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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  July 5, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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[cheers and applause] >> you guys kept me hanging. >> joey: look at this crowd. look at everybody. >> beautiful. july 5th. you'll be in california. another coast, another concert. >> joey: all right, guys. thank you all for being here. three, two, one. have a great friday! >> president biden: it's all about democracy. it's all about freedom and who
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we are. we are the united states of america and nothing like it exists in the world. >> mike: president biden fighting to stay at the top of the ticket the next few days. he knows make or break. bill and dana are off. jacque, great to be working with you. >> the president is hitting the trail in wisconsin today and also sitting for a taped interview with abc. >> mike: new details how the white house plans to limit the president's work hours. the post headline dazed and confused. >> more for us from the white house. >> the president knows the next few days are high stakes for him as he knows the next few days will be crucial in shaping the trajectory of his campaign. last night the president dug in. listen. >> president biden: you've got me, man. i'm not going anywhere.
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>> notably vice president kamala harris was at that event. the president raising her hand above his head. it was harris's first time joining the president for the holiday as she visited local fire stations in california the last few years. the president has been keeping the vice president close in recent days as the biden campaign reports that a succession plan is underway. the campaign says it is ramping up efforts to reach voters in battleground states with a $50 ad blitz and aggressive travel schedule. expect off the cuff moments at the campaign after attending the nato summit in d.c. next week is president will do a swing through the southwest and programming in las vegas for the naacp and the republican national convention takes place. the president privately told a group of democratic governors and needs more sleep and work fewer hours. >> the president shared with me as i have shared that he was exhausted. and he had done quite a lot of
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travel in the two weeks before. and he didn't make any excuses about it. exhaustion is very real for governors and presidents, i can tell you. >> frustrated with the president's defiance some donors are taking things into their own hands. disney telling cnbc she won't fund the democratic party until the president drops out. stein is pausing more than $3 million in planned donations to nonprofits and political organizations aligned with the presidential race. it could pose a threat to the president. hard to have a robust campaign if the flow of money slows down, as you know. >> mike: the next few days seen as critical for the biden campaign. "wall street journal" the president admits he must prove himself to the american people. a columnist for "the washington examiner" is here. "the new york times" reports president biden says he is
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really tired, needs to work fewer hours. limit the events after 8:00 p.m. but the public perception is that he is like a 10:00 to 4:00 president with a nap in between. how does he counter that? >> the problem is that it would be theoretically easy to counter. all they want to see is proof of life after 4:00 p.m. come out, do a press conference, take a couple of candid remarks after 8:00 p.m. he can't do it. he won't do it because he can't. his debate prep he wouldn't start until 11:00 a.m. a nap in the middle of the day and comparing himself to prior presidents saying george w. bush went to bed at 9:00 p.m. obama left early to get dinner with his children but he was working until midnight. we know president trump sleeps four or five hours a week. biden is the anomaly not for president work discipline but the ordinary americans he represents. the average full-time worker
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works a 42 hour work week. biden can't show his ability to be candid or off script after a certain time. when he does these midday rallies with a crowd and can work off the energy he does quite well. i've seen that the day after the debate. in a room by himself with just jake tapper, dana bash and donald trump after 8:00 p.m. he fell apart. >> seems like the problem for the party right now is president's allies had not seen this. his detractors were looking at videos and saying that's not a picture of a guy who looks like he has a lot of stamina. people close to him just seemed to be realizing this and there was an article that said this morning of the president's allies who were at a holiday party this past winter it became clear to one of the guests that he would not be able to make it through the reception. the guest wasn't sure they could vote for biden since the guest was open to an idea they dismissed as right wing
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propaganda. the president may not really be the acting president after all. "new york magazine" talking about a democrat who was in the room at the white house with the president and had this realization. what does that mean for this moment? >> it is an emperors new clothes situation. it's propaganda. not happening. cheap fake. two weeks ago "the new york times" is calling it cheap fake and now they all saw. when biden imploded he didn't take down others, he blew up a lot of credibility of the all aisles in the media who were covering for him. was it willful, intentional gas lighting? i don't know. they saw the undeniable. most people don't tune into the primaries. 50 million people watched that debate. this was their first moment
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seeing biden unscripted in maybe four years that they really paid attention to it. and they saw what we all saw. if you had the volume off you saw the slack jawed performance. if you only heard the audio you could barely hear him. his allies can no longer ignore it. by choseing kamala harris, a candidate so weak, that is probably the best protection he has in terms of the democratic party not necessarily wanting to take him out. >> mike: we're seeing some of the ambitions of some of the governors and people who would love to be president one day. a draft gretchen whitmer campaign. react to this. >> i think the most dangerous place for the president is on a staircase with governor whitmer. she definitely is positioning herself to try to take the place and be on the ticket for the next go round.
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>> mike: is there any way they get around vice president harris if the president decides he is done? >> on the one hand, joe biden needs to win michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin. he is trailing behind by five or six digits in arizona and maybe nevada, georgia. states that he once won. and if you don't get that blue wall, there is no electoral map to 270 electoral college votes. whitmer can bill herself as a moderate. fairly popular in her own state. however, not only does she poll worse than kamala harris in head-to-head match-ups with trump but this is before any real research on her and before the rest of the national electorate has studied her. with harris people know. there will be more op-ed on her if she becomes the nominee. whitmer, there could be a lot more.
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more importantly, how do you leapfrog the first black asian female vice president in american history. how do you do it? california democrats are already saying they'll blow up the convention if they even try to undo harris. >> mike: thank you so much. >> appreciate your time. thank you. >> into a crowd of people who were actually just celebrating like so many new yorkers and americans are doing right now. we had a tragic incident like this that really impacts family members who were just here celebrating and barbecuing inside a park. >> fourth of july celebrations taking a deadly turn in new york city. a suspected drunk driver plowing into a park where people were bash cueing. three people killed. violence erupting in philadelphia. gunman opening fire on the street. one person killed and eight
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others wounded there. >> mike: july 4th celebrations took a terrifying turn for beach goers. a shark attack off the southern coast of texas. with one of the victims suffering a severe bite. there was also shark trouble in the waters off florida. steve harrigan is following this story for us, steve, good morning. >> good morning, mike. multiple shark attacks in texas and florida. the first attack officials believe was by one shark about six feet long in south padre island, texas. the shark attacked four people. one of them injured seriously enough, a woman, to be flown to hospital. one spectator who saw her being lifted out of the water said her calf was completely gone. the other attack in florida, a town known unofficially as the shark bite capital of the world because of the number of attacks it annually happened there. it was a 21-year-old, man from
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ohio playing football in the water with friends. many people panicked and began shrieking and crying when she you a the attack happen. >> the lady was screaming i need help. the man was kind of limping in, fell in the shallow part of the water. next thing you know paramedics were coming to him. you could tell he was in pain and see the blood coming off him in the sand. >> that victim will be all right but many people who saw the attack say they were surprised where it occurred. this happened in just knee deep water. >> there were 16 attacks in florida last year. the most of any state, two fatal attacks in the u.s. overall last year. mike, back to you. >> mike: perhaps a good day to go to the pool. steve harrigan. thank you very much. >> illegal immigration is unfair
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to the migrant children themselves. they are being used as pawns. we've heard today that they are trafficked, they're exploited just to get people across the border and then they're dumped. >> it is one of the most heartbreaking aspects of the border crisis, traffickers exploiting children and the federal government is more often losing track of those child victims. we'll explain why. >> mike: it's not just our southern border. federal agents intercepting fentanyl and guns smuggled across the northern border. what's behind the disturbing trend. >> historic election in the uk. what prompted the major upheaval in parliament. >> i'm feeling great. a fresh, new start and i think we needed that change. >> a breath of fresh air. really have to see what they do before i make a decision whether i like them or not. ices on booking.com there are so many tina feys i could be. so i hired body doubles to help me out. splurgy tina loves a hotel near rodeo drive.
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>> mike: it got a lot of attention during the trump era. migrant children who cross the border and end up missing. under president biden that problem is getting worse with the number of so-called lost migrant kids bigger than ever. william la jeunesse is live in los angeles. good morning, william. >> good morning, mike. the term lost is relative, right? many of these kids are 16 and 17. they don't want to be found. yet in 2018, donald trump took a beating when his administration couldn't locate some 1500 unaccompanied minors. >> the u.s. government has lost track of nearly 1500 migrant children. >> we can find isis in the caves of north pakistan and afghanistan but we can't find 1500 kids. >> 1500 children are just gone.
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>> that number may have reached 54,000 by the time trump left office. what about now? >> if anything, things have gotten worse under the biden administration. >> unaccompanied migrants under 18 can't be deported. most spend a few weeks in shelters before being handed over to relatives or sponsors. case managers are supposed to follow up. according to government data more than a third of the migrant kids released into the u.s. can't be reached. the truth is that the biden administration doesn't know what has happened to those 85,000 children. is that correct? >> the fact that a telephone was not picked up, telephone call was not picked up does not mean that child did not have post release services. >> estimates are biden lost contact with twice as many children as trump. >> what percentage of those children's whereabouts can you tell me with any degree of certainty? >> it is not accurate to say we have lost -- that we have lost
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them. >> the bottom line is the administration can't find by its own estimates about 1/three of the unaccompanied children who crossed the border. don't respond to inquiries. so whether it's president trump or president biden, it is unlikely these children are ever going to leave the country. back to you. >> mike: william la jeunesse live in l.a. thank you very much. >> jacque: the crisis at the southern border might get the attention but the situation at the northern border is a mess. illegal crossings breaking a record for the month of may. drugs are also a big problem. federal agents seizing six pounds of fentanyl in detroit. the largest haul ever at this point of entry. the guns keep coming. north dakota the feds found three backpacks full of dozens of abandoned weapons. charles merino is the author of
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terrorists on the border and in our country. thank you for being here. appreciate your time. >> good morning. >> jacque: i want to bring up on our screen for people to see the kind of things coming over the northern border. you had 57,000 illegal e-cigarettes and ozempic shipments in cincinnati and chicago. we just talked about the guns. we just talked about the six pounds of fentanyl found in one seizure in detroit, enough to kill 1.3 million people. why is this happening at the northern border? >> the country is being bombarded by the mexican cartels who have benefited from the policies of the biden administration from the start. they have never been as powerful as they are now both financially and operationally. why not expand those operations and double the money? the mexican cartels want to make as much money as they can and willing to work with whoever they need to, whether it's state actors or non-state actors. we know what they are doing with
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the fentanyl with china out in the open. working closely together and have for a long time and we also know they are working with terrorist organizations to traffic suspected terrorists into the united states along with criminal aliens. so what we're seeing is we're seeing the northern border start to mirror the southern border and that includes the composition of what is being countered by border agents at the northern border, including those migrants coming from special interest locations. so that number will continue to climb as the mexican cartels go unchecked because the biden administration has never had a comprehensive strategy similar to the bush administration, obama administration and trump administration. >> jacque: what does it tell you the kinds of products they're seizing. we look at tens of thousands of electronic cigarettes coming from china. that this is becoming a more diverse illegal trade?
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>> yeah, you will see it across the board not just with elicit drugs but intellectual property-related products like ozempic knockoffs and e-cigarettes that you talk of. look, when i say bombarded, i truly mean that. they will try to make money across all different sectors, not just with the human trafficking, the firearms and drug trafficking. they are also going to try to do it through intellectual property. the country that will have their hand on the intellectual property aspect of things is typically china. >> jacque: if you look at the graph on the screen, the encounters of migrants at the northern border are hitting a record high there. so this is a problem that they will have to continue to fight and doesn't seem to get any better. moving to a second topic, you know, you are seeing the spate of violence increase also allegedly at the hands of these
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migrants. you had ms-13 gang member arrested in queens about a loaded gun. last week border agents stopped seven sex offenders in a single weekend, all of them previously convicted. crimes included rape, aggravated sexual abuse with a minor. these are serious offenses. how do you keep track of the people who are already here? >> well, unfortunately the only way the administration is allowing law enforcement to do it now is when they are already let into the country and they commit more crimes. often violent acts against americans. look, these encounters will continue to go up as criminal aliens, those numbers continue to climb allowed into the country. their encounters with the american public will also increase. this is a huge problem. the biden administration is not using a program like secure communities, which was used by both the obama and trump administrations where you deputize state and local law
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enforcement to immediately identify those criminals that are in the country illegally and prioritize them for deportation. so they are really not doing anything to not only deter the entry into the country, but then conduct interior enforcements in large enough operations to identify and remove. of course, sanctuary cities are not helping any of this. we've found the eight suspected tajikistan hiding out in places like new york, la and philadelphia. they've become safe havens for not only criminals but those that may want to carry out terrorist attacks against the country. there is no monitoring going on, which is why we're hearing the right thing from former president trump in terms of doing a prioritized deportation effort if he were to come back in office, addressing national security threats and those that are in the country overstaying their visas and not showing up with their notices to appear.
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>> jacque: we'll see how long this sanctuary city tolerance lasts. the phrase that every city is a border city now is becoming more and more real as time goes on. thank you for being here, appreciate your time. mike. mike >> we have no internet. no contact with the outside world, nothing. i had one phone call from canada. i gave them all my friends call everyone and tell them i'm alive. >> hurricane beryl leaving a trail of destruction across the caribbean. it is now setting its sights on texas as people brace for landfall. that's next. plus the housing crisis going from bad to worse. why buying a home is looking increasingly out of reach. ovide, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪) with so many choices on booking.com there are so many tina feys i could be.
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- [announcer] call right now to receive your free no-obligation info kit. call the number on your screen. why do couples choose a sleep number smart bed? i need help with her snoring. sleep number does that. thank you. shop our lowest prices of the season with free home delivery when you add a base. sleep number smart beds starting at $999. learn more at sleepnumber.com >> mike: the stock market opening after this morning' june jobs report down slightly. job growth beat expectations
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with 206,000 jobs added. slowdown from may. the unemployment rate ticked higher hitting 4.1%. >> jacque: hurricane beryl has left destruction in its wake. the battered islands are accessing the damage. it made landfall in mexico this morning. it is still dangerous. robert wray is live from jamaica with the latest on what is happening down there. how it is feeling out there? >> jacque, good morning to you. very muggy here in kingston, beautiful skies but hurricane beryl three days ago pounding this region. widespread damage across the country of jamaica. look at some of this video, nearly 3 million residents have endured the wrath of beryl. yesterday we left the northwest shores where we were reporting
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as those outer bands came in and made a perilous drive about seven, eight hours through two-lane roads to see the damage up close with our own eyes. what we witnessed was thousands of downed trees over roadways, power lines down, strewn everywhere. structures destroyed, roofs ripped off and people that were really reeling and out of service for cells, no water, and lack of communication. they need aid desperately. listen to the accounts from some of the survivors we spoke to. >> describe what you went through. >> terror. i never experienced nothing like that before. the wind was so devastating. it was something like i never seen before. you have a blower and you are trying to blow. i don't know how to explain it.
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>> while it was happening, you honestly did not know the devastation that you were going to see. even when it slowed down last night and we looked, we kind of went okay, that roof is off, that roof is off, the fruit stand is gone. but this morning was just something you've never experienced before. the thing is, we have no internet, no contact with the outside world, nothing. i had one phone call from canada, i gave him all my friends, call everyone, tell them i'm alive. i don't know. >> wow. >> i mean, i only learned -- we have no weather reports, we have nothing. we have no power, no water, zero. >> and you see some of that damage from st. elizabeth and treasure beach. the hardest impacted areas from hurricane beryl that we
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experienced. those people need aid. if you are with an aid group and ngo know that. whether dropped in from the air or ground, they are in desperate situations right now. the temperatures are very warm. there is a lack of provisions meaning water and food. they are cut off and trying to get cell service back. there is still debris all over the roadways. if you aren't familiar with jamaica, this is a mountainous, hilly region. to remove thousands of trees and power lines. not easy. state of emergency in play. 11 total people have lost their lives across the caribbean and beryl just crossed the yu tan to texas. it continues to make historic markers. >> jacque: what a dire situation. hope those people get the help they need.
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thank you so much. stay with fox weather or complete coverage of hurricane beryl. use your phone camera and scan the qr code on the screen now to download the app for free. you can also go online to fox weather.com. >> mike: mortgage rates jumped this week. the average rate on a 15 year fixed mortgage rose to 6.25, 30 year -- good morning to a financial expert. the higher interest rates keep those of us with mortgages in three or four percentage range out of the market and causes an inventory problem, doesn't it? >> 100%. if you have a mortgage of 3%, why will you sell your home and take on a mortgage at 7%? it doesn't make sense. that's why the supply of homes
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has gone down like 40% pro-covid. sales are down as well. there are a lot less homes to buy. when less homes to buy, it pushes up the price of those homes so the higher price of homes and these higher interest rates is making housing a real tough buy for a lot of people. >> mike: new report published by real estate data provider adam that examined 589 u.s. counties, median priced homes in 80% of those areas are out of reach for the average income earner who makes $71,000 annually. does that force a price correction at some point? or does that force young professionals to rent long term? >> overall bank rate survey was published recently showed it is cheaper to rent in all 50 states compared to buying a home. but you know, mike, call me an
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optimist if you want. i think there will be good things ahead. i will tell you the reason why. when interest rates do start to come down -- and they will start to come down -- i think it will have an enormous impact on the buying market. a recent survey from an economic group that found that 72% of aspiring buyers, these are younger home -- potential homeowners want to buy once rates start coming down. right now current rates for a 400,000 home you're paying $3 thousand a month. a lot. when rates come down i think it will have a big impact and it will increase the supply. it will have a positive impact on overall housing prices and also hopefully provide a lot of opportunities for the businesses that rely on the real estate industry. that's what i expect to see. hoping to see it soon. >> mike: let's talk student loans. 42.8 million people owe $1.62 trillion. nearly half of them are not paying that back.
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are the president's promise to forgive some of that student loan debt causing people to not pay? >> yeah. don't you feel the same way? there have been so many promises of relief from student debt and the president puts forward a plan. supreme court overturns it. the president defies the supreme court and tries another plan. if you are a student loan holder you are confused. it has a lot to do with why a lot of student loan owners are not paying back student loans. another big portion is income. there is a survey that comes out every month from paychecks, the payroll company showed this month the average person is gaining 3% a year increase in their pay. inflation is at 3% as well. so it is kind of canceling each other out. people don't seem to have enough money to pay back some of these loans and that is also having a problem. >> mike: is it a sign they cannot pay or is it a sign they
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don't believe there will be consequences? >> i think like everything, there is always multiple answers to a simple question like that. i think that's the case here. yes, there are some people that can't pay. i do think there is a lot of confusion in the market. if i can say anything to your viewers if you have the means to pay, pay your loans. if you ignore this, it goes on your credit report and especially if you are a younger borrower it will have significant impact on your ability to get a mortgage in the future or other debt. don't ignore it. if you owe the money, pay it back. >> mike: thanks so much for your time and analysis. >> thanks, take care. >> jacque: remote workers are looking for company and turning to tiktok, the newest social media trend coming up next. a competitive eater crowned in coney island after drama in major league eating. last year's champion took home a victory of his own. ♪
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>> mike: a former biden administration official gets a slap on the wrist after pleading guilty in a luggage stealing scandal. he was charged with felony grand larceny last year for stealing a suitcase that belonged to a fashion designer. a deal downgraded the charge to a misdemeanor and allowed her to avoid jail time. he was placed on leave in 2022 and later fired after being charged in another luggage theft. >> i've been so much more
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productive ever since i started doing this. my brain is so freaking and so nice to be able to have friends to do my taps with online. >> jacque: remote workers livestream themselves during their workday as a way to connect with others whose jobs are also home-based. caroline downey is with the national review and joins us now to talk about this fascinating story. i was reading the details here and it is really something. so most of these tiktok livestreamers are using a method where they'll work for 20 to 45 minutes and then take a five to 15 minute break. by our count i've been going for 46 minutes on the show and hang it up until after the 10:00 a.m. hour. how do they say that and talk about how they feel more productive when people are watching? help me understand this.
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>> thank you for having me. covid fundamentally changed the workplace and i could say while necessity is the mother of invention, the remote revolution has brought unprecedented flexibility, gen z millennials have more latitude and leeway than any of their generations that came before them. it also has come with isolation and the way that i think this generation now is rectifying that loneliness that's an epidemic that is spreading even after covid is by using this kind of advanced technology to try to find the online connectivity more. what needs to happen here, there needs to be accountability from companies. make sure that these staff are just as productive as they were before. it is harder to do with the remote revolution. but i think senior staff also need to be intentional creating opportunities for in-person connection. that's what ultimately they
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crave. i think for my generation and other co-workers i have who are my age, they definitely crave camaraderie and networking that an office provides. so in one sense they might be slacking off or really enjoying the freedom that online gives but i think in another sense if they were given a chance to come into the office and actually have a real input in meetings i think they would take it. >> jacque: i can't wrap my head around this idea that they are so lonely they would want to go on tiktok and just exist so that other strangers on the internet can watch them existing but yet wouldn't want to go back to the workplace if they're that lonely and then you have the average hours worked at home versus at work. the data shows people at homework an average of 5.1 hours. in a workplace it jumps to 7.9. you have a big difference here in terms of how productive
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people are if they're at home and if they're lonely, too. but the other issue is gen z is quiet vacationing during the fourth of july. they are taking unscheduled pto and figuring out how to work the calendar is another, i guess, new trend and talent of this generation. you see on the internet sort of take these days off and it will get you nine. how is this happening? >> this is again the trade-off of remote work. in one sense, many companies are now shedding their overhead cost of having an air conditioned office that needs to operate 24/seven with security and it is expensive. they're transitioning fully online. they don't have the additional cost but now they have less ability to exercise accountability over their staff. so i know for a fact that many members of my generation are probably older are not taking
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paid time off because they can check in for a few hours in the morning or maybe answer emails at the barbecue. it is very ambiguous now the boundary between work and play. i think it is more blurred than ever before because of covid. that is not something that companies asked for. these are the new circumstances, the new normal that we are all forced to work around. but yeah, i would say it's taking advantage of companies to not declare yourself fully off line but rather be online while you are engaging in all sorts of recreation during the fourth of july weekend. >> jacque: that's the other advantage of having a zoom background. you could be on the beach but might look like a library. thank you very much. >> thank you. >> president biden: you know, i was in that world war i cemetery in france, and the one that one
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of our colleagues, the former president didn't want to go and be up there. i probably shouldn't even say that. >> mike: today may be the most important date of his campaign jetting to wisconsin as he fights for his political life. the fallout. a political earthquake across the pond. the results of britain's historical election next.
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>> ladies and gentlemen, champion joey! >> jacque: 57 hot dogs in five minutes to win an eating contest in texas competing army
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soldiers. the event was sponsored by impossible foods who donated over 100,000 to a charity supporting military families. that event forced chestnut to operate out of the nathan's coney island contest. pat took home that belt ate 54 hot dogs in ten minutes. it took him double the time to reach that mark compared to chestnut who consumed them at the rate of 11 per minute. 11 per minute. how do you practice for that? >> mike: don't mess with chestnut. the poor shoulders who had to go against him. that guy is the ringer. >> jacque: i don't understand how you get to this level of expertise. >> mike: gives me indigestion just thinking about it. >> jacque: me, too. >> mike: there you go. former u.k. p.m. rishi sunak
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stepping down as keir starmer takes the role. good morning, stephanie. >> good morning. it was a very warm welcome here for the new prime minister keir starmer. they had his constituents, supporters and members of staff and family lined up outside to welcome him into his new home, of course. still unclear if he will live in number ten or 11. stay tuned for that one. just like the weather today it was a stormy election. after 14 years in power and five prime ministers for the conservatives the center left leaning party received a huge election win. he addressed the nation for the first time as prime minister saying his reign will lead with country first, party second. my government will serve you and politics can be a force for good. >> we can make a start today with the simple acknowledgement that public service is a
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privilege and that your government should treat every single person in this country with respect. >> earlier today the prime minister met with king charles iii to officially form the new government. now, of course, you can hear cheering behind me. he will spend the rest of the day appointing his top team. as for sunak he remains as an mp representing his constituency in yorkshire. >> this is a difficult day but i leave this job honored to have been your prime minister. this is the best country in the world. >> starmer only has a couple days to settle in as he is off to america for a nato meeting in d.c. back to you. >> mike: stephanie is live a

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