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tv   Cavuto Live  FOX News  June 22, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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ou from being there. why wait? talk to your doctor about botox®. and get in the picture. learn how abbvie can help you save. ♪ ♪ rachel: so cute. this is cute. not like will in that tank top. will: what? [laughter] what? rachel: pure cuteness. will: rachel, get in the pool with the dog. get in there. rachel: i might, i might, i might. will: here we go. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] [laughter] will: that's going to do it for us this morning. thank you guys for hanging out. charlie will be back again toow. charlie: yes, indeed. will: we'll see you then. ♪ ♪ jackie: it's the final days
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before the first 2024 faceoff, and the candidates are taking very different approaches before the gloves come off. president biden is hunkered down in camp david preparing while former president donald trump is campaigning. and as trump is gaining momentum with donors, a new fox poll shows biden's building support with voters who say that immigration and the economy are still among their top deciding factors. so who's got the edge heading into next week? welcome, everyone, i'm jack a key deangelis in for neil cavuto, this is "cavuto live." we begin in the battleground state of pennsylvania where donald trump is holding a rally tonight. alexis mcadd a also is in philadelphia with the latest for us. hi, alexis. >> reporter: hey, jackie. as you said, two different approaches. we have president biden out in camp david really preparing for that debate as it grows closer here. in just a matter of days, or he'll be on that stage as former president donald trump is going
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to be at a temple university holding a pretty big rally, we'll have to see what the turn out is around a 7:00. this comes as recent polls show former president trump is gaining steam and holding a pretty strong lead right now in the swing state of pennsylvania. i want to show you those policy on your screen. this is the latest fox news poll that has biden up nationally by 2 points. but in the must-win state of pennsylvania, that real clear politics average of policy has trump winning by 2 points. trump's on a swing9 state tour, michigan, wisconsin and today pennsylvania. these are states the former president won back in 2016 but lost in 2020. recent polling shows he's doing pretty well in those states though this time around a, gaining support with young and non-white voters or specifically who say they're upset with president biden's handling of the economy and gaza. as a both candidates work to win over voters, former president trump is hitting the podcast or circuit, jackie, talking foreign policy and the economy on the all in podcast.
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one of the hosts tells jesse watters just night that trump needs to focus on the future, not his last term. watch. >> if he reminds people of how chaotic that first term was, i think he loses. but if he seems more presidential and more reasonable, i think that's going to get him a lot more moderates, and that's what's going to decide the election, women and moderates. >> reporter: so a key demographic here in pennsylvania is the black vote. it's something that president biden won back in 2020 20, but recent polling, jackie, shows some of that support might be shifting specifically here in philadelphia. so what's the dnc doing? today ahead of trump's rally they're putting up billboards and signs around this campus saying things like donald trump is a disaster for black americans. i'm sure he'll have a couple things to say about that tonight. jackie: alexis mcadams, thank you so much. meantime, president biden is at camp david this weekend where where he's preparing for that cnn if presidential debate which you can also catch on fox.
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we're going to go straight to madeleine rivera at the white house with how preparations are going. madeleine. >> reporter: heying jackie. debate prep is consuming the president's schedule. when he was asked how preparations are going, he made this gesture. watch. >> reporter: mr. president, how is debate prep going? >> reporter: not much to go with there, but the stakes couldn't be higher on thursday when former president trump and president biden go head to head for the first time in this election cycle. president biden is continuing to battle questions over his age and mental acuity, concerns the campaign has dismissed. the president is expected to hit former president trump over his record on reproductive rights, democracy and taxes among other issues. vice president kamala harris is weighing in. >> with i think that the debate is going to make clear the contrast between our president, the current president when works on behalf of the american people, fights for the american people and the former president
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who pretty much spends full time fighting for himself. >> reporter: the president's former chief of staff ron klain is leading the debate prep, his personal attorney is expected to be the stand-in for trump in mock sessions. bauer hasn't confirmed if he's doing the same thing, sharing only this about a role-playing -- >> the requirement is to so immerse yourself in what the opposing candidate has said, the style of argument they've used, the tone that they've deployed. >> reporter: unlike trump, president biden is laying low. he has nothing on his public schedule for that debate on thursday. jackie: thank you so much for that. immigration and the economy still among the top issues for voters, so who gets the edge next week? let's ask democratic pollster doug schoen and gop fund raiser noel nick poor. president trump is hitting the
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battleground states hard, he's focus on the issues, and he's coming to the table with new policies, showing that the he's evolving, changes with the times, understanding that this moment is different and trying the communicate to people that he will fix things. is the message resonating? >> i think so, jackie. i think the message is resonating, and you're seeing proof in a to lot of the polls where -- in a lot of the polls where in the swing states they had him down x now he's inching up. and in some states, he's even going over. you can see why joe biden is sitting and prepping, which is good. donald trump is not. donald trump is actually out there talking to people just like when he was talking to the waitresses about no tips. i feel like he is once again connecting9 with the average a working american. so it seems like he is out there listening and trying to implement potential policies
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that he can enforce when he is elected. and i feel like he is on the campaign trail the really showing people that he's working, going into different areas where people are not really campaigning and going into areas where people are saying he doesn't have a fighting chance. and i think that that i hike the style and i like what he's showing america. and i think this is what is actually going to make the difference. jackie: doug, as the president is preparing right now for the debate next week, everybody's wondering if he's going to get up to the podium and give people something new whether it's immigration or the economy. it's been a lot of the same. people can argue his most recent immigration policy hasn't really been effective. what do you think he's going to use that moment to communicate? >> well, i think, first and foremost, jackie, the president is going to use the opportunity to do what he did at the state of the union, to make the argument that he is in charge, he is a aware and he is on top of the issues facing america,
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inflation, the economy and the southern border. now, his arguments are not so great on inflation and the southern border. i know it as a democrat, and most other democrats acknowledge it. but i don't see him changing his message other than doing what he started doing this week which is to call trump a convicted felon. not sure that's going to help him, but it will sure get a lot of attention in the reporting of the debate and in the conducting of the debate. jackie: okay. i want to follow the money trail with both of you as well. noel, the trump campaign is reporting it smashed biden's may fund raising, but we also know from 20616 money isn't -- 2016 money isn't always a victory. what do you think here? >> well, you know, i'm a national fundraiser that specializes in super pacs, so my concentration is totally on the money. i think it does matter. and in the case where you had
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hillary clinton and donald trump, donald trump won, hillary clinton lost. and then though -- and even though she outraised him, it doesn't mean that she was spending the money efficiently. so you can have more money, but if you're not targeting the niches that you need to, if you're not doing the right things in the campaign, it doesn't matter because it looks like that you're probably wasting money. so even though donald trump did not raise as much as hillary, he obviously spent it more effectively. and in the numbers game, a lot of time the fund raising, people will look at that number to gauge where you are in the race. they view it almost like a poll. so the money is very important for optics, and it's very important when you get that october surprise that you are financially ready to have a comeback for whatever they're going to throw at you, and they will in october. jackie: and, doug, right now
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biden is ahead 2 points in the polls in a head the head race at this point. but we also looked at his fund raising, we saw him in hollywood getting some traction there, for sure. when i look at the trump numbers, i think it's roughly 25% of them are from those grassroots donors that are coming out to support the president,9 and the campaign has even said if you can donate $1, we just want to see your support. he's getting that. it actually is very reminiscent of what we saw in 2016 when we saw that big upset against hillary clinton. >> and, jackie, i think you're on to something. the polling is showing more enthusiasm for trump now than for biden. the financial contributions, even the small donors are reflective of that. and even with the slight increase in the biden poll numbers nationally, the swing states from what i've seen are about five out of seven, six out of seven still for the former
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president. so i think trump's in a relatively good position going into the debate. look, let's be clear, this election could go either way, but there is momentum for trump. biden needs to make the case that he is in charge and has an agenda and has answers to the tough questions about the border and the inflation. jackie: and, doug, let me just ask you, do you think he's physically up to the task? when it came to the state of the union, it's prepared remarks, it's very different than going head to head with somebody like donald trump. i know there are a lot of rules in place this time around, but nobody's going to be looking at notes or anything that's prepared. he's going to have to be quick on his feet. >> jackie, i think that's a very much an open question. a 90-minute debate starting at 9 p.m. is a long debate. i have no doubt the first 30, 45, 50 minutes both candidates will be fine. the real question is after 10:00, between 10 and 10:30, will both candidates, the
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president, the former president, be able demonstrate they have what it takes. jackie: we shall see. one more for you, noel. expected at the rnc next month, teamsters, president zone o'brien saying he's -- sean o'brien saying he's going to address the group. >> for far too long we have just contributed to the democrats, and i'm a lifelong democrat, always will be. however, it's unfortunate where with people just assume they've got our support because they have a d next the their name. jackie: noel, what do you think? >> i think that's huge. and when i saw the headline that he was going to be speaking at the rnc convention, i thought that that was pivotal. that means one of two things. number one, you can believe what he's saying, which i do, but, number two, he's looking at the polls, and he is gauging that there could be, you know, a new sheriff in town, so to speak,
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after this election. so he wants to be friendly and on the good side. jackie: final word to you, doug. there are a lot of groups in play here, and that is what's going to be so critical when it comes to election day. what do you think? >> i think between minorities, both african-americans and hispanics, younger people, group item workers, non-college-educated males in particular, this election is very, very much more volatile potentially than 2020 was, and we could have a lot of surprises in some blue states. and i think democrats are waking up to that now. perhaps a little slowly, but rest assured trump is making inroads where where he's never made them before. jackie: volatile isn't necessarily the word that we want to hear when it comes to this election, is so we all have to be ready for that. i thank you both so much for your time today. >> thank you, jackie. jackie: good to see you. all right. before the faceoff, a major supreme court opinion on
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presidential immunity could come down. what it would mean for donald trump this time around. plus, the heat still on across the united states. is relief coming this weekend? we'll find out. ♪ with so many choices on booking.com there are so many tina feys i could be. so i hired body doubles. 30,000 followers tina in a boutique hotel. or 30,000 steps tina in a mountain cabin. ooh! booking.com booking.yeah (tony hawk) skating for over 45 years has taken a toll on my body. i take qunol turmeric because it helps with healthy joints and inflammation support. why qunol? it has superior absorption compared to regular turmeric. qunol. the brand i trust. the cockroach. resilient creatures. true miracles of evolution. where there is one, others aren't far behind. always scavenging for food, the cockroach... well that's horrifying.
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jackie: a southwest airlines flight dropping to about 500 feet in oklahoma city wednesday night, the situation set off altitude alarms in the control tower and frightened passengers as well as people living in the city of yukon, a quiet suburb that was suddenly in the path of that southwest jet. here's air a traffic control and the pilot as it happened. if --
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jackie: now federal officials are investigating, and if southwest says it's cooperating. we're going to bring you more as we get it. then there's this, that wicked, wicked weather outside. millions of americans still sweltering under a heat wave. they are bracing for heavy rains as well with. rick reichmuth is tracking it all for us. any relief from this heat in sight, rick? rick: kind of, for some people. we're going to get some relief, and for some people it's going to get worse, unfortunately. you get an idea where this problem is? it's right here. anywhere you see this orange, this is the area of high pressure that's been dominating and bringing incredibly hot, very stagnant air, by the way, which is causing all kinds of air quality alerts. but you notice right here you just see this, this is the high pressure, and around that area of high pressure is where we've got the rain and where we see the storms that come in. with that we've seen incredible amounts of rain this week just on the north side of that area of high pressure.
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last 72 hours, 3 days, canton, south dakota, over 12 inches of rain. mitchell, south dakota, about 7.5 inches of rain. we've been seeing incredible flooding across parts of the mid country here and, and a lot of those rivers are going to be rising to major flood stage, maybe even record flood stages over the next couple of weeks. today this storm pulls off further to the east, level three out of four flood threat for a lot of wisconsin, it includes milwaukee, over towards madison. be on the alert for it. when you look at the radar picture, you can see this general motion circulating around the high pressure. here's that rain in across areas of wisconsin. where the high pressure is we've got a lot of heat in place, and we were incredibly hot this week, broke all kinds of records especially in the state of maine, way to the north. they've calmed down a lot. we've had severe with weather, more today, by the way, but at least some cooler temps. but you see that boundary there. by the time we get towards tomorrow, it starts to sink just
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a little bit. chicago, you're at a 80, and pittsburgh, you're getting better. new england, everybody feeling a lot better at least when our temporary reprieve comes. watch what happens here in the plains. this area of high pressure retrogrades here, and it's going to be feeling like 111 on monday in topeka, 100 in st. louis, 10111 is in des moines. it's going to be dangerous -- 1011. tuesday, same story. you get the idea. we're at the beginning of summer here, so you do get this heat. but i think we're seeing this area of high pressure set up, and if it does, it could have some big implications that's with us for a lot of this summer. the other thing is what happens in the tropics, and we're expecting to see this incredible, active season this season. we've already had one storm, alberto, made landfall in
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mexico. we have another storm right now, not yet an actual tropical storm, but an area they're investigating, and a medium chance of this one developing, again, almost the exact same area where we saw alberto. another system that's not going to develop but brought energy and rain across parts of the southeasted today, and behind this, jackie, maybe more storms it looks like in models that are lined up behind this. drop ec -- tropics active, the heat sticking around, and i think that pattern that brings the rain to the northern plains also going to stick around. this might be the story for much of the summer. jack rick, thank you, i think. later this morning, startling incidents of americans targeted by illegal migrants showing the crisis at our border is spreading across the country. plus, donald trump trying to get special counsel jack smith out before a supreme court ruling on his classified documents case comes in. that's next.
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jackie: former president trump awaiting a supreme court decision on his presidential immunity claim over his handling of classified documents. ahead of that opinion, a florida judge is hearing trump's motion to dismiss special counsel jack smith from that same case. jeff paul's got the details on that hearing. jeff. >> reporter: former president donald trump's lawyers walking into federal court on friday starting what will be three days of pretrial hearings in trump's classified documents case. judge aileen cannon overseeing the day's arguments centered around the appointment of special counsel jack smith. trump's defense says doj
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regulations don't allow attorney general garland to appoint smith as counsel. therefore, the case should be thrown out. special counsel smith's team told the judge the argument doesn't hold water. >> this judge is allowing hearings where a lot of these judges have rejected positions on the patients. i think it's a credit to the judicial system. >> reporter: kendall coffee says with a former president nation 40 felony count, more time is deserved for pretrial issues, but the motion is seen by legal analysts as a long shot as self-courts previously have rejected near-identical a challenges. judge cannon was appointed by trump in 2020, her critics now accuse her of trying the stall the trial ahead of november's election. >> it's not at all a frivolous argument. and i think the rap on judge cannon is just ridiculous. this is a classified information case. they are very hard to get the trial. >> reporter: after several hours of legal arguments from
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both sides, it's important to point out that judge aileen cannon pressed prosecutors about what role attorney general merrick garland had in the indictment of former president trump. prosecutors declined to comment. meanwhile, the judge did make a decision in friday's hearing and is expected to issue a written order in the coming days. jackie? jackie: jeff paul, thank you. so what's the potential legal fallout from all of this? if our legal eagles are here to discuss both criminal defense attorney mercedes colwin and former u.s. assistant attorney andy mccarthy. good morning to both of you. mercedes, i want to is can about the timing of all this. the critics are saying judge cannon shouldn't be looking at this, but she seems to be taking her time. at the same time, you've got the supreme court opinion pending as well. we could hear as soon as late next week. how does this all a play out? >> well, a great question, jackie, and wonderful to be with you with. it really depends on how difficult the subject matter is.
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really we should loathe to criticize a sitting federal judge that has these very significant cases, obviously, judge cannon here, which this is a very significant case. this is a case that requires a lot of intellectual capital to unpackage if it. the fact that she has multiple motions before her, she should take her time because there is significant fallout that could happen depending on those rulings. in terms of the supreme court, it's interesting because a lot has been reported about the delay, but we're talking about one case of 23 cases, and justice gore such said -- gorsuch said this case is such significant precedent because it may shape all presidency in the future. they are taking their time because the very's essence of it is whether a sitting president can have absolute immunity and, frankly, the arguments are going to be very difficult. there probably will be some middle ground. absolute immunity is a long shot, but perhaps a middle
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ground and maybe some guidance for the lower courts to say if it's official act as, perhaps there'll be qualified immunity. if it's a private act a, there won't be immunity, and that's one of the questions justice barrett posed the donald trump's attorneys at oral arguments. she was very specific when she got them to concede that it's a private act of victimming -- selecting and acting a private attorney to set forth petitions around this election issue, whether that in and of itself for public officials are private acts and, frankly, what the attorney said, no, it's a private act. so there was some concession on that. jackie: andy, that's the distinction that's really important here. some say the supreme court case for trump is a long shot, that it's just not possible for him to win. others say even if he does win, in some ways he'll lose because of the parameters that will probably come with it. >> well, he wins by delay,
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jackie, to the extent that he's been able to push this off as far as hes has. his goal, of course, is to try to get the case, the prosecution against him in washington, pushed off beyond election day because if he wins the election and runs the justice department, he can basically get rid of the case. i don't -- what i think is going to happen here is the that -- is that jack smith is gown to have a case when the supreme court rules, whether it's a robust or a more narrow immunity that they find, because he did, trump's lawyers did make concessions in the oral argument that a lot of the conduct in the indictment is not susceptible of an immunity claim. so if smith is willing to go on trial with just that stuff, just the stuff that the trump people even admit is not covered by immunity, i think he could try to push the case to trial prior to election day. jackie: and, real quick, what do you expect from the supreme
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court? if we don't hear from them on this particular issue, mercedes, they've said they could extend into july. to andy's point, this could go on even longer. that would ultimately give us a situation where the trial wouldn't necessarily be until after november, and that's crucial. >> that's such a great question. it's the million dollar question that everyone's looking for answers. the judge, the underhigh aring judge specifically said -- underlying judge specifically said donald trump has 88 days to specifically prepare regarding election issues. if there are 88 days prior to election day, they could rush this case and go forward. jackie: all right, we'll have you back, both of you, very soon. we so appreciate or your time, andy and mercedes. >> thanks so much. >> good morning. jackie: up next, americans still dealing with high prices and president biden still claiming inflation was at 9% when he took office. what treasury secretary janet yellen had to say about that. and later, a classic collectible toy now at the center of a retail theft ring.
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jackie: welcome back. as a americans continue to feel the pinch from high prices, treasury secretary janet yellen defending president biden's record on the economy this week with including his claim that inflation was at 9% when he took
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office. neil pressed secretary yellen about it on "your world" earlier this week. take a listen. neil: wonder if you could weigh in, secretary, on joe biden constantly saying, and i don't believe he's ever corrected it, ma'am, that inflation was 9% when he assumed office. >> well, look, the pandemic had hit the economy, hit america president world with full force at the time that a president biden assumed office a. neil: which is why it wases so low, right? which is why it was so low when he took office. i know the factors behind that and what was going on, and you're quite right to point that out, but he doesn't say that. >> well, inflation hit 9% at its peak -- neil: 16 months after he took office. >> that was due to -- inflation was lore before the pandemic -- lower before the pandemic,
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that's absolutely true, and into the pandemic a year or so, inflation began to pick up because of supply bottlenecks and later russia's invasion of ukraine led to spikes in food and oil prices. neil: right. >> it briefly hit 9% and has come down. it's two-thirds down from that peak. and all throughout we've enjoyed strong economic growth. jackie: amazing interview from neil. i want to get reaction on it from qi research ceo and former dallas fed adviser danielle dimartino booth along the certified public accountant dan geltrude. danielle, reaction to that interview. i love the way neil does it. she wouldn't admit that biden just can't cop up to the fact that it wasn't 9% when he took office. >> yeah. you know, that was -- it's very
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painful to listen to this. we do have to bear in mind though that the inflation that was ignited was a process. you've got to first get the kindling to catch on fire before you can get the bigger logs in the fire to also a take flame. and it was the composition of the first, the cares act and then another stimulus bill. and then when biden came into office, yet another stimulus bill. more and more and more spending until we crossed this $12 trillion rubicon. it was not supply chain issues in the end, it was too much money chasing a too few goods and service ises. and the continuation -- services. and the continuation of the never ending spending, that is what got us nearly to double-digit inflation. and, of course, the current administration has a very difficult time acknowledging this as well as the fact that millions of americans are losing their full-time jobs. they're being not even fully replaced with part-time jobs. the lying has absolutely got to stop. i think they'd actually do
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themselves a service if they would stop lying to the public at this point. jackie: and that's the thing, dan. not to get too political with you, but ultimately, when you stand up and you can't bring any new policies to the table or can't even admit that you messed up on the policies that you implemented causing the american people real financial strain over the course of the the last three and a half years, that's a hard campaign message. we were talking about it earlier as the debate is approaching, the cnn presidential debate next week. you know, president biden's got to somehow figure out, that's his opportunity, 40 how to say to people i can fix this if he wants to win. and even if he says it now, do you think people will believe him? >> jackie, i don't think no matter what anyone says whether it's the president or people like us, whatever our opinions are, people feel it in their pocketbook with. jackie: yeah. >> so you're not going to be able to convince anybody that rent is cheaper, home prices are
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cheaper, grocery prices are cheaper. it's just not going to happen no matter how you spin this. the other point here is, is that when you talk about, oh, inflation is coming down, that is year-over-year. you have to look at the cumulation of inflation. over the past three years, it's been 20%. that's what people feel. so you can continue to have wage inflation. it's not going to solve the problem. jackie: yeah. >> as danielle said, you want to solve the problem, stop flooding the system with cash! jackie: and, unfortunately, it's kind of a never ending cycle. the wages have gone up, but they haven't gone up enough the make people whole with respect to the price increases that a we've seen, danielle. and part of this, of course, has been action from the federal reserve on interest rates, but now you've got mortgage rates just sitting urn, you know, that 7% mark and making it really tough for people to get any kind
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of a loan that they need. this is an economy that's been difficult for american to navigate, hen you've got the success market -- then you've got the stock the market on the other hand a, and they're wondering, are they going to start cutting rates right now? the data doesn't appear to give the fed runway to do that. >> i think the fed will, indeed, have an excuse, if you will, to start reducing interest rates probably as soon as september. there's a very large revision coming for payrolls in august prior to september the 18th next fed meeting. think that will show that instead of just three months of net job losses through the third quarter of '23, that we actually stretch that to six months of job losses through the end of 20 to 23 given what we've already heard from the nation's most populace state the, california, that has said, you know what? we had net job losses in the third and fourth quarters of 2023. i think once fed chair powell is faced with that data on a
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national level, that he will indeed start to lower interest rates. but this is going to be very little releave for americans to have one small -- relief for american americans the one small rate cut. it's going to be too little, too late by then. jackie: we also heard or that our deficit is expected to hit $1.9 trillion this year. it's 27% higher than they had projected back in february9 with the biggest driving factor being this: president biden's student loan cancellation plans. so, dan, i want to get to you on this. these are plans that are tough for americans to swallow and, by the way, they're skirting the rules to even try to push this through. so ultimately, we're in a a position where some of the policies are hurting americans more than they're helping. >> that's very true, jackie. and let me say this, every time one of these plans is proposed, you always hear, well, it's going to be paid for. we're going to make cuts here,
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we're going to do this, we're going to do that. so it's going to be debt-neutral, deficit-neutral. it never is. every time we talk about these types of plans, what ends up happening? we continue to add to the national debt and those deficits year after year. so until the federal government -- and i don't think it'll ever happen -- comes to the conclusion that we cannot continue to spend without truly making cuts, it's never, ever going to work. jackie: and, danielle, as president trump hits these battleground states, he keeps, you know, hammering home the economic issues. he's proposed a couple of ideas. he wants to lower the corporate tax rate, he wants to not tax tips for the working class and several other ideas revolving around tariffs as well. how do you think these are going to sit with the american people? you know, he's saying, listen, this is a different moment in time. i'm going to take my trump policies from when i was president, i'm going to kind of put them in a blender.
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i've evolved, i'm listening to you, and here are some solutions that you can really get your head around. >> well, you know, i think we should look, again, to the example of california. 20% of the nation's joblessness, only 11% of its population. i would rather not tax tips than try and attempt to raise the federal minimum wage -- jackie: yeah. >> -- given that we've seen it has sacrificed tens of thousands of jobs already in the state of california. think that's a wiser way of spending the public purse than trying to ram through a national minimum wage which is the other thing that's been suggested. i applaud this move. jackie: danielle, dan, thank you so much. great to see you. >> thank you. jackie: coming up, thieves in california setting their sights on a new hot target. not handbag, not electronics, but a classic collectible toy. we've got the details. and later, justin justin timberlake is said to have told police his dwi arrest would ruin
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about ingrezza. ♪ ingrezza ♪ jackie: police in southern california are busting theft rings centered around a new hot target, legos, the huge demand for the classic toy has made it a favorite item for thieves to swipe from retailers and then resell on the black market. fox business' kelly o'grady has the details for us. kelly. >> reporter: well, jackie, it might if surprise you, but legos have become a hot item when it comes to retail theft. it's an easy thing to resell online without raising red flags, and thieves can make a pretty penny on the black market. this captain america shield is going to run you $200 to, and this harry potter set, okay, $450. but then you looked at "star wars" and superhero mini figurine collectibles, you could be seeing anywhere between a
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couple hundred to a few thousand per item. that's why a number of organized retail theft rings have been busted in recent months. southern california police, they arrested multiple groups confiscating over hundreds of thousands' worth of stolen lego merch. i talked to a store owner who detailed an attack. >> they were in and out in 42 seconds, so it was devastating just to basically watch it happen ask and not be able to do anything about it. they clearly knew exactly what they wanted and where it was in the store. >> reporter: now, what you're seeing here is footage of that attack. she tells us that impact has really stayed with her. when an expensive item comes in, she questions if the store may get attacked again. on top of that, she won't consider expanding the business until conditions are more secure. critics of california crime policies cite proposition 47 as an enable aer of these types of
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attacks reclassifying thefts below $950 as misdemeanors rather than felony, so the worry is the consequences are not enough to deter thieves, and the reward on the black market can be so attractive. jackie? jackie: and that's the thing. kelly o'grady, thank you so much. up next, charges dropped against dozens of those anti-israel protesters arrested after barricading themselves into a building at columbia. we're going to hear from one jewish student who came face to face with those protests back in april. known for lessons that matter. known for being a free spirit. no one wants to be known for cancer, but a treatment can be. keytruda is known to treat cancer, fda-approved for 17 types of cancer. one of those cancers is advanced nonsquamous, non-small cell lung cancer, where keytruda is approved to be used with certain chemotherapies
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jackie: welcome back. we have photographs of the faith and freedom coalition, these are live pictures, actually, many washington where donald trump will be speaking this afternoon
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at 1 p.m. eastern time. of course, we're going to monitor that and see what comes out of it. meantime, as alexis was reporting earlier in the hour, we're going to expect to see the former president in philadelphia later this evening as well. so he's got a busy schedule ahead of him today. meantime, let's get to this, this was the scene at columbia university back in april when with anti-israel protesters were arrested for barricading themselves in a school building. now the manhattan district attorney's office is dropping all criminal charges against dozens of these student protesters. the move enraging a lot of jewish students including my next guest, columbia student noah letterman joins me now on the phone. noah, it's great to talk to you. listen, this has been an issue when it comes to alvin bragg in new york city, what charges he chooses to take to court, which ones he drops. and, you know, you were there on campus, we all saw the pictures, we saw the reports of what was
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going on. many people are outraged by the fact that he's not pursuing this, not moving forward with it when it was so disruptive not only to our city, but to our country as well. eyes across the country and even possibly around the world were watching what was happening in new york city, an epicenter. just wondering what your reaction is to this as a jewish student who was on campus who witnessed this and even came face to face with it? [no audio] do we have noah? all right. i think we lost noah, but, of course, we are showing you some of those pictures from april. i mean, these were really motion ifal and difficult scenes to watch. e -- emotional and difficult scenes. we walked to to many students who felt unsafe at that time. there is this sort of outrage around the fact that it's not necessarily moving anyway. it's my understanding we may
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have noah back, so i just want to see, noah, if you're there, and i want to get your reaction to the latest. [no audio] okay. he can't hear me. we'll try to get him back. three illegal migrants behind bars after two separate brutal attack on american kids. texas congressman dan crenshaw has been warning about the dangers of our open borders and our entire country is at a risk. he's here next. if you switch. okay. so, what about $574 for switching your home insurance to allstate? that's way too much of a hassle. allstate can handle the switching for you. just call 'em. check allstate first and you could save hundreds. the cockroach. resilient creatures. where there is one, others aren't far behind. well that's horrifying. always scavenging... ortho home defense max indoor insect barrier. one application kills and prevents bugs for 365 days. nature is wild. your home doesn't have to be. there are many ways to do things.
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>> more asylum seekers continuously entering the united states illegally. the border patrol 171,000 migrant encounters last month alone and a new fox poll shows that immigration remains a top issue with voters ahead of next week's cnn presidential debate which will also air here on fox. president biden is at camp david, preparing for the face-off with donald trump.
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madeline rivera joins us. >> hello, jackie. one of his biggest political vulnerabilities, check out the poll showing 53% of registered voters think that president trump does a better job than president biden. despite the executive order that president biden issued earlier this month restricting asylum at the southern borders. majority of voters 6 in 10 support the action. and unveiling another executive action making it easier for migrants married to u.s. citizens to get legal status. the president has continually put the blame on congress for the crisis at the southern border despite many putting the blame on him. here is the president on the issue. >> i'm not interested in playing politics with the border or immigration, i'm interested in fixing it. i've said it before -- [applause]

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