Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 21, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

3:00 am
to him lovingly, beautifully. told him he loved him, told him to keep fighting, we need him. i believe joe heard him. i want you to understand donald trump does this all the time and he needs all the time. you are not a number to him. you're not a model, mass of people to him. you are a human being to him. he looks you in the eye, every individual is special. i want you to know that. the fact that we almost lost this man is shocking to me. it breaks my heart and i know it does yours, to. i'll see you tomorro ♪ ♪
3:01 am
♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
3:02 am
♪ will: good morning, and welcome to "fox & friends." middle of the summer, not right before back to school, but still the middle of the summer here in new york city. we had to clarify for the record that it's still july. rachel: we did a back to school segment yesterday -- [laughter] and it had me and will triggered. will: yeah. there's still vacation to go, there's still camps to be add had. i understand very well that everybody's ready to go with back to school -- rachel: who? will: well, his kids are ready to go back to school in early august. pete: parents are ready -- rachel: ray i feel the whole stress of getting them out the door. i don't like it. i prefer summer --
3:03 am
pete: i agree with that, but get ready. give it who two weeks, it'll really be back to school segments. rachel: yeah. let's hold off for now. pete: put it away for now. will: this whole thing is like a guy who wakes up on saturday morning and goes, monday's coming. rachel: yeah. will: can you go in the other room? we're going to enjoy our saturday. pete: i agree completely. someone else enjoyed their saturday. if you were watching the channel, you saw is it. it was their first rally together. it was donald trump, who's done many of these rallies, and his new vice presidential candidate j.d. vance who's done rallies but none with his name on the posters. here's a highlight, if you missed it, of some of the best moments from that rally in grand rapids, michigan, yesterday. >> i final it hard to believe that a week ago -- i find it hard to believe that a week ago an assassin tried to take donald trump's life, and now we've got
3:04 am
a hell of a rally. kamala harris said something to the effect that i have no loyalty to this country. i don't know kamala. i did serve in the united states marine corps and built a business, what the hell have you done, other than collect a check? [cheers and applause] what is radical about a making more of our own stuff in michigan, in ohio, in pennsylvania? if nothing. what is radical about telling the drug cartels and the violent gangs across the world you're not welcome in this country? if you know, there's nothing radical about having a strong national security. we had a hell of a four years with president donald j. trump, didn't we? [cheers and applause] in four years he undid, i believe, 30 years of damage of terrible leadership. aren't we ready to give him four more years? if. [cheers and applause] if. >> as i said earlier this week, i stand before you only by the grace of almighty god. and now we have something coming
3:05 am
up where they're going to go through their convention, and they have a couple of problems. number one, they have no idea who who their candidate is -- [laughter] and neither do we. they keep saying he's a threat to democracy or, i'm saying, what the hell did i do for democracy? last week i took a bullet for democracy. [cheers and applause] what did i do against democracy? to further protect michigan awe to to workers, i will -- autoworkers, i will end if biden-harris electric vehicle mandate on day one. it's going to end on day one. with the right leadership, every disaster crooked joe biden has created can be ticketed very -- fixed very, very quickly. the flame of to liberty will be burning bright. crooked joe biden, the the worst president in the history of our country, will be a fading memory of the past x.our great silent majority including the once-forgot requesten men and women of our country -- forgotten men and women of our
3:06 am
country will be the ones shaping america's magnificent future when i am the 47th president of the united states of america. [cheers and applause] rachel: he also had a really great comment on his hair as he put up -- do we have that the clip? i really hope we bring that back. he talks about his combover, he seemed really relaxed which is why piers morgan is calling him the mick jagger of politics. because, you know, he can just get up on stage just a week after a being -- an assassination attempt after a week of just a lot of stuff going on at the convention, and his energy level is incredible. pete: one of the themes we did show, highly focused on the economy and the contrast of what's happening in the states like michigan and wisconsin. rachel: yes. pete: and they leaned into the phrase maga-nomics. as a he leaned into the into the phrase maga, what's wrong with
3:07 am
it in that consistent theme in states like this is what will continue, i think, the contrast and momentum for this campaign. will: and what an opportunity to focus in on those the issues. i told you guys yesterday i feel like the convention was an opportunity to celebrate the leadership, the strength, the personality of donald trump in the wake of an assassination attempt. while democrats are just in the middle of a circular firing squad. you have an opportunity to go into michigan, to go into pennsylvania and sell a message that people will actually vote on in november. and i would put it at the top of the list, the economy. that would be the number one message while everyone else is talking about hillary rodham clinton this morning -- [laughter] that that to to talk about your kitchen table -- rachel: very specific michigan-based ones. he was highlighting it or previewing it, i should say, at the convention. ending the subsidies on evs, getting back to making america's auto industry great. he had some very specific michigan stuff in there as well.
3:08 am
and, of course, bringing in j.d. vance, someone from the are rust belt -- pete: yeah. starring out the gate with kamala harris. a prevow of what we might -- preview of what we might see. rachel: the secret service director is tet to testify tomorrow. will: we're learning more new details about the failures leading up to the shooting including a shocking story that the secret service denied trump's request for more defense. pete: c.b. cotton has more from butler, pennsylvania. hey, c.b. >> reporter: good morning, guys. the troubling report from the if washington post followsterred claims from whistleblowers within former president trump's circle after the assassination attempt here in butler, pennsylvania. but the secret service was quick to refute claims that any if security forces had been denied. now the agency says when it's been stretchedded thin, some resources maw may indeed have been denied over the past two
3:09 am
years. a spokesperson writing, quo, in some instances -- quote, in some instances where resources were not provided, the agency made modifications to ensure the security of the protectee, this may include specialized functions or otherwise identified alternatives to reduce public exposure of a protectee. "the washington post" reported in the two years leading up to the assassination attempt on trump's life, members of his security detail were sometimes rejected after requesting more manpower and gear to screen people at sporting events and large public gatherings. the value ally in butler, pennsylvania, was reportedly not one of those events. u.s. officials said trump's security had been bolstered after u.s. intelligence learned of an rain ran -- iranian assassination attempt against president trump which is why lawmakers say they have pressing questions for kimer by cheatle who will testify tomorrow about
3:10 am
the security lapses at saturday's rally here in pennsylvania. >> we have also had whistleblowers tell our committee that there were resources diverted to nato and to dr. jill biden, the first lady. did that really happen? there's a a finite number of buildings that needed to be secured. this shooter is identified at 6:09. 6:1 is 11, president trump is shot. that critical two minutes, what all happened? >> reporter: and now representative brendan boyle who serves a suburban area here in pennsylvania has become the first congressional democrat to join the chorus of other republican voices to call on the secret service director to to resign. back to you. rachel: thank you, c.b. pete: c.b., thank you. i think one of the craziest parts of this is the fact, the forewarning that so many people had, the indication that something was amiss. was it an hour earlier when they identified this guy walking around, was it 20 minutes earlier, was it the moment today
3:11 am
had signs there was potentially someone with a weapon? that was a question that was brought to donald trump, because jesse watters the has a new interview tomorrow with him and j.d. vance is. he asked him about before the shooting was there any warning for you before you got on stage. here's what donald trump told our own jesse watters. >> mistakes were made. they were monitoring this guy for an hour beforehand. no one told you not to take the stage? in. >> no, nobody mentioned you, nobody if said there was a problem. and i would have waited -- they could have said let's wait for 15 minutes, 20 minutes, 5 minutes. i think that was a mistake. how did somebody get on that roof, and why wasn't he reported in because people saw that he was on the roof. you had trumpers screaming, the woman in the red, in the red shirt, she was screaming, and a man on the roof and other people, there's a man on the roof who's got a gun, and that was quite a bit before i walked onto the stage. so you would have thought the
3:12 am
somebody would have done something about it. will: that interview set to air, by the way, in its entirety on monday at 8 p.m. if on jesse watters prime final. you can check that out. finish -- prime time. pete, i was listen dog what you had to say. it's interesting, so if you think about the time increments of preparation for this, you could say weeks in the request for more secret service protection, it was denied. you could say hours, who was first on the radar apparently by 3 p.m. that day -- rachel: ray can you explain that to me? i'm kind of confused about that. so they identified that he was walking around, and they didn't -- will: not a suspect. pete: like a person -- will: person of interest. and i think at that point his range finder -- he'd already gone through a security detector, and his range finder had had gone off. he didn't have, by the way, a hunter's range finder, it was a golf -- pete: a golfing -- will: a golfing range finder. so they had eyes on him as he
3:13 am
was walking around the building. but the time increments keep doing, and even -- going, and seven minutes before he's on the roof, but it's not until the rifle is seen that he's a full-on suspect. whatever, the terminology changes. and the latest time increment is down to, like, two minutes. between 6:09 and i 6:0111 he's -- 6:111 he's seen there basically as a threat before shots are fired. and even that though, two minutes is a lot -- you know, two minutes in television, that's an eternity. we do a lot of things where someone says 30 seconds til we're on air, we're over here putting around off camera. what kind of communications, was it smooth communications? was local law enforcement on the same channel as a secret service? but to your point p pete, there's a lot of different moments where something had to go wrong. pete: yeah. and if there was one flag, just waiting 5 minutes or 10 minutes
3:14 am
and saying we're going to hold, mr. president, there's some guy on the roof. we're just going to wait is and make shower. that, to me, seems eminently prudent. and i feel like there have been plenty of other times where we've seen that take place and we had no idea about it. just out of precaution. in this case it was just with, here we go. rachel: well, last weekend when we were, you know, reporting on this, the secret service must have been watching, and they were immediately putting out -- because we were the first people on there really on, right after a at least on conservative media or right of center media talking about this, and immediately the secret service was putting out, like, we didn't -- we offered all the, you know, help we could and that's not true that he was denied, you know, more assistance from the secret service or more people. so they were really defensive from the get go. this is what donald trump jr. just tweeted. he said it's been exactly one week since the assassination
3:15 am
attempt on my father's life. no the one's been fired, no ans to the obvious and ridiculous failures that have been explained, no committees have been formed to investigate, and people -- ten it is of millions of people wan answer. and cory mills, we need a full investigation to determine whether or not this was negligence, dereliction of duty or if there was intent. we can't rule anything off the table. at this time. so hopefully, this will happen. but a lot of people questioning what kind of investigation -- pete: you know, it's a good point. where are the calls from democrats for a massive investigation if you're a fair-minded person, you can say this needs to be exposed completely and calling for it. and it's just kind of, well, okay. the fbi will tell us many due time, whenever we want. this is this is a lot more important than that. how no one's held accountable at all. rachel: usually the answers come out after the news if cycle has moved on. that's kind of what they like to do. that's what people are saying,
3:16 am
no, this is too important. there's an election in four months. every day that donald trump's on the trail he's in danger. pete: that's why they denied it so adamant ifly the day off. they're counting on the news cycle going somewhere else. will: meanwhile, the energy is mounting to get joe biden out of the race. this happened yesterday outside of the white house. >> thank you, joe, it's teem to go! hey, hey, ho, health care o thank you, joe -- will: you're laughing because they said thank you, joe -- pete: please, politely -- rachel: remember, you said yesterday you don't want to to push him too hard, he digs his heels in, so this was the nicer version -- pete: were these the two people who a couple of weeks ago were saying genocide joe has got to go? no, now we'll nicely help him out. [laughter] we will note that joe biden's not at the white house, he's in delaware. so you wonder if something like that ever hits his radar because
3:17 am
he's probably watching msnbc and they're not covering it. but who knows? rachel: one of the problems for the democrats is it's increasingly looking like it's probably going to be the kamala. this idea that we can have the mini convention and maybe somebody else would come to the top. it's just really hard when you have a a lot of african-american female delegates for the democrat party, and this is this idea you can't tech them off. it's probably going to be kamala. and so the question then is who can we have as vice president to start of balance that -- sort of balance that ticket out. welsh "the washington post" is saying that, reporting that the democrat donors are funding an effort to basically vet who would be the best vp more a kamala -- for a kamala harris ticket. here's what they had to say. major democratic donors are vetting a process for potential vice president, nominees should biden exit the race. in recent days people involved
3:18 am
in the effort have contacted the team of top democratic figures including pennsylvania governor josh shapiro, which is the name that we most often hear about, and kentucky andy bashir. the people said speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the effort. the donor ifs are also interested in vetting roy cooper, michigan governor gretchen whitmer and arizona senator mark kelly. what do you guys think of that? will: no mention of the name that's very popular to discuss which don peebles brought it up here yesterday on "fox & friends" or, maryland governor wes moore. rachel: or governor gavin newsom. will: new york i think there's -- pete: you think he'd be a good vp? if no way. will: you know who the latest name everybody's talking about is, i mean, they wrote about it, we'll talk about it later in the show -- rachel: hillary. she's back. pete: let's do it again.
3:19 am
i still think the staggering lack of movement over the weekend that was supposed to be the weekend of all weekends, that that's what we were told thursday and friday, this weekend is the moment, if anything's going to change, it's going to change. nothing's changed. mean, joe's dug in. i'm -- if i've got chips, i'm putting more and more on joe every single day. rachel: he's just saying that's just not enough money for me yet. so that deal is being worked out, for sure. obviously, not going smoothly because, as you say, pete, not out yet. pete: turning now to your headlines starting with this. if new overnight, the idf says they intercepted a missile from yemen after striking at houthi targets in the region one day after the iranian-backed terror group launched a deadly drone attack on tel aviv. this marks the first time israel has directly struck yemen. meanwhile, idf officials say the hamas if leader accused of
3:20 am
masterminding the attack in october was killed last weekend. they're confirming that. israeli prime minister netanyahu will meet with joe bide then tuesday and will address congress on wednesday. and airlines are still suffering from crowdstrike 's global tech outage that knocked airports, hospitals and banks offline since friday. this morning, will, pay attention -- will: i'm watching, i already got the notice the -- pete: more than 750 flights canceled and more than 600 already delayed throughout the united states. rachel: terrible. pete: microsoft says about 8.5 million of its devices were affected in the outage, and those are your headlines. you already got the notice that you're delayed? will: i got notice yesterday -- no, just -- pete: look out. rachel: i'm heading for wisconsin, and i got the same notice. so we're all going to have to, during the break, make sure our flights are actually leaving after the show. still ahead, all eyes on
3:21 am
capitol hill tomorrow as the the u.s. secret service director prepared to be grilled by lawmakers. what questions need to be answered? if a former fb irk investigator -- fbi investigator weighs in.
3:22 am
some days, you can feel like a spectator in your own life with chronic migraine, 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they start. and treatment is 4 times a year. in a survey, 91% of users wish they'd started sooner. so why wait? talk to your doctor. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life-threatening condition. side effects may include allergic reactions, neck and injection site pain, fatigue, and headache. don't receive botox® if there's a skin infection. tell your doctor your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects.
3:23 am
chronic migraine may still keep you from being there. why wait? talk to your doctor about botox®. and get in the picture. learn how abbvie can help you save.
3:24 am
team usa is back! let's see that enhanced 4k from xfinity. wow. everything you'd want is right here when you say... “olympics” so, what if your favorite athlete is... "grant hollowa”" nice. or you can't get enough... “swimming” definitely adding that to favorites. now let's check... “medal coun”" and when is gymnastics on? “olympic schedule” it's that easy. find it, see it, count on it with the best seat in the house. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity.
3:25 am
♪ if. pete: new details in the assassination attempt on the former president p. a source telling fox trump's would-be assassin researched mass shooter ethan crumbley and also major depressive disorder before carrying out his attack. so what goes into the investigation of his motives? here to discuss is former fbi nest andic terrorism investigator ashton pack. ash a -- ashton, thanks for being here. forgive our skepticism on the fbi at this point and the way they can conduct --, what they withhold and what they provide. based on what we know so far and these most recent disclosures, we've heard him googling trump and biden at different events, we know. that these are new. -- he was maybe aware of his own disorder, but also the idea that everything else we're reporting on this morning, that he was looking into another mass shooter.
3:26 am
what do you think about this? >> thanks for having me back, everyone. i think that a lot of these assailants that carry9 out these attacks, what we've seen in some of the after-action reports, we've seen that they've researched other assailants other shooters that conducted some kind of attack in the past, so it doesn't really surprise me. i think, ultimately, the fbi will peel back the onion on who the subject was, was there any kind of guided, guided part on behalf of a nation-state or a domestic terrorist or a foreign terrorist organization. if it starts to appear that he's a lone individual who was out just doing his own thing, then i think, yes, the meantal illness part of it -- mental illness part of it will come into play. but i think the it will start to shift away from the idea that the he was guided by somebody and, ultimately, was doing this on his own, did he have some sort of a grievance and why did he carry out this attack. i think, ultimately, behavioral
3:27 am
assessment unit will start to delve into who he was as a person. the searches on other shooters are not uncommon. we have seen that in the mast and, of course -- in the past. and, of course, a lot of folks are suffering from mental illness. we'll have to find out, the investigation will find out was he previously diagnosed with some kind of mental illness, and if not, they'll have to do some kind of a psychological autopsy since he's no longer around to answer questions to find out what kind of mental illness he may be suffering from. pete: we're going to want those answers. the longer it takes, the more skepticism it engenders, so i hope they're as thorough as possible as quickly as possible. want to move to what's happening tomorrow because the u.s. secret service director, kimberly cheatle, is testifying before the white house over-- house oversight committee. what do you want asked? what do you want to know? >> well, how did this get to where this -- how does this even happen, how does this even
3:28 am
occur? having worked executive protection and having been a percent of helping with presidential visits to the location where i'm at here in southern nevada, you always want to the stay in the protecter world what we call left of bang. we want to stay in that proactive, intelligence-gathering mode where we're trying to prevent attacks. you don't want this to even happen. i mean, once the worst happened and president trump had been hit, you could see the reaction by the agents and the training kicking in. but that is unacceptable and the fact that this should have never occurred in the first place. massive ams of communication breakdown between the u.s. secret service and, i think, the local cops that were there. i am very eager to find out how this could have even happened, how those advance teams and the countersurveillance teams that are such a part of each rally where the former president or current president goes, how did this happen? we always want to stay left of bang in that world of gathering information service we had citizens reporting information that the subject was in the
3:29 am
area. i've heard internet rumors, and i don't know if they're true or not, but that law enforcement had contacted him, they saw him with a range finder: maybe on the surface somebody didn't think that was suspicious enough, but how he was able to crawl on top of a roof within several hundred yards with of the former president -- pete: staggering. yeah, it's gross negligence, a communications failure, failure of imagination. just failure to be prudent, to withhold him from the stage. we've got a guy on a roof, we don't know what's going on. let's wait five minutes, mr. president. all those are failures, if and and she's got to answer for them. ashton packe, thank you so much for your time. >> thank you. th if president you got i. still ahead, time for joe to go -- that's what they say -- as protest testers call on bide on to end his campaign. the president goes to hollywood announce a star-studded fund raise fundraiser with a late night -- letterman.
3:30 am
can the campaign ignore the crisis? well, they're trying. we'll talk about it next. memory and thinking issues keep piling up? it may be due to a buildup of amyloid plaques in the brain. visit morethannormalaging.com
3:31 am
he looks down at his queen, and says... (in atrocious french) au revoir mon amour. a bientot let's work on that french, shall we? (♪) au revoir mon amour. a bientot au owwwww bientot au revoir mon amour. a bientot (♪) (in perfect french) au revoir mon amour. a bientot now search with ai assistant with the hotels.com app -remember when i said we need to screen for colon cancer? -was that after i texted the age to screen was now 45? [both] because i said cologuard®! -hey there! -where did he come from? -yup, with me you can screen at home. just talk to your provider. [both] we'll screen with cologuard and do it my way. cologuard is a one-of-a-kind way to screen for colon cancer that's effective and non-invasive. it's for people 45+ at average risk, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your provider for me, cologuard.
3:32 am
what's considered normal for your cat is interesting. but if your cat isn't their quirky self lately, they may have pain from a common condition called osteoarthritis. now, there's solensia. solensia is a once-monthly injection to control your cat's oa pain. veterinary professionals administering solensia who are pregnant, trying to conceive, or breast feeding should take extreme care to avoid self-injection. self-injection could cause allergic reactions like anaphylaxis. ask your vet about solensia and help get your cat back to their normal.
3:33 am
at the tunnel to towers we made a commitment that commitment is to make sure, that the word homeless and the word veteran are never in the same sentence again. it's a great partnership between the tunnel to towers and manatee county, to be able to provide housing for the veterans that need it most, not shelter, not shelter, home, it's not just a place to sleep. it's actually wraparound services, that's what's so impressive. as someone who fought on the forward edge of freedom these are my people. these are my brothers, my sisters, the people we fought beside we want to make sure that when our veterans are coming home, that they're coming home to something that actually feels personalized and homey for them. i was able to walk through one of the comfort homes today. that moved my heart. i'm just telling you it did when i walked in. and it'll help the heart of that veteran. that's what's important. this is all that is good in america. and i am incredibly proud to stand with them. they matter.
3:34 am
they save lives. you should support them. ♪ >> hey, ho, ho, thank you, joe, it's time to go! will: president biden met with protesters calling on him to step off the democratic ticket. this amid. mounting pressure within the party as 35 democratic lawmakers are now publicly pushing on biden to drop out. the campaign, though, is pushing on, announcing a slew of events and fundraisers. david letterman's going to headline a fundraiser on july 929th. here to react is a former executive director of the draft biden campaign in 2016 or, will pearce. will, great to have you this morning. i think one of the things i like to have these conversations with people that often come from a different side of the political aisle than i lean is to understand where you're coming from and see if you're representative of a larger group
3:35 am
of people out there. but i can't get my arms quite around you, will, because you're from joe biden to bernie sanders, out on joe biden and now i think a self-described republican. and what i would like to know from you at the outset here to see if you represent a larger group of people is why? why have you left joe biden? why have you left bernie sanders? why would you now describe yourself as republican? >> thank you very much for having me on. i think i'm a larger percent of -- group of people p i care more about how the person is going to help our country evolve. i supported joe back in 2015 and 2016 because in that current campaign it was him or hillary clinton, that's why i wanted joe biden. on top of it, if you look at it, i believe joe is not the perfect if candidate at all. the past four years has not been good overall. but if you look at the numbers, the writing's on the wall for the democratic party they need to step aside, and i believe the perfect candidate is donald
3:36 am
trump. will: you have gone from bernie sanders to donald trump, will. there's got to be something in here beyond just the individual that you have seen the effect on policies or some other motivating factors butch again, i find it fascinating because i want to know what's impacting other people out there. is it the economy? >> yeah, absolutely. if you look at the numbers and if you look at the issues overall and also look at where bernie sanders won overall. he won in states, he was supposed to win in states where hillary clinton won, michigan and ohio. look right now what donald trump is doing with j.d. vance is. he's focusing on the iron range, michigan, ohio, indiana. those areas overall because they're hardest hit by the economy. if you look at prices where we were four years ago, where we are now, everything's out of sync. we looked at bidenomic, and it's not doing what it needs to do for the average american, and has the issue why so many people are on the bunch -- bench right
3:37 am
now for joe biden. will: right. absolutely fascinating. to be fair, people seem to be getting off the fence. they're pulling away from joe biden, they're selecting which side they want to be on including donors who are really putting pressure on joe biden. second quarter with fund a raising is down big. trump,, $331 million, biden, $2264 million -- 264. i believe it dropped significantly in the month of july. fund raiding donors, that's turning off the spigot at a some point that's got to be a huge lever on whether or not he remains the candidate for president. >> on top of that, there's a biden super pac right now withholding funds up to $90 million. right now the last recent fec report, now you have basically half of the budget going into one of the most -- [inaudible] right now. you're going into the summer. you have labor day coming up as well. that's when the average american is starting to care about the election. they need those funds overall as well. will: and not to make light here, will, but if i were dating
3:38 am
you, i would want to put a little bit of time behind us before i proposed. you've jumped around a little, so before we get committed, i want to know you're all the way committed. if they replace joe biden with somebody else like kamala harris or gavin newsom, would you still stick with donald trump? if are you convinced with donald trump, or are you waiting for them to replace joe biden with something somebody else that you find more afracktive? >> it's just the direction that the democratic party's going right now. that's my main issue. will: interesting. >> on top of that, overall, if you just rook at where the country's going, when you look at the administration from president trump to versus biden, it's just night and and day. will: fascinating perspective. part of the draft biden campaign in 2016, will pierce. fascinate -- fascinating conversation. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. will: all right. ready and resilient. trump vows to foyt and win in battleground michigan at his first rally since the
3:39 am
assassination attempt. senate candidate mike rogers thanks trump for taking a bullet for america, and he's live next. every day, more dog people, and more vets are deciding it's time for a fresh approach to pet food. they're quitting the kibble. and kicking the cans. and feeding their dogs dog food that's actually well, food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food.
3:40 am
get 50% off your first box at thefarmersdog.com/realfood there are many ways to do things. at old dominion freight line, we do them this way. this way has people who start early. people who care and inspire each other to do things the way they should be done. this way uses technology (♪) and goes the extra mile (♪) to deliver your promises on-time, every time. this way is why we're the number one national ltl carrier for quality. for us, this way is the right way which is why it's the only way we go.
3:41 am
3:42 am
why do couples choose a sleep number smart bed? i need help with her snoring. sleep number does that. thank you. save 25% on our most popular sleep number smart bed. plus free home delivery on select smart beds when you add an adjustable base. shop now. >> i did more for michigan autoworkers and manufacturers than any president in the healthily of our country. [cheers and applause] in the history of our country. [cheers and applause] and just as i promised, i withdrew from the if transpacific partnership which would have totally destroyed
3:43 am
your auto industry. to further protect michigan autoworkers, i will end the biden-harris electric vehicle mandate on day one. it's going to end on day one. [cheers and applause] together we will fight, fight, fight, right? [cheers and applause] and we will win, win, win. rachel: former president trump holding a massive rally in battleground michigan exactly one week after the terrifying assassination attempt, rallying with his new vp nominee j.d. vance for the first time. our next guest was at that rally in michigan, he's the u.s. senate candidate, mike rogers. host trying to flip his seat red, and he joins us now. congressman, so let's -- we're going the talk about your race in just a little bit but, obviously, donald trump reaching out to michigan voters, a very important state, talking about dropping that subsidy for ev vehicles and endearing himself to the auto industry. what else can donald trump do to
3:44 am
ensure that this important rust belt state goes for him? >> yeah. welsh rachel, we prefer to call michigan a work belt state. [laughter] we're worker here. we get up and put our kids on the bus and go to work and build some really amazing products all across michigan. rachel: yeah. >> and i think what the president did yesterday, president trump, first of all, it was electric in that place. i was at the convention. that was electric. if i've never seen a crowd so excited and fired up and enthusiastic about a direction, a different direction for the country than the i did yesterday. 12,000 people in the arena, that's maximum capacity, and i have a feeling they stuffed a few more in there, and there were probably 3 to 4 to 5,000 people out around the community trying to get in. i've never seen anything like it. it was pretty exciting. and what the president's doing is just talking about a working family agenda, ab making sure that we can -- about making sure that we can build thing the things here.
3:45 am
so energy prices have to come down, regulations have to come out. we are out raising costs because of the democrats to make it just damn near impossible to build anything in america anymore. and the agenda that donald trump talked about yesterday reverses all of that and gets us back in the driver's seat is. rachel: yeah. it's really interesting, my colleague, will, just had a guest on who voted for bernie sanders and is now voting for donald trump: but i think this transformation in the republican party from being about sort of corporate needs and now looking at things through the prison op of -- prism of workers is a huge opportunity. and i think testing it there in michigan is a fascinating thing. miking, you were also on the intel committee when you were in congress. you were the chairman, in fact. a lot of people looking at this investigation into what happened with donald trump. what can congress do to ensure that, one, there's a speedy investigation, that we're not going to find out like, you know, a year from now what happened; two, that, you know, we can trust, you know,
3:46 am
apparently the fbi is in charge of in in this investigation. a lot of people don't trust the fbi. what can congress do to make sure it's not only investigate ifed, but that we trust who's investigating and what the results are? >> yeah. and, listen, i was a special agent in the fbi, i was what they call a brick agent or a street agent working organized crime, and that's when the fbi was good and criminals were bad. rachel: yeah. >> i'm not exactly sure what's going on with our department of justice, but i'll guarantee you this, we can fix this, we can reorient them, get them out of politics and back into bringing hardened criminals, violent criminals, death-peddling drug dealers to court. and that's what they should be focused on. i think that's going to be a leadership change. donald trump and i actually had that conversation about a how, what that might if look like. you need a leadership change. there was a thing that happened in the fbi where they brought lots of investigation decisions
3:47 am
to washington d.c. that's got to go back. you got to flip that back around. the special agents in charge in those states need to make those decisions. you'll get a lot less politics when you do that. i think there's a good way forward here. and remember, rachel, the brick agents, the street agents, the people who are doing the hard work and putting their lives at risk, they're good. they are rock solid -- rachel: yeah. >> they don't like what they see either. we've just got to get that justice department cleaned up. rachel: i think your strategy is a good one. i wish there were more whistle blowers coming out of the fbi. know that's tough. their career's at risk, the retirement at are risk, but at this point, we've lost trust in the institution. one quick last question with cheatle. is it enough for her to get firedded? could this possibly be criminal negligence, what happened last week? >> you know, i'd hate to speculate on that. i certainly, i mean, you have one really important job as the secret service, and that's to protect the president. and, unfortunately, this was a
3:48 am
successful assassination attempt. rachel: yeah. >> thank god he missed. but it was a successful attempt. that is a, you know, that's a critical failure. there's no other way to look at it. and so i would look at all the things that went wrong on that day including the fact, you know, listen, i don't know if they were appropriately resourced. i know, i know some folks in the secret service saying that their tactical reaction team had half of the number of people it was supposed to, their counter-sniper teams -- all of those things are something we're going to have to look at. rachel: yep. they're going to look into all of those. by the way, your primary candidate dropped out, so things are looking good for you, congressman, and we wish you all the luck. >> thanks. we're going to flip michigan red. rogers for senate.com. help us out, we need it. rachel: all right. thank you, congressman. >> thanks, rachel. rachel: you got it. let's turn to rick reichmuth for
3:49 am
our fox weather forecast. rick: hey, pete, hey, rachel. what's going on? if it's been a minute. look at thought weather right there. there away go -- there we go -- [laughter] plenty of concerns the next few days. a lot of rain across the southeast. you been dealing with a lot of rain, and nothing really changes all week long. you're going to continue to be the stuck in this pattern. i see pete looking at me because he's been in tennessee the talking about all the rain. right now starting off you find of -- kind of mind you know what happens, the day heats up, and it comes back. parts of texas, some spots the next few days, maybe 5-10 inches of rain, obviously, big flooding concerns. temperatures wise, continues to feel like summer. it is hot. rachel, back to you. rachel: thank you, rick. a four alarm fire sends the first baptist church of dallas up in flames with no injuries. pastor robert jeffers -- robert
3:50 am
jeff rest joins us live next. and keeping it off? same. discover the power of wegovy®. ♪ ♪ with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. ♪ ♪ and i'm keeping the weight off. wegovy® helps you lose weight and keep it off. i'm reducing my risk. wegovy® is the only fda-approved weight-management medicine that's proven to reduce risk of major cardiovascular events in adults with known heart disease and with either obesity or overweight. wegovy® shouldn't be used with semaglutide or glp-1 medicines. don't take wegovy® if you or your family had medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop wegovy® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis and gallbladder problems. wegovy® may cause low blood sugar in people with diabetes,
3:51 am
especially if you take medicines to treat diabetes. tell your provider about vision problems or changes, or if you feel your heart racing while at rest. depression or thoughts of suicide may occur. call your provider right away if you have any mental changes. common side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. with wegovy®, i'm losing weight, i'm keeping it off. and i'm lowering my cv risk. that's the power of we. ♪ ♪ check your cost and coverage before talking to your health care professional about wegovy®.
3:52 am
3:53 am
rachel: god saved us, that's what grateful worshipers are saying this morning after a massive fire broke out in the world's large southern baptist
3:54 am
church, first baptist in dallas. pete: here with an update, senior pastor of that church and friend of the show, pastor jeff is rest. yesterday morning we were stun thed at what has happened. we're so sorry about it. share with our viewers what happened and what your view is. >> well, on friday a massive fire broke out many our historic sanctuary, our old sanctuary of first lap test dallas. -- baptist dallas. it's one of the most well known sanctuaries in america today. presidents like woodrow wilson and gerald ford, george bush have worshiped there. president trump was the first president to worship in our new worship center. billy graham preached there many times. more than that, it was a place filled with memory of our own members. i was baptized there when when i was 6, called to the ministry, ordained when i was 2221. and yet as important as that
3:55 am
building was to us, we know the church is not really about brick and mortars, it's about people, and our people are more resolute than ever to fulfill our god given mission. will: pastor, can you just give us -- we've seen pictures, so it looks pretty devastating -- extent of the damage and any indication of what happened here? how'd the fire start? >> well, atf, the fbi are investigating. frankly, it's too hot to still get in there, but they'll come up with an answer. but, you know, ultimately, this is part of god's plan. exact presidentially one week ago -- exactly one week ago today i was on the early edition of your show declaring that god had saved president trump from an assassin's bullet. i've had people since that time scoff and mock and said, well, is that same guy who saved trump, is that same god responsible for letting your building burn? and i said, absolutely. the bible says god caused all
3:56 am
things to -- causes all things to work together for good, and all things includes the good and the bad. he can work those hard things out for our good and for his eternal glory. rachel: there's actually been a lot of comedians and others mocking christians for saying that donald trump's life was spared, that it was part of a plan. what is your response to people who really just fundamentally don't understand the way christians look at the world? and understand it? >> well, i think, i think you're exactly right, they just don't know god. you know, the bible says in psalm 139 god has written all of our days in his book before we live one of them. the date of our birth, the date of our death and everything in between. it's part of god's plan, and we can trust in that. pete: pastor, you're resilient. thank you, we're praying for you. i know you're worshiping today in a different location. we're with your congregation. >> thank you all very much. rachel: god bless. pete: we'll with be right back.
3:57 am
♪ i wanna hold you forever ♪
3:58 am
hey little bear bear. ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm gonna love you forever ♪ ♪ ♪ c'mon, bear. ♪ ♪ ♪ you don't...you don't have to worry... ♪ ♪ be by your side... i'll be there... ♪ ♪ with my arms wrapped around... ♪
3:59 am
i would say that we're closer than the average mother daughter. hi mom! if i lost my mom... i can't think about that for too long. i was like, "whoa, mom, i have this gene!" kenzie's test and me being able to find out that i was brca positive was lifesaving. i've seen her take her health into her own hands, for herself and for us. i'm really proud of my mom.
4:00 am
(intercom) t minus 10... (janet) so much space! that open kitchen! (tanya) ...definitely the one! (ethan) but how can you sell your house when we're stuck on a space station for months???!!! (brian) opendoor gives you the flexibility to sell and buy on your timeline. (janet) nice! (intercom) flightdeck, see you at the house warming. while i am a paid actor, and this is not a real company, there is no way to fake how upwork can help your business. upwork is half the cost of our old recruiter and they have top-tier talent and everything from pr to project management because this is how we work now.

78 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on