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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 7, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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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 and the things that we did overseas and not everybody can do that. adam! how's it going, brother? we live pretty close to each other. so he's always coming over. when i go to jack's house, we watch a lot of football, hang out. we go outside the friendship has kind of grown into a family i was talking to some vet■s last week amazing how we have these houses where they can come over because they■re in chairs too. carpet and wheelchairs don't mix very well. tunnel to towers, they got rid of all that. they redid my whole bathroom i thought they were just going to do the upgrades. but the surprise to me was they paid off the entire mortgage. when they told me they're going to pay off my mortgage, i cried. please visit t2t.org
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♪ ♪ joey: welcome back. it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" if weekend starting with this, a fox weather alert. texas already feeling the impact of beryl. what you need to know before it makes landfall tomorrow. lisa: and while president biden's mental acuity is in question, his team is now accused of feeding interviewers prepared questions before he would appear on radio shows. more from those allegations as a well. will: plus, like father, like daughter when one small town georgia mayor decided not to to run for re-election last year, his daughter took over the helm. we're talking to them later this hour. the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪ uptown girl, she's been living in her white-bedded world. ♪ as long as anyone without a -- lisa: least well, hello,
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everyone. happy sunday. 7 a.m. in new york city although i'm missing my home state of it'll with images like that. it's great to be with you guys. yesterday was a lot of fun and we're back for some more. any tips, will? will: no, you're both doing wonderfully. [laughter] lisa: learned a little bit about sharks -- joey: i appreciate that you're claiming florida. you live far south, jacksonville's a different world than south it'll. that's where -- were created, interesting football teams -- lisa: they're denying me the state that i live in. that i have chosen. born in virginia but chose florida. will: the producers -- one of of the producers on the will cain show -- lisa: would he echo those sentiments? will: it's as though a pawnshop became a city. [laughter] now, we love you, jacksonville, but i thought that was funny. this is, it's an interesting bit of news that a came out
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yesterday, and it's interesting in that a lot of the press is feigning outrage. i think they're truly feigning outrage because you can't be surprise. this can't all of a sudden be a bit of investigative journalism when we know this has been going on for four years. it's not just about the president's mental capacity, but the way that the press has treated the president. here's what i'm talking about. andrea sanders is a radio host in pennsylvania. she gave an interview -- she got an interview with president biden earlier this week. well, she went on, is it on cnn? it was revealed, well, the white house gave them essentially an approved set of questions with or topics that they could cover, eight a of them, and she got to pick from the that four. watch. >> were those questions given to you by the white house, or did you have -- or the campaign, or did you have to submit questions ahead of this interview? >> the questions were were sent
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to me for approval. i approved them. if. >> okay. so the white house sent the questions to you ahead of the interview. >> yes. i got several questions, eight of them, and the four that were chosen were the ones that i approved. >> okay. and the reason i asked is not a criticism of you, it's just if the white house is trying now to prove the vim, vigor, acuity of the president, i don't know how they do that by sending questions first before the interview so that the president knows what's coming. lisa: so this is what makes me mad. so this is what the biden-harris campaign if said, and i'm going to the tell you why this makes me mad. this is through their spokesperson. it's not at all uncommon practice for interviewees to share topics they would prefer. the president was asked about his debate performance as well as would he deliver for black americans. we do not condition interviews
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on acceptance of these questions, and hosts are always free to ask the questions they think will best plaintiff their listeners. what makes me mad, okay, sure. it is not uncommon to lives topics. you know, i've staffed hebbs of congress before as well as being a comms director on campaigns as well, but i've also been on the other side as someone who's interviewed these people, president trump, governor desantis -- we've all interviewed all these people, right? so it's not uncommon to list topics that you might be interested in discussing, that's good staff thing. but this suggests a couple of different things for me. the fact that biden has to be that controlled, that he cannot step into these interviews with fresh questions because of the lack of mental acuity, the mental a vacancy that we were saying. and secondly, the ca capitulation of the media. i blame those radio she'ses -- hosts for accepting those terms. if someone came to me, these are the questions you ask, go fly a kite, pound sand. do you not have any integrity whatsoever? i blame both sides, the biden
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campaign as well as the media. joey: why is she coming on cnn and saying it now? what was the catalyst for them to come on and divulge this information? and i think that's kind of, that, to me, really is the story. this flip-flop of the media. i guess for them, within a week we're going to support, coddle and prop up this person because we're so afraid of donald trump to be president to now this person can't beat donald trump, so we're going to go and try to get him replaced. and that's what it feels like. will: you know, joey, this stuck out to me yesterday. i started taking screen shots of all these, half a dozen easy of, you know, named reporters, you have heard of them whether or not they're at a abc, nbc, cbs or cnn who are acting like, wow, can you believe this story, that the biden administration is planting questions ahead of time? [laughter] and that, to me, is the bigger scandal that the -- than the revelation that the biden administration if or biden campaign is planting questions
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ahead of time, because they've been doing this. we've all seen the pictures of joe biden with the various members in the press gallery who are there. this -- nothing has been -- joey: he had a moment where he said, i can't remember it was a few weeks ago a he said that's not on the list. talking about the question. and it was at one of the few rest conferences or briefings he's done. will: but now all of a sudden it's a story. now, all of a sudden, you know, it's an outrage. and now all of a sudden the press is interested in investigative journalism. it's in part because, look, this is what the climate around biden has become. it's the tell. i want you to look at some of these headlines just in the last couple of days. actually, from friday forward. "the washington post," biden meets his critics with defiance but they see him in denial. wall street journal, a president in denial. times, biden digs in, more supporters look to push him out. the "wall street journal," biden interview fails to alleviate voters' concerns.
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and the washington post, as biden digs in, another elected democrat calls on him to exit the race. the sharks are circling, and now all of these stories like planting questions, it's like they're all of a sudden ready to tell the truth, all of a sudden ready to recognize reality. they might want to look into a few other stories while they're at it. i've got a suggestion, look into hunter biden. there might be an interesting story about his connections to ukraine and china. if you're interested in, anew in the truth, check hunter biden out. lisa: you know what infuriates me? one, i hate being lied to. that makes me mad. but what makes me mad as well is there's almost -- joe biden's age is almost being used as an excuse for the terrible policies that he has enacted on americans throughout his presidency, right in we are failing not because of anyone, but because his policies are a failure, a failure as a president. i mentioned yesterday former secretary gates said he has gotten every foreign policy decision wrong for 40 years, right? that is when he was with it,
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allegedly. and this makes me mad, this quote from robert hur back in february on biden's handling of classified documents. he said we have also considered that at a trial mr. biden would likely present himself to a jury as he did during our interview of him as a is sympathetic, well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory. based on our direct interactions of our observations of him, he is someone for whom many jurors will want to identify reasonable doubt. it will be difficult to to convince a jury to convict him, by then a former president well into his 80s, of a serious felony. this man has a his if handled classified information since the '700s, since the '800, since he was a senator. how is he a well-meaning, sympathetic elderly hand? that's what makes me mad. joey: that statement you just read was from the special counsel's report who spent hours sitting in front of biden investigating, investigating this issue and asking him questions. what is amazing about this is we sit here and we go the liberal
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media is in an age of epiphany right now -- will: right. right. joey: they understand president biden's cognitive abilities are declining, if only there were someone in an official role that spent time with him and could have warned us about this -- will: in february. joey: but this is how they responded in february. >> he's very lucid, very well informed, and he speaks quietly and a little bit slowly, but, you know -- >> the one thing that really strikes me about this is there hasn't been, as far as i know, a single claim that biden made a mistake, that he did, that he did something wrong in terms of policy. because he's old. >> robert hur, the self-declared republican prosecutor who threw in gratuitous personal critiques of president biden's memory and age like an amateur neurologist. >> we've spent way too much time talking about this president's age, and i'll say it again. when ronald reagan was the
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oldest person to ever be in the white house and to run for re-election, i don't recall a lot of people within his own party talking about the fact that we need to get another person, he's too old. if. will: so in february, to your point, joey, robert hur, the special prosecutor looking into joe wind's handling -- joe biden's handling of classified documents, said i don't think he's mentally competent, essentially, to stand trial, for me to convince a jury that he's culpable. and in february the media responded that way. how a dare robert hur -- [laughter] if how dare he say that. a short, what are we, five, six months later, these are your headlines, this is their reaction. joey: it's absolutely -- it would be laughable if it weren't our country's fate. if it weren't for the 13 kill killed in afghanistan, the people who are losing their lives and livelihoods thanks to an open border and fentanyl coming into the country. like lisa said, the policies still matter. and it's one thing to say this
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guy's on cognitive decline or another thing to say he might have broken -- broken the law or been corrupt with his son. no matter how you land on any of those, you have to sit here and go this is the man this charge of the policies of our country, and these policies are dangerous to americans right now. and anyone who carried water for something we all saw is cull package in that. and -- culpable many that. they should be eating crow and apologizing. lisa: sometimes i feel like we living in the truman show? is this real when we get up and we head some of -- read some of these headlines. in addition to the bad policy, just the loss of freedom and liberty in america as well. we all saw during covid when that man we saw on the screen earlier, joe biden, tried to force vaccines in the arms of young and healthy people, a vaccine he said would stop the transmission. it did not. we saw governors go in and continue state of emergencies well past when they should have been expired, abusing their power. and thousand we see them trying -- and now we see them trying to jail president trump.
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he's still facing that sentencing, you did the interview earlier, great interview, on what that a means for some of these cases. but lawfare against the president in an unprecedented way we have never seen before which sets the groundwork for a dangerous precedent moving forward. we have a whole host of issues on top of, you know, do we have a president with dementia or not. will: right. lisa: it's wild. will: it is. the media now interested in exposing some truth. there's a lot -- joey: for now. will: it'll be interesting to see how quickly it turns -- lisa: what do you think the over-under -- will: for what? lisa: for how quickly it turns? will: they won't have think interest in holding kamala harris accountable for think role she played in this if she becomes the nominee. and if it resolidifies behind joe biden, it'll be interesting to see how anybody walks back any of this. if all of a sudden this passes and it's joe biden again, what are they going to do about a these headlines? what are they going to do about these democratic congressmen who
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are, like -- joey: yeah. will: how does everybody walk back from this? lisa: oopsies. [laughter] joey: they're pretty good at it. will: let's move to a fox weather alert. beryl turns into a tropical storm and is likely to make landfall in texas as a hurricane tomorrow morning. lisa: storm surge and hurricane warnings are being issued along parts of state's coastline. joey: we have more from surfside beach, texas. >> reporter: good morning. that hurricane warning woke everyone up in the middle of the night, and that's a big deal. the warning is now extending all the way up closer to the houston metro area. surfside beach is about an hour and 15 minute drive southwest of houston. the gulf of mexico, right over my shoulder. i will say it is a spectacular sunrise. but a huge day ahead of us. in fact, landfall is about a 24 hours from now. right where i'm standing we're
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talking about at least 4 feet of water. the storm surge warning that's in effect warns for a possible storm surge of 4, 5, even 6 feet of water above dry ground. that's why mandatory evacuations have already been called for recreational vehicles. this morning we're seeing a ton of fishermen if come out trying to get that last catch before they head over the bridge and get more to an inland location. beryl has already smashed records. in fact, it's the strongest june and july hurricane, the earliest category 5 hurricane. it's already december hated the caribbean islands. decimatedded. thankfully for americans, this is not going to be a category 5 hurricane, but we're tracking a tropical storm that's 250 miles away, and within 24 hours it is going to be a hurricane. in fact, the national hurricane center warning this could have rapid intensification in the forecast. that means that winds could ramp up 35 miles per if hour within the next 24 hours before landfall, and that means beryl is going to be strengthening all
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the way until it smacks this coastline. unfortunately, southeast texas is very prone to storm surge. this is going to bring everything. we have the wind, we have the inland flooding that's going to be a risk as well. but the storm surge particularly for surfside beach is going to be hard hit. they got a taste of it with alberto a couple weeks ago. this area actually sustained damage from al a berto, and that's a drop in the hat compared to what we're expecting with beryl. joey: thank you, brit that, for that update. stay safe. i've got a lot of friends in texas. hope that -- it just seems unfair for a hurricane to get weaker and then just strengthen as it comes back in. it just seems like one or the other there. it's tough. all right, turning thousand to your headlines, hamas accepting a u.s.-backed ceasefire proposal, laying the groundwork for the release of the remaining hostages in gaza. the deal is moving forward after hamas dropped its demand that israel put an end to the fighting completely but is now requesting, quote, written
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guarantees that will continue to be negotiated once the first phase of the plan begins. cia director bill burns is reportedly expected to the travel to qatar next week to join the negotiations. this wild video shows a massive fire after a train hauling hazardous material derailed friday in rural north dakota. 101-15 cars -- 10-15 cars erupted in flames for 12 hours. nobody was hurt, but officials are worried about possible exposure to chemicals like ammonia, sulfur and meth if knoll. right now a spill investigation is underway. it's unclear what caused the train to derail. and check this out, a massachusetts teenager stopping a runaway boat in the middle of a new hampshire lake earlier this week. a sailing instructor says he was teaching a class when one of the boats hit -- one of the boats hit the throttle into full blast, forcing him overboard as the boat sailed around in circles.
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that's -- >> oh, my god. [background sounds] [cheers and applause] will: that's awesome. joey: that's a aquatic rodeo. will: it is. he hopped on to to back of the jet ski with his buddy -- joey: he'll be heading off the for the navy -- that was a navy if seal level agility -- least roast you know he's showing off for all his friends. joey: he's going to show this clip to all his friends. [laughter] lisa: more to talk about, biden heads to battleground pennsylvania today for campaign cleanup as his mental state remains in question. will: and more democratic lawmakers call for him to drop out of the election. joey: patrick murphy is a former democratic congressman, and he'll be seeing biden on the trail today. we're going to get his take.
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the latest being minnesota congresswoman angie craig who says the stakes are too high. notably, she is there from -- the first of a swing district to do so. there's others like texas congressman lloyd doggett who believes now is a good time to look elsewhere. arizona congressman raullyal a v.a. says part of biden's responsibility is to get out of the race. massachusetts congressman seth mouseon, compared it to stepping a aside. mike if quigley saying step down and let someone else do this. it's not just lawmakers. maybe even more important, democratic donors like netflix cofounder reed hastings urging the president to step aside as well. all of this is happening as today house minority if leader half ceem jeff reese will be holding a meeting with democrat as as they weigh their support of joe biden.
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former democratic pennsylvania congressman patrick murphy joins us now. congressman, great to see you this morning. what do you think about this? the number of elected officials, there's as well senator mark warner who's putting together a group of senators, the number of donors who are lining up now asking joe biden to step down, growing. >> yeah. well, listen, it's great to be with you this morning. the old adage, do democrats fall in love, republicans fall in line. the congresswoman and other folks who are saying they want someone else other than president biden, the reality is they're still going to vote for him. and you compare that though, will, with 40 of the 44 cabinet officials under president trump are not supporting his election. so, listen, there's folks -- it's going to be biden versus trump this november, november 5th. it's going to be the an epic rematch, but the reality of it is, there's a reason why there's two tour-star marine generals that served under former
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president trump, his chief of staff and secretary of defense, james mattis and john kelly, they are not endorsing president bush. that should -- will: patrick, the problem with with that is, a, it's not new news. b, this moral or attempt at some type of equivalency -- and it's been going on for quite some time -- even when it comes to mental acuity in the months leading up to that debate, there was an attempt by many on the left to compare the brain of donald trump against the brain of joe biden. that's gone. that's over. that equivalency is over. so for you to bring up another equivalency today, all you're doing is hiding the ball on what is a real problem here -- >> no. will: hold on. not just for joe biden's electability. the united states of america ask and if our national security. if the president of the united states, the sitting president, can't form thoughts, that's a problem for the united states. >> but, will, he is deliberate. he has formed thoughts.
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he's been delivering for three and a half years. if there's a question about a him making a wrong decision, i would be the first to criticize, and i've been on your show, on "fox & friends," and said it was not a good debate, no doubt about it, and sometimes he stumbles. he's always been that way -- will: you don't think there's been a change? >> i, i -- do i think there's been a change? i think him and president trump stumble ogg the -- stanley cup, on the -- stumble on the stump -- will: you know what i'm asking you. you haven't seen a decline in frieden from february to june, from 2020 to 2024, from 2012 to 2024, you think, oh, it's just normal stumbles? you don't see a change? >> i think there's no doubt that since he's been in the presidency, he has stumbled, but even before that he stumbled, will. and i think we ought to be fair and balanced here, and the reality of it is, is he's been delivering. and, again, it's not that he stumbles, he's always stumbled.
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he's talked about, he's been open if honest about his stutter. he's been open and honest that he's not an orator like jfk or barack obama. well well, that's a fact. >> the american people want someone that can deliver for hi- will: look, i get that argument, i do. i don't get the -- >> okay. will: i don't get the argument these are is stumbles. i hear the argument you're attempting to make, the biden administration is attempting to make as a well, bad 90 minutes versus 3 and a half years. it's an overall a -- >> and i didn't say just9 90 minutes. will, i've always a been on here, and i've been straightforward with you and the american people, you look at my instagram, i've been on the air a, i showed these clips. but i'm also saying the people, the president that i want for my kids, for the american families is someone who's going to deliver for them and not be for himself. and that's a contrast in this race. and you know it and i know it. will: well, i don't know that as well. i don't know what you're suggesting i might know.
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i think record high inflation and wars across the world are not the delivery i'm looking fo- >> will, will, will, come on -- will: look, you and i have a difference of opinion on the quality of the last three years of leadership, okay? i don't know how we can have a reasonable difference on whether or not there's been a decline in the president's acuity. that ship has stale -- sailed. that talking point is over. i think that the real debate right now, today, we'll get to trump versus bide, but the real debate today, patrick, and it's for your home state of pennsylvania where trump is up big right now and biden that e -- is headed to pennsylvania, the real debate is whether or not everyone is telling the truth about the mental ability of the leader of the free world. >> and, will, i will say this, this is what the debate should be, the fact that, today, when i'm with president biden in a few minutes, about an hour from now, this is his eighth trip to pennsylvania just this year. he was in wisconsin on friday. the guy is hustling. the guy was overseas in a combat
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zone as president of the united states in ukraine, he was in israel with our allies. and i'll say it today, when he's at a black church this morning going to mass, right, he's going to talk about it was 16% unemployment in black america just years ago under president trump, and now it's less than 5%. that's an historic low. we're going to talk about a stock market that's at a record high. so you talk about inflation, it was high. it was 9%, but it's now down to 3, will. that's the record that he's brought, and that's because of some of the policies -- will: hey, pa patrick, before we go, i've got to run, but you and i have had debates about those numbers, and we don't have to do it every time we're together, the games you're playing with some of those -- >> i like you, will. will: i like you as well. one last thing, and you're going to be truthful with me, okay? >> okay. will: if you were sitting in congress today, juan your name be up on this board with the rest of these democratsesome. >> no, you know why? will: a swing district. i have a feeling this would be six, and the sixth would be
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patrick murphy. >> but you why, will? i'm not calling those fife out, but a lot of folks in washington care more about their re-election, and i always said and i always live my life this way, you know what's more important than re-election? judgment day. and that means doing the right thing -- lash. [laughter] how you are when nobody's looking. will: i like that you -- you climb to the top of mount moral high ground there with judgment day -- [laughter] and i've got, i've got to break it to you, i've been on top of judgment day. i'll meet you when you get there, patrick, okay? [laughter] >> hey, i want to tell president biden that will says we should start calling joe biden joey jobs, because that's what he's deliver delivered -- will: you can tell him whatever you want, he won't understand what you're telling him. >> oh, you're killing me. will: see you later, patrick murphy. we told you a lot about the southern border crisis, but critics say the northern border is one of the biggest loopholes
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earn up to 5% cash back on business essentials with the chase ink business cash card from chase for business. ♪ joey: new this morning, growing outrage over a reportedly massive loophole. 5500 moils long, to be exact, a. border with canada where critics say president biden's executive order does not apply. dhs data vealing a record 3600 migrants illegally crossed the northern border just last month alone. that's in addition to the 100,000 migrants at the southern border during that same time. our next guest warns the northern border is just as big a threat as the south. retired border patrol chief
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chris clem is here to explain. good morning. thank you so much for joining us. explain what makes the northern border so much of a risk right now. >> yeah. well, you know, again, the hot topic has always been the southern border just because of volume, and even the numbers are minuscule. as you mentioned, 55000 -- 5500 miles, we have some technology and great partnerships, but, you know, that in itself is one problem. but 90% of the canadian population lives within about 100 air miles of the united states, and that includes all their major population centers. so that is an opportunity for criminal networks to build their enterprise and, you know, use that smuggling system, you know, they do so well. and, again, it's not so much the numbers that we're seeing there, it's the rapid increase, the acceleration that the agents have experienced over the lassies fiscal year -- last fiscal year that is putting everybody at risk. joey: yeah.
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i think most americans see canada not so much as a good ally, but as a more technologically advanced country, a can country that doesn't have several other countries just on the other side of it, it's bordered by the arctic circle. so why is it i see here people from 85 different countries and terror suspects, why is it they're able to get into canada and get down to us? >> yeah, you know, those that have been a apprehended on that terrorist screen database, that's a big chunk of the people that they've been catching up there. but, you know, canada has a more lax immigration policy as far as if allowing people in, different visa waiver programs they have even with mexico and the united states. so it allows people all a around the world to arrive there. and if assimilate much quicker, that gives them an opportunity to come in sometimes even lawfully sooner than anywhere else. joey: yeah. >> but again, it's a pull factor. joey, i just spent the last three weeks of june on the northern border, montana,
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michigan, pennsylvania, new york, i was in new hampshire last year, and i can tell you the northern border of people, the communities up there, they feel left out, number one, because of the volume. but it's a sucker punch because a lot of their communities are receiving migrants from the southern border when they have this threat there. so it is a problem for this administration. i've said all along let's get the leak fixed on the southern border, but with we cannot ignore the northern border because of those potential threats. and the people up there, again, some battleground states, they're ready to battle. they're fed up with this. joey: yeah. we see new hampshire, the polls are leaning towards trump so maybe this is part of it. you would know before anyone, chris clem. thank you so much for joining us. >> you got it, thank you. joey: yes, sir. all right, we have a fox weather alert. texas already feeling the impact of beryl. what you need to know before it makes landfall tomorrow. plus, biden rejecting the need for a cognitive test amid concerns about mental acuity. >> look, i have a cognitive test
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every single day, every day i have tests. joey: thankfully for you, here at fox news we've got the doctor's take. nicole saphier is up next. and it's designed to help you feel cool. so, no more sweating all night... no kicking off the covers... or blasting the air conditioning. because only the tempur-pedic breeze is made with our one-of-a-kind cooling technology that pulls heat away from your body. so, the mattress feels up to 10° cooler all night long. during our july 4th sale, save $500 on tempur-breeze mattresses, and sleep cool and comfortable, all summer long. learn more at tempurpedic.com. when my doctor gave me breztri for my copd, things changed for me. breztri gave me better breathing, symptom improvement, and reduced flare—ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush,
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lisa: fox weather alert, texas already feeling the impact of beryl as hurricane warnings are issued along the state's coastlineline. you can see rain drenching the streets of houston as it's expected to hurricane into -- intensify into a hurricane before making landfall tomorrow morning. swiss jees residents in galveston are under a voluntary evacuation order. rick: this is going to be an interesting storm because it doesn't look all that organized right now. you can see on radar, it's close enough to land to start pick it up on radar. we're getting rain way down across the mouth to havely with yo grand right there, but you get the idea. rain coming onshore. this storm expected to strengthen rapidly as it's heading towards the coast. doesn't look all that organized right now. there's the center of the storm. it's going to move off towards the northwest, but as it does, all of the environmental conditions are going to be in favor of potential rapid strengthening. that means while it's a 60 mile-an-hour storm right now, officially forecast to get to
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about 85 miles an hour with category 11, some guidance could increase it past that. a rapidly strengthening storm as it's moving towards land would have much bigger impact, increase the storm surge, certainly the wind and probably even a little bit of the rainfall totals eventually. we do have hurricane warnings in effect right now. you need to be making final preparations. this storm is strengthening tonight and making landfall likely sometime early tomorrow morning, conditions bad each during the overnight hours tonight. make all your plans today for this potential big impact storm. guys? will: thank you, rick. joey: thanks, rick are. will: president biden is refusing to commit to an independent medical or cognitive test despite growing calls for him to drop out. >> have you had the specific cognitive tests, and have you had a neurologist, a specialist do an examination? >> no, no one's said i had to. no one said -- they said i'm good. >> would you be willing to undergo an independent medical
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evaluation that included neurological and cognitive tests and release the results to the american people? >> look, i have a cognitive test every single day. every day, i have tests. joey: fox news medical contributor dr. nicole saphier joins us now. doctor, this was a question from all of us here on the couch, we'll get into his reaction, but at some point what is a cognitive test, and and why is it so hard for him to want to do it? >> well, good morning, joey and everyone else. so cognitive evaluation, there are many different ones. one of the most basic, the easiest is what we call mini mental status exam that takes 5-10 minutes. you essentially ask a series of questions just to gauge someone's ability for, you know, recall, their attention, visual-spatial relationships and others. so while the president continued to say, you know, i'm running the world and i take a cognitive exam every single day, i mean, that's not really true. it is not so, it is not so
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bombastic or crazy to think that an 811-year-old -- 81-year-old with at his annual examination if would undergo a mini mental status exam, at least have some form of cognitive evaluation because age is the primary risk factor, and he does have other risk factors. he has high cholesterol, a heart condition, these are all risk factors for cognitive decline. will: dr. saphier, that 5 to 10-minute cognitive test, what would it red familiar if -- flag for you? i know there's can conversations, and and i'm not making a diagnosis here today, but i know what has been mentioned, dementia, alzheimer's. there's eastern reports about a parkinson's specialist. so in that cognitive test, what could you learn? >> well, and to be fair, cognitive decline is a symptom, potentially a symptom of something else. could be one of the dementias that you just, you just discussed. and during this mini if mental status exam or some sort of
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cognitive evaluation, you know, if you start to see they really having difficulty with memory, with withdrawal -- recall, some of their physical capabilities, you may want to undergo more expensive testing such as brain imaging like an mra -- mri or other things. at the end of the day, it happens as early as about 45. so, again, it is not so crazy to think that at the age of 81, he may be having some decline. now, the reality is he keeps saying i have a cognitive examination every single day in his job which, obviously, requires a lot of executive functioning. but this is a president who has fewer interviews, live events than really many other presidents before him and, unfortunately, in a lot of those live events people are seeing his difficulty remembering things, you know? he just goes -- anyways, he moves on. that's something that a people are concerned with -- joey: that's a growing frustration. >> -- with people's concerns to have this examination and release the results just like
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they do every single year with his physical. lisa: and, dr. saphier, real quick, how would that impact an individual's decision making? >> well, certainly, it is difficulty with high-level thinking when it comes to some level of cognitive decline. and, again, just because you have some level of cognitive decline doesn't mean that, you know, all of a sudden you can't retire, you can't perform your job. that doesn't say that at all. but i think the american people do have the right to know what the meant ifal and physical fitness is of their president, and that is something that has, we've done that every single year that they release their physical examination. at 81 it's recommended to have, you know, a cognitive evaluation. leyna: lisa: yeah. dr. saphier, thank you so much. always good to see you. will: thank you. joey: thanks, doc. >> thanks, guys. joey: all right, like father, like daughter. when one small town georgia mayor decided not to run for re-election last year, his daughter took the helm. lisa: we're talking to those two
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♪ if. lisa: following in her father's footsteps, after her dad served as mayor of a small town in georgia for 12 years and decided not to run for re-election, at
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the age of 20, brooke decided to run for his seat as mayor of the city and won. that makes her the youngest female mayor ever elected in the u.s. mayor brooke huckabee and her father, former mayor craig huckabee, join us now. i love this story because my dad worked on capitol hill in politics, and i also a followed in his footsteps, so this story means something to me. i love it. you know, brooke, you're 21 years old. you could be out partying, you could be out doing all these different things, yet you decided to run for mayor. why'd you make that decision? >> well, you know, it's just really concerning the me how people -- to me how people my age aren't involved in politics or any real thing going on in the world. and i just -- i wanted to be the one to be able to make that a change and take that step forward where other people aren't. lisa: well, craig, she didn't even tell you at first shah she
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was -- that she was going to run. so that surprised you. when you found out, what advice did you give her? >> well, let me explain the way that happened. it was on a tuesday i think she signed up, and it was thursday before i found out from my secretary at city hall. i thought i'd maybe talked her out of running, but anyway, i was a little bit shocked, but i'm glad. and she's a smart girl and she'll do well. he's he's you know, brooke, why did you decide to not initially tell him? >> i really don't -- i don't know if i was kind of more or less scared he was going to try to get me to back out or just kind of the almost of surprise with the whole thing. i think i wanted to be able to kind of a sneak up on him. lisa: craig, what makes a good leader in your estimation? what did you learn from your time in office in. >> well, i think it takes somebody to step up to the plate, to see the needs that are going on in our community and be
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willing to take a little heat and make some changes, you know? lisa: brooke, what do you hope to accomplish? >> my goal is to just really get the community to start investing in themselves. i mean, we've got such a good area that we're in, two cities in chris county, and i think it's just more or less time for everybody to kind of focus on our future and not necessarily have to rely on the county. he's lois craig, do you think more young people should step up to the plate like your daughter decided to do? >> oh, yeah. i think about us older folks, these younger people are going to be here a lot longer than we are, so, i mean, the laws and the rules that are being made today, they're going to have to live with. i think it's definitely important that we see younger people getting involved in politics. lisa: brooke to -- brooke, do you hope more young people step up to the plate? >> i really do. and just -- not just because, you know, i have a new outlook
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on things. it's really start time -- time we start caring about the world that we're a making for our children and their future. and right now i don't think too many people are worried about that. lisa: and real quick, what did you learn from your dad, brooke, when you saw him in office? >> well, it's not really what i learned from my dad necessarily just in office, but what i've learned from him my entire life or, and that's just don't do anything behind the scenes that you wouldn't do in tonight of everybody else and just kind of keep your name good, because that's the best thing you're ever going to have. lisa: i think that is sound advice from both the mayors. thank you so much for joining the show. i love your story. good luck to you. we're looking forward to what you do. >> thank you so much. have a good day. lisa: a big show still ahead this sunday morning. you're going to want to stay with us. ♪ e red. with a very high risk of another attack. with his risk factors his recommended ldl-c level
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