs on july 111th, everybody should ask themselves, do we want to belittle someone that was the in the white house, make him pick up garbage a on the street or jail him? i mean, this is the american brand we're talking about.
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it's not about a donald trump only. it's the white house. pete: man, i hope you're right. there's a lot of poem that aren't big fans of the american brand inside our own country. rachel: that's a great point, pete. pete: kevin to leery, thanks for being here. of? >> thank you. pete: more from to off our exclusive interview with president trump. stay with us all morning long. it was an hour and a half, we're going to play big chunks all morning. an alternative to pills, voltaren is a clinically proven arthritis pain relief gel, which penetrates deep to target the source of pain with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medicine directly at the source. voltaren, the joy of movement. first, we did the impossible.
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♪ >> you guys know that i've been dealing with some health issues, and through that i have developed something called perry car diets which is a heart issue. i just want to use my platform to tell you to cake take care of your body. >> rachel: carly pearce revealing she was tight nosed with a heart condition. here with more, dr. nicole saphier. she looks young and healthy. what's going on here? >> yeah. well, per car diets is inflammation of the lining of the sack around the heart and most common causes is autoimmune disease, viral infection. there are also a some other causes like certain med if occasionses and kidney disease.
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most cases do resolve after a few weeks of just some rest, and as she mentioned, not getting her heart rate up. and most cases don't require long-term treatment, so we wish her the best. rachel: we heard about myocarditis on the rise, is this in any way related to that or these are totally separate things? >> so they're both associated with the vaccine in very rare cases, they were also associated with covid-19 infection itself. it's hard to say what it is, it's possible she had a recent infection. if she did have recent vaccination, it is possible that's the culprit, but with we don't really know. she didn't give us any information. rachel: nicole, you're a doctor but u you're also a guest on a morning show, i get up every morning for a morning show, so we both appreciate sleep. [laughter] you're saying there are some things we can do or eat, actually, to help us sleep betterful talk to me about this. >> well, that's right. how many times do i have to say
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you are what you eat? we really are. there are certain foods that that turn into wither is toe min and melatonin. we know that after thanksgiving meals high in turkey, we tend to get tired. but there are other foods like spin after a, eggs, salmon, nuts and other things. there are also some foods you should avoid before bed, suppose city foods, foods high ins acid, fried foods, obviously, alcohol. these can all disrupt your sleep. some people, i personally like to the take natural remedies. you and i talk about this all the time. but, yeah, you are what you eat. eat healthy, you'll sleep better. if. rachel: anything high in magnesium also helps. thank you, nicole. always good advice from our favorite doctor can. >> good seeing you. rachel: you got itment more from our exclusive interview with president trump, his plans to fix our southern board at the, top of the hour.
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