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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  June 14, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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governor, if you are serious about closing the california/mexico border you would allow california national guard to help us. border patrol tells us day after day they feel overwhelmed. we did see the national guard working in texas. so we have inquired with governor newsom whether it's part of his strategy to send the california national guard here to stem the flow of illegal migrants on this pathway that is very well-known to the governor and very well-known to authorities out here. >> bill: matt finn watching again with the sun up in southern california. what a scene. thank you, matt. at the moment other end of the country now waiting to hear from the u.s. supreme court where one or more new opinions are expected any moment now, including possible rulings on gun rights, social media censorship. state restrictions on abortion and presidential immunity, which may or may not affect several cases right now against the former president, donald trump. welcome back, everybody.
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could be a big hour. we'll watch it together. dana has this friday off. i'm bill hemmer live in new york city. hello to you, gillian. >> gillian: the first hour went pretty quick. i'm ready. >> bill: yesterday we got the ruling on the abortion drug, the supremes said you don't have standing to bring this case now. maybe it comes back in six months or a year. it was a unanimous decision. what is left here? there are -- by my count there are two weeks and maybe a few days and change if you want to extend the summer session by a few days into early july. they have done that in recent years. not suggesting they will do that this year. that's the window of opportunity we have for a number of significant cases. >> gillian: it's an option if they want it. >> bill: i mention immunity. you have a case regarding january 6th and three of the january 6th defendants who brought a case.
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you have another case about abortion restrictions. you have a second amendment matter on the line as well, and two first amendment cases that are yet to be decided. >> dana: also, bill, as we wait these potentially very big decisions now, you know, the background here is that the court's credibility this term, alleged, politization has been in the spotlight with justices thomas and alito. the focus of a lot of attention and chatter in the background. >> bill: the progressive left has gone after those two justices and in a public way. see whether it ends up anywhere in the end. even drawing their wives into those headlines and stories. two minutes past the hour. we're watching the wires and have a great team lined up. when we get one we'll bring it to you. stand by. we'll wait. [sirens] >> bill: so we have this now
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from the middle east. hezbollah terrorists launching hundreds of rockets and drones from lebanon into southern israel bringing the two sides closer to the brink of a war. will that happen? hopefully we won't go there. i want to mention right now we did get a decision from the u.s. supreme court. gillian, i'm reading off the wires the u.s. trustee versus john q. hammonds. it doesn't appear to be one of the major cases that we do not have on our radar now. that's the first one. could get two or three more. that's what we're watching from the u.s. supreme court. now we jumped the gun. back to the middle east we go and what's happening there. >> gillian: israel and hezbollah are trading fire along the border on a near daily basis. the latest escalation is coming on the heels of an israeli strike that hit a military site
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where they have rockets in its arsenal. this is a little shocking that can reach nearly all of israel's major population centers. >> bill: 2006 was the last time they had a war. the u.s. is still seeking a hostage deal and cease-fire in the south with hamas in gaza. >> we've seen hezbollah continue to take really aggressive strikes across the border. fires break out in northern israel yesterday as we saw last week as a result of strikes that hezbollah took. it remains an extremely concerning situation that we're trying to resolve. >> bill: robert greenway has a lot of thoughts. alex hogan is live in london leading this hour. >> attacks hammering the northern part of israel today. i talked with one contact who was there in a largely evacuated town who says that every single day it seems to get worse. so this is a look at what's
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taking place today. fires breaking out across the border after missiles were fired from south lebanon toward those northern israeli towns. as you can see in the footage, emergency response teams quickly arriving on scene. this follows months of tensions between the idf and hezbollah, strikes that have only increased in recent days especially after the iranian-backed group vowed to escalate attacks after one of its senior commanders was killed earlier this week. the u.s. navy is warding off attacks from the houthis in yemen. yesterday they launched two anti-ship cruise missiles hitting and setting a commercial ship on fire in the gulf of aiden. one person was wounded. washington is doubling down on its diplomatic efforts for a cease-fire reiterating a peace plan for gaza means calming the rising tensions in the region.
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>> we're ready to seize any opportunity to make sure that should we achieve a cease-fire we can turn it into something more meaningful and enduring and lasting. >> still a lot of frustration for negotiators this week given that the current deal on the table is very similar to the demands made by hamas back in may. still hamas is not willing to strike that deal. >> bill: alex hogan watching it carefully out of london today. thank you. >> gillian: let's bring if robert greenway. former senior director of the national security council and principal architect of the abraham accords. want to get your reaction to this first off the top. president biden in italy was asked about the hostage deal by fox news. take a listen. >> president biden, did you have a chance to discuss a possible cease-fire? >> president biden: yes. >> are you confident it will be done soon, sir? >> president biden: no, i'm not
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-- i haven't lost hope. hamas has to -- >> do you think hamas's proposal back is acceptable? >> gillian: so to hear the president say that they have essentially now stalled out on any kind of hostage deal is quite something. what did you make of that? >> talks collapsed wednesday and not a surprise. exposed a rift between the united states and israel. it exacerbates the problem. some 120 hostages remain including five americans, four were rescued by the israeli, 43 died in captivity. unless we're willing to apply coercive measures to encourage we'll continue to get this impossible position. every time the u.s. administration says hamas is not acting in good faith or not being responsible party, it's no surprise. they are a terrorist
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organization and anticipate they will act as such. i would like to believe the united states is taking the steps israel has to recover our own hostages but we're constrained by our own policies. >> bill: almost wishful thinking. blinken said the haggling has to stop. no duh. we knew that months ago. >> how many of those 120 are still alive? >> i don't have any idea about that. no one has any idea about this. >> bill: you mentioned the americans. let's make demands for them. that comment there is stunning. i think the world knows it. robert, no one knows how many hostages are alive today. >> that's exactly right. again, instead of applying pressure to get the outcome we want we're negotiating with them and in some cases negotiating for them and can work in a good cop, bad cop scenario, but if
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all we're providing is incentives and resources no surprise they are unreasonable. >> gillian: there was a sense of new energy and optimism but a cease-fire deal. behind the scenes in my normal day job covering the state department officials over there were sort of talking every day about how the israelis had a new sense of commitment to getting a deal done at that moment. do you have any sense of what changed over the course of just a few days to the point where we now have the president saying we got hope but not much else? >> look, i think the hope was false all along. it was an unrealistic expectation in a misread of hamas's position. hamas believes the united states is actually in their corner con strange israel and advocating for access to additional
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resources. that disconnect has resulted in the collapse of negotiations. this is reality ambushing the assumptions the administration falsely held. >> bill: robert greenway, thank you for coming on today. really appreciate it. we want to talk about yemen and what is happening with the houthi rebels. we are spending a lot of money on behalf of the u.s. navy. a conflict by a third world country that could go on for some time on the cheap. a u.s. supreme court ruling right now. thank you, sir, for your time. nine minutes past the hour. a case about bump stocks. so this was a second amendment question and it was challenged by the u.s. supreme court. the question is, whether a bump stock, which is an accessory to a semi automatic rifle that allows the shooter and users of that weapon to rapidly reengage the trigger and fire quickly. it converts the rifle into what many consider a machine gun. the court holds that it does not
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stand by one second -- justice thomas, stand by, we want to get this right. hang with me. the third and final ruling of the day a case garland versus cargill. the bump stock case. it is by justice thomas and the vote is 6-three. sotomayor dissent joined by kagan and jackson, 6-three ruling does what to the case about bump stocks in the second amendment. >> essentially, bill, what they are saying the atf exceeded its statutory authority by issuing a rule that classifies a bump stock as a machine gun under statutory law. so reading through now we would expect when we see justice thomas is the one authoring this opinion it would leave in favor of what are viewed as second amendment rights and sounds like he put this coalition together
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that looks like a 6-three split here in favor of pushing back against what the atf did. thomas, roberts, alito, kavanaugh and barrett together. alito supports what they have done with a con curing opinion. sotomayor has a dissenting opinion with kagan and jackson. as we read through here, pretty lengthy. justice thomas is saying atf went too far. not a machine gun. >> bill: you keep reading there. this goes back to the massacre in las vegas, nevada when the gunman was on the top floor of that hotel at the country music concert. the headline from the a.p. is this. supreme court strikes down the trump-era ban on bump stocks that rapid fire gun accessory used in the massacre of 2017 in las vegas. that's the ruling on behalf of the court, shannon.
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>> it is and in justice alito's concurrence which is very brief he mentions that shooting in las vegas trying to get to that language here when he talks about that. essentially he says this: it was a horrible shooting spree but it did not change statutory text or its meaning. he says that event did demonstrate a semi automatic rifle with a bump stock can have the same lethal effects as a machine gun and strengthens the case for amending the language of the law. but he says an event that highlights the need to amend the law does not itself change the law's meeting. he agrees with what the majority did here and says atf cannot extend the statutory definition of the machine gun to a bump stock and he does note that las vegas event. of course, that was foremost in people's mind when this move was made. he says the remedy for the problem with bump stocks and machine guns is about congress. they have to amend the law.
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if they had done that the atf may have stuck with its earlier interpretation. congress needs to act. that's so often what we hear from the court. they have to be the ones to take care of the statutory language and what we're hearing from the court this time around. >> bill: the guidance i'm given now this is not considered a second amendment matter. andy mccarthy is on it as well. andy, join the conversation. what is your read? >> i think shannon's summary of this is perfect. the only thing i could add to it is i think this is a trend of this court as you have just observed. really, i think it is less about guns and more about the administrative state. what they are saying is that they want -- unless there is something that's very clear in congressional statute that authorizes an administrative agency to take action, what they are saying is they want action taken by the congressional
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representatives who are answerable to the people rather than bureaucrats in the administrative state. >> gillian: this is gillian. this was a response to a trump administration move that banned bump stocks as bill laid out a moment ago in the response to the mass shooting in vegas in 2017. in this case you had this sort of weird setup where you had the nra arguing against that trump-era law. so we're now seeing the way it is teasing out. it looks like the justices are siding with the nra. >> well, i think what they are siding with, gillian, most is stability. what they don't like -- and i don't think what anybody should like is the idea that congress just doesn't act and these administrative agencies feel like they can make it up as they
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go along. what happens is as each president from a different party comes in, they decide to change everything through the administrative agencies. what is supposed to happen in our system is congress is supposed to enact laws because those theoretically are the laws desired by the people who congress represents. whereas with the administrative state, they're bureaucrats and they don't represent anyone. >> bill: exactly on that point alito suggests that congress, quote, can amend the law and perhaps would have done so already if the atf had stuck with its earlier interpretation. back to shannon on that. i know you have more, shannon. you have just read more. what do you have? >> yes i'm looking at the dissent again authored by justice sotomayor and joined by kagan and jackson says this. the court is putting bump stocks back into civilian hands.
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to do so casts aside congress's definition of machine gun and she argues seizes upon a definition inconsistent. when i see a board that walks like a duck, swims and quakes like a duck i call that a duck. a bump stock rifle, i like congress call it a machine gun and i dissent. so clearly they see the statutory language very differently. but she is very full throated and also in that dissent mentions the events of las vegas from 2017 so clearly that is woven through this opinion as both sides debate what the atf did. the majority saying they went too far. a bump stock does not under the statutory language according to the majority equate to a machine gun. >> bill: jonathan turley joins our coverage as well. give us your first reading on this ruling now.
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>> well, this is a very big victory for gun rights in the sense that even though this is a matter of interpretation and the authority of federal agencies generally, this limits the ability of the atf to adopt broader definitions to accomplish limitations that congress has not approved. and so while it is certainly true that this goes beyond the second amendment, this is a huge victory for the nra and other gun rights groups. they were concerned that the atf was circumventing congress and abandoning its earlier position on what constituents a machine gun. and the majority really takes after the defense in a footnote and says you keep on saying that we're ignoring how bump stocks work but they said quite to the contrary, this is not a machine gun. it does not with a single pull
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have an automatic firing mechanism. the majority puts in diagrams and pictures to make out that point. you have in dissent justice sotomayor saying it still walks and quacks like a duck it must be a duck. the majority is saying you are in the wrong species. this is not a duck and it doesn't even look like a machine gun. >> bill: to refresh the memory of our viewers the gunman that day, a lot of people still have questions how it all happened and how it was carried out, fired more than 1,000 rounds, professor, in 11 minutes' time and he was elevated by several floors and this was -- they were easy targets for him that night. they left 60 people dead and injured hundreds more, professor. a texas gun shop owner challenged the ban put into effect on behalf of the trump team and argued the justice department wrongly classified the accessories as an illegal
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machine gun. >> that's right. there is no question that a bump stock allows for a higher rate of fire and there is no question that we were all appalled by what occurred in las vegas. what alito says none of that is before the court. this is not a super legislature. the dissent is acting like a legislature by allowing the atf to redefine an accessory of this kind to convert non-machine guns into machine guns legally. he is saying that is the role of congress, not the courts. and i think that he is right on that. when i taught this case in my supreme court class, i had lots of students that aren't exactly pro-second amendment and yet they actually came out the same way, that they didn't see how you could use this change of definition to convert this into a machine gun. it is a very difficult opinion for the court because many of us
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were traumatized watching what happened in las vegas. many of us don't see the value of bump stocks. but that is going to the merits of the legislation. that legislation hasn't occurred. the reason is that they might have had trouble in congress. alito thinks they could have gotten it through but they should have tried. >> bill: turley, mccarthy, bream, stand by. david spunt is outside the court. reaction there and are we done for the day? we are done for the day, bill. we did not get the big immunity ruling that would describe former president trump's fate as far as it comes to him potentially going to trial here in washington, d.c. for his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election. but back to this gun thing, i have reached out to the atf, also the department of justice waiting to see if any sort of statement. i've been told by a d.o.j. source they don't expect anything right now from the
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attorney general. he is one of those in the administration pushing for this ban on bump stocks. just like the prior administration did, too, as we mentioned. this was something that came about during the trump administration. i was looking back from december of 2018 when then acting attorney general matthew whitaker said it is important to ban bump stocks, bill. >> bill: thank you to all of us waiting there at the u.s. supreme court. in a moment quickly key part of the democratic base might be you have questions about workplace safety. the white house, what a new report says about the president's own dog and the secret service. ams of protein! those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. -ugh. -here, i'll take that. woo hoo! ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals. and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic. (♪)
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>> bill: commander is apparently back in the dog house in a big way. new records reveal that president biden watched as his german shepherd went after the secret service agents repeatedly. he ate through the guy's suit one time. documents saying commander with responsible for 36 attacks and biden apparently was there for at least three of them. want to bring in tyrus and taylor riggs to talk about this. good morning. you own dogs, i assume, mr. ty. >> once or twice in my life. listen, i look at this in a way. his owner's health is failing and usually dogs sense it with their owners before everybody else and they become more protective. so i'm not surprised that he is standing watching. we see his responses. if he can't no longer -- if he is having an episode where he is doing his thing where he goes off and his dog is panicking and strange people are coming the dog will attack. i feel terrible for the dogs in
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this situation. >> bill: this was an evening walk many times. the dog would get away from the president and go after who else was there. >> he is not the same person. i would imagine since he is a dog owner him and the dog were close and dog can see the failings and memory loss, the dog can feel all those things of their owner which puts the dog on high alert worried about their owner. the behavior probably more has to do with joe's failing health. since it didn't happen before. if you admit that you have to admit the president's health is not -- father time is undefeated and dogs can smell it. >> bill: three dozen times? >> it is rarely the dog's fault when they misbehave. as a dog lover, can i make a joke? a cat would have never done this. cats are amazing. i have a wonderful cat and cats are more discerning. you have to earn their love and respect.
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>> i won't sit here by cat gas lighting. >> they aren't surrounded by nice ladies at the dog park but secret service officers dressed to intimidate. >> bill: i feel sympathy from both of you. i love dogs. i love cats, too. fani willis is back at it yet again and what she said yesterday in fulton county, check it out. >> others have found -- with the media for not checking those who unfairly attack african-american women. but that same media will jump at the morsel of a chance to tear us down. when they are running their mouth, i'm over here paying them no mind.
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>> bill: to you, sir? >> if you aren't doing nothing, no reason to speak. >> bill: she talks a lot. >> it is hilarious how it is always the system is after me. now your inappropriate behavior that got you into this. not expenses and what not. no, very convenient always the system. that speech to me just drips of just narcissism and trying to make excuses for bad performances. >> i take a quote from jamie dimon. if you call your critics lube loon -- lunatiks. see you on fox business. >> republican party is
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consistently standing in the way of providing the resources to support the men and women working hard not only at the border but out throughout the state of california and this country to address the issues related to the border. >> gillian: gavin newsom touting his response to the border crisis. will other democratic leaders follow suit? stick with us. but there's no magic involved. (dog bark) it's just smarter, healthier pet food. it's amazing what real food can do. when you're in the military you're really close with your brothers and your sisters that are in the military with you. and when you get out of the military, you kind of lose that until you find a new family. we can talk about our struggles
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>> bill: from the u.s. supreme court we got three decisions handed down moments ago. the big one is the gun stock ruling called a bump stock striking down a trump-era ban from 2018 as a bump stock. it can be used in a gun to help you fire multiple rounds. the court saying it is not the administration's job to ban it, it is the job of the congress. we're still waiting on others. significant ones, too, including immunity. when it comes we don't know. on this friday morning three decisions handed down, three yesterday. there will be more before the month is out.
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gillian. >> gillian: there will be more. congress is now putting bipartisan pressure on the white house to help bring home a georgia man held captive by the taliban for a year and a half. rich edson is live with the latest on the renewed push for action to get him home. rich, what do you know? >> good morning. the taliban took george hostage in afghanistan in december of 2022. his family says he has a degree in cultural anthropology. airline mechanic for delta and traveled the world. he also has a benign tumor outside his left eye socket. the georgia congressional delegation wrote the president requesting the white house increasing efforts to bring the atlanta native home. end quote, george has medical concerns that necessitate his speedy return to the u.s. the 65-year-old has been denied needed medical attention by the
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taliban and his condition is deteriorating. the state has designated afghanistan as one of the most dangerous countries for americans to visit. state department spokesperson says the u.s. is working to release george and all americans. the taliban has wrongfully detained. yesterday on capitol hill a congressional committee pressed the u.s. chief hostage negotiator about americans held captive across the world. >> they are becoming targets overseas because foreign adversaries see the u.s. government will cut deals. biden administration has directly negated this policy and this policy may be incentivizing actors to detain americans as leverage for money. >> the top hostage negotiator maintained at one point during the biden administration he was working to free 54 americans. now between 20 and 30. it includes americans in russia
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like paul whelan and evan gershkovitch. ♪ >> bill: what a scene, gillian. magic at the movies. behind the scenes not so much. you get it? our celebrity news. kate winslet is what it was like to make out with leo in titanic. not all it's cracked up to be. makeup kept smearing and required a lot of touch-up between the takes on the edge of that boat. we haven't heard from leo. he may have an entirely different view of this matter, gillian. >> gillian: i'm not surprised. they always talk about what great friends they are. can you imagine having to go to
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work and kiss your friend? probably not great. probably a little awkward and weird. >> bill: that's what they get paid for. 20 minutes before the hour there. you have it. you are up to date on celebrity news. >> dana: president biden is gearing up for a hollywood fundraiser. wait until see the guest list for it.
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>> bill: it was a moment on the world stage. here it is roll the video. president biden during a skydiving demonstration at the g7 when you see him go towards some parachutists and the white house is saying he was giving them a thumbs-up and the video, however, shows the italian prime minister wondering where he is going and then gently pulls him back. clearly that's the wrong video. incorrectly played. the president then scolding a reporter about a question that he was not apparently expecting. here is how it went q and a. >> do you believe that they are trying to work towards a deal or is this response working against a deal? and what is your message to allies, including those here at the g7 about what more, if anything, the u.s. can do to drive towards a peace agreement? thank you. >> president biden: i wish you guys would play by the rules a little bit. i'm here to talk about a
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critical situation in ukraine and ask me another subject. >> bill: i don't know what the rules are but we'll find out. here is what kelly o'donnell said, white house correspondent's association president. she said there are no pre-conditions it is up to professional journalists to decide what to ask. white house correspondents association would like to pose a range of questions to the president in a press conference setting. a couple of things are going on here, guys. mark, i'll let you start. topics are known to those who coordinate with the press corps and president all the time but they were clearly offended by this. as i allow you to answer that, we'll roll the video i was trying to describe a moment ago with that parachutist thing. go ahead, mark. >> i'm somewhat sympathetic to the president on this video. i did see him do the thumbs-up
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to the parachute team. so i wasn't really disturbed by that and she brings him back. in terms of -- she brings him back, it's okay. a lot more has been made of this than it really is. i think on the press conference, look, it is fair game. the rules are if journalists want to ask a question it is their opportunity. i thought the rebuke was quite strong saying mr. president, you've got to make yourself available to the press and we will ask whatever questions we want. >> bill: i agree with that. i think they are getting frustrated they don't have enough access. what is your take on this? >> maybe it is biden being chagrined. not a good look when access is so limited and clearly because the white house team is worried about having him out there more. maybe on that video he is giving a thumbs-up to another paratrooper or whatever but it is not what any other world leader is doing and clearly the
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leader of italy she wasn't being rude just trying to be nice to get him back in synch with everyone else. sometimes they're innocent but sometimes they speak to a level of confusion or not on the same page as everyone else that is disturbing and shows up in the polls. >> bill: he is going to california over the weekend and go to a big fundraiser. a lot of folks will be there. jimmie kimmel with interview him and barack obama. why not just biden? why not just interview joe biden? to the side, speaking of california, here is gavin newsom then and gavin newsom today on the border and immigration. >> this is also getting in the way of our national guard being prepared for being redeployed overseas and hurting our readiness. national guard men and women have been working on feat
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nanotechnology. at the end of the day they need more resources. everybody needs more resources. the republican party has been consistently standing in the way of providing the resources that are so important. >> bill: is the nose growing at the end there, mark? >> well look, yes, it is. what happened here is everybody, democrats included, once migrants hit the cities, realized that wow, it won't be just texas paying for this thing and hundreds of millions of dollars were needed to pay for the conditions at the border and so also shot to the number one issue. it has come down a little bit. i think the president's executive order fell flat because it seems to be neither fish nor foul but yes, democrats have moved on the issue and whether or not there is some real election time conversion on it. >> bill: rich. >> if biden loses to trump this will be a major reason why and one of the most self-destructive policies ever implemented by a
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president of the united states not just in term of the harm to the country but his on political interests. he is running as a guy this is his signature issue and how far right opinion has moved in response to the last 3 1/2 years on the border. cbs poll last weekend you had majorities supporting mass deportations. this is a huge loser for the white house and for democrats. they are starting to realize it but too late. >> bill: mark penn and rich lowry, great to have you on. talk again next week. thank you both. >> dana: coming up keeping your family safe is a top priority for your beaches this summer. how lifeguards are getting help from an eye in the sky amid a major staffing shortage. we'll get to that next. ♪ i'd like to take a moment to address my fellow veterans, because i know so many of you have served
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>> harris: republicans are praising former president trump's big visit to capitol hill with a message of unity. also a hint at his vice presidential pick. another moment that was so painful to watch. president biden appearing to wander off during a skydiving demonstration at the g7 summit. you may have seen the video. now it has people asking again and again and again is he okay? is the president paying enough attention to potential terror threats on the homeland? senator j.d. jans. joey jones and ben domenech top of the hour. >> bill: as the summer swim season gets underway first responders taking to the sky to save lives at the beach. this is new. cb cotton is at the rockaway beach. what are they doing, cb? good morning.
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>> hi, bill, good morning. as we approach summer, several stretches of new york city beaches are closed due to a lifeguard shortage and while city leaders look to fill those vacancies we have an up close look at the drones police are helping will help the strained system. from the sky to the water below, the nypd is turning to technology to help swimmers who are in danger. >> this device is going to not only help save you, but it can also communicate with a public announcement and p.a. system that you aren't alone. help is on the way. >> they say more than 30 specialized drones with flying over new york city beaches. each one has thermal imaging capabilities and carries a deployable float that can be dropped to a person in the water. >> this device opens up as soon as it makes contact with the water it opens up to a flotation device about four feet.
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>> they stress these drones are not a replacement for lifeguards but an extra set of eyes at beaches this summer. the drones are crucial as city leaders say they still need to fill 200 lifeguard positions. if they don't, several stretches of beaches may remain closed. police are also hoping the drones' camera system can spot nearby sharks in the ocean waters. >> bill: i like the idea. beautiful day at the beach. you got a good assignment. cb cotton, thanks. rockaway. here we go. before we go, gillian, all right, apparently 20 is winning especially. in the commonwealth of massachusetts 23 sets of twins all graduating from the same middle school. that's awesome. >> gillian: i don't know if i believe that. >> bill: we need to talk to them. how many times has that
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happened? 23 sets of twins graduating from the same middle school. >> gillian: that's pretty wild. >> bill: nice to have you here. hope you have a good weekend. i hope today was not too rocky. >> gillian: it went by for me in a second. i feel like i've been here 20 minutes. >> bill: it will be a great weekend of weather and enjoy it at home as well. supreme court ruling on bump stock. we'll see what we get next week -- next thursday is the next big day and a stack of stuff still to be decided. decisions are still in the wings. have a great weekend, everybody on this friday. "the faulkner focus" is next and here is harris. >> harris: we begin with this fox news alert. tough words from former president donald trump to the department of justice over the ongoing cases against him.

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