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tv   The Five  FOX News  July 29, 2024 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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>> jesse: hollett everybody and jesse watters along with the judge jeanine pirro care dana perino, it's 5:00 in new york city and this is 'the five'. [ ♪♪ ] do not be fooled by the media as a rewrite of. >> commentator: record, as radical as ever and she just proved it, harris for a complete overhaul of the supreme court, which includes establishing the term limits and ethics codes for justices and a brand-new constitutional amendment to prohibit presidential immunity. you can speak at any moment and here's what he had to say earlier, watch... >> said your supreme court reporter is dead on arrival what is your reaction? how are you going to get it
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done? >> jesse: the vp giving the planners stamp of approval saying this, this popular reform will help to restore confidence into the court, strengthen our democracy and ensure nobody is above the law. democrat voters may think they are signing on for mainstream moderated and kamala harris, but donald trump is warning that is not the case spew. >> mr. trump: if cole gets an issue will be the most extreme radical liberal president in -- history? her deadly destruction of america's borders is completely and totally little disqualifying for her to be president, you cannot have a person like this as president. i sent in the national guard to save minneapolis while kamala harris signed in with the arsonists and raised money to bail out of the criminals, bailed them all out of jail! >> jesse: already, judge, we will take the president when he is ready finally, is about 40 minutes late. [ laughter ]
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judge it, if i were kamala harris and joe biden tried to do something i would not jump to it at all, i would say wait a second. [ chuckling ] have to take a minute before we sign anything that a guy wants. >> judge jeanine: let me take a line from harold, it's good to be back at the table. i agree and i will tell you why, she's trying to promote his of as a moderate, let joe biden do all of the hard work with a progressive nonsense and she just will lead the party leaders know that she is in with it but for the term and duration of this campaign she does not need to go up and do it. the whole idea of joe biden and his team wanting to change in an institution of our government, the united states supreme court, which is embedded in the constitution because they don't like the decision that they
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made? no, they did not do it right away, they waited, they got the decision and got the presidential immunity decision and they were like we will do this thing could, not do it when they had all three houses. the sad part about this as they say number 1, we want to term limits, okay,, why don't you impose term limits on yourselves? why don't you and congress decided that two terms is now for all of you because all you do is make money and make sure the people in your family are able to make money based on inside information that's number 1-3 court of conduct is number 2, who is congress to impose a code of conduct, court of congress on the supreme court of united states and who the heck is going to enforce it? the are a coequal branch of government, they are an independent branch of government and congress has no right to impose any kind of ethics requirement, by the way as long as they were in good stats when
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they stay there. number 3, this whole thing nobody is above the law, they think they are above the law, joe biden and the left by changing the supreme court! 200 years people -- presidents were upset with the supreme court but nobody said let's do something, three quarters of the state legislature, two thirds of the senate and let's try to change everything about of the constitution. and the immunity nonsense? they are stupid! they did not read the decision! it is not absolute immunity, it is absolute in some case, partial in some cases, and has to be determined by the lower court to determine whether or not any immunity applies. you people are so full of it, you want people to believe all the american people will have confidence! know, that is not what this is about! they are upside about the fact that the epa regulators are not -- not now in a position to decide what they can do in a
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result, and over the past what was centuries, i mean everything has been considered and none of this has been proposed. by the way it one last before joe biden comes on, that is i went to portugal last friday neighed after the show, okay? she was a borders are, a come back, all of a sudden, kamala harris is not of the board it's our! does somebody have a lobotomy? the gaslight as all the time! went to the president of the united states because it through order -- thousands of of articles calling her the border chaz. >> jesse: i cannot wait to hear more about your portico trip, we will be hearing about it for quite some time. [ laughter ] jessica, why now? why supreme court? do you want to ran against clarence thomas?
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>> jessica: sure. happy to run against donald trump and clarence thomas, at least his an ethical behavior which is really what this is about? now this will not get past this deck when it goes to congress, it is dead on arrival as the reporter says. at the point is to a. make this an election issue, something to democrats who confident you can do effectively for our side, and b. for the biden harris demonstration to be responsive to the making public. i understand people can have opposition but they have been paying attention where national sentiment is on these issues. >> jesse: really? >> jessica: really? 67 percent of americans want to term limits on the supreme court, that is a poll from last summer, in terms of an ethics code, 75 percent of americans would like that. when that was out, shown how much clarence thomas has taken an gifts and travel back to
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amanda his financial disclosures because of everything he took from harbin to grow, that raises big red flag. >> jesse: that raises red flags but of millions of china to bite and raised on? >> jessica: i love that we are going back to misdirection, i missed you when you were sick and i had nobody do that to me when i was six, clarence thomas and joe biden are different branches of government and he did not take millions from china, we heard nothing about a hundred biden impeachment,. >> jesse: -- >> jessica: sorry, as a hun hunter, okay? the immunity clause issue, a majority of americans agree they do not want immunity from criminal prosecution for actions taken as president. these are popular reforms, they will not get past. >> jesse: it's so funny, acting like people have been
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clamming -- clambering for supreme court reform, there clambering promote money into their projects and a secure border, i did not hear anybody talk about it this. >> jesse: it's an election issue, not principle. they do not care when they took away one donor funded trip, because they were like, okay,, they are taking the trips, and onto the issue popular? medicare for all was super popular, 88 percent. next question, know we don't, we are not for that. i am not buying that about what i am buying, there is a town of left-wing dark money on this issue and has been going on for several years, look at the hearings it. i was a spokesperson for john roberts when they were, one they were going through that confirmation hearings. it really started right after that a, like we have to do something. now with that group, they want a return on their investment. so they wait until joe biden says i am going to cure cancer
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and fix of the supreme court in six months so here is my idea, he has this op-ed that somebody is always he wrote for him and there is just no way that those decisions have gone away that they wanted they would be doing this. there is no way they would be calling for reform if the republicans, their public and one back this entity, do think all demagus will say it we definitely still want to filibuster reform? absolute not. i get irritated because it's decisions like this have to do something very political that everybody on the right to say actually here are the rules, here is the constitution, even though 88 percent popular, when he asked the next question, he's not going to do it in six months. they want a campaign issue and the media will give it to them. >> jesse: brian? >> i'm surprised i was not interrupted, you were surprised -- willing to get a bid right to him. i did not have to be here, but i
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will try to something. if this has no chance of pausing, will agree with that, right? it will make people look at the supreme court as an entity and it will lower the validity for the average american, okay supreme court, if you are republican you're fine obviously but of the average independent what it sounds zoned into its done everyday they say that's correct, is an ad? people have no faith in ed, more polls show they have less faith and they will get more gourds around their home and you feel secure with her doing? turns out up until 1970 the average years of which they served is 17 years, what happens 1970? this started taking vitamins, jogging, wearing short shorts, started taking better care of ourselves so we are living longer that's all that's changed, i'm sorry america! we are living longer! so it does not mean that america
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has lost its way and the constitution needs some white out. i think we leave things as they are and i think the next just run on this, seat open, clarence thomas, not the healthiest person, clarence thomas has been there for 33 years, elect me and i will fill that seat was somebody like me. and seek -- >> spee-five donald trump ran on that and he won. >> judge jeanine: no, he got the right to appoint three justices, i'm tired of hearing what are the american people want. the american people when they vote for president know that president will appoint a justice i literally of political views. >> jesse: there you go, president biden speaking now on his plan to reform the supreme court, let's listen. [ applause ] [ cheering and applause ] >> president biden: thank you.
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'rrr''s thank you, thank you, really. please. thank you mr. ambassador! 'rrr''s. >> president biden: 's thank you for the introduction and above all for your friendship over the years, there is only one word that comes to mind every time i think of andy, the words integrity, absolute integrity. thank you mr. johnston's family for carrying forward the legacy a truly great president and first lady, your mom was incredible as well. [ applause ] the same goes to the president of the foundation, great to be back here, thank you all, to all
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those gathered here today. >> jesse: >> president biden: i was at the college at the university of delaware, early beginning years when i heard the news that president kennedy was assassinated. remember like everybody in my generation, where they were sitting, standing and walking, was on the steps of one of the halls of one of the university halls, at the university. listening on the radio with three other people. it was unbelievable. and then, watching president johnston, to help the nation find a way forward. in his first address after the tragedy, president johnston said in a quote "nothing can more eloquently on her president kennedy's memory then at the earliest passage of the civil rights bill". that is what he said because mark -- [ applause ] >> president biden: i always
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admired president johnston for his public service, when he was a schoolteacher in texas, master of the united states assembly, historic vise president and president, one thing was simple. and a great society, in a great society, no one back no one should be left behind. [ applause ] it's time for us to come to see that every american gets a decent break, and a fair chance to make good? as andy young said, president johnston, repeatedly, building a coalition, vision of life. he brought her to life. fifty years, the foundation has reflected one of the crowning achievements, the civil rights act of 1960 4-3 the defined
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movement that has since opened doors and opportunities for all americans, regardless of race, sexual orientation kind of gender, gender identity, religion, national origin, together, voting rights, and the housing,, each three landmark laws he signed her remarkable in their scale and there is scope. taken together these three agates have made this fundamentally more fair, fundamentally more just and most important fundamentally more consistent with our founding principles, a for real! [ applause ] we are a better nation because of them. we must be clear, our work is not done. it is not done. we do not celebrate these laws as part of our past back critical components of hours
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future. president johnston understood, president lincoln understood in his own time that the courts were determined the scale and scope, the scale and scope of our laws. over 100 years after the proclamation, president johnston vowed in his words to do this job that lincoln started guide to do this job that abraham inc. and started to. by challenging the court to hold up to its constitutional responsibility. he did that by nominating marshall as the first black justice of the supreme court. [ applause ] by aggressively defending civil rights throughout the courts, but now, we live in a different era. in recent years, extreme opinions of the supreme court has headed down and undermined laws established to principles and protections. 2013, supreme court, a case
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gutted the voting rights act, opening the floodgates to restricting voting laws and estates across the country past. in 2022, the court overruled rove you weighed, the right to choose, the law of the land for 50 years, the following year, affirmative-action, which was the tale for nearly 50 years as well, and now, this extreme movement and agenda called project 2025, by the way they are serious man. they are planning another all saudi talking civil rights in america, for example,, project 2025 calls aggressively attacking diversity it, equity and inclusion all across all aspects of american life.
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this extreme maggot movement, imposes -- that is how far they have come -- maga maga if you're born in america, you are an american citizen. that is how extreme these guys are, these issue, and so many other civil rights americans take for granted, in front of the court for years to come. most recently and was shockingly, three-quarter established trump in the united states, at dangerous precedent, they ruled as you know, that the president of the united states has immunity for potential crimes he may have committed while in office. this nation was founded on principle there are no kings in america! each of one of us is equal before the law! [ applause ] nobody is above the law! we are all practical purposes
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the court's decision says that the president can violated the rules, defy laws and rays no consequences. the supreme court justice needs to understand, and i quote, under the majority's reasoning, the president now will be for criminal prosecution, orders of navy seals to assassinate political rival, immune, organizes at the literary to hold onto power, immune, digs a bribe in exchange for pardon, immune, use of physical power, the president is now the king, above the law. folks, just imagine what a president can do when civil rights -- the courts can weapon eyes the extreme unchecked agenda gagged this decision was
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a front to the basic expectations that we have, and those who wields the power in this nation, but they are expected to be held accountable under the law. the president is no longer restrained by the law and only limits will be self imposed by the president alone. that is a fundamentally flawed view and a fundamentally flawed principle, a dangerous principle. on top of his extreme decisions, the court lack of ethics. these scales of justice have caused public opinion to question the courts fairness. they are essential. legal justice under the law. for example,, from documented reports a decade-long effort to reshape the judiciary including the supreme back trunk supreme court backed by shadow agile
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interests who support project 125, gifts worth hundreds of thousands of dollars from wealthy benefactors, who had interest before the very court contributed to, conflict of interest, from those, cards to the january 6th instruction us and the blatant attack on the court itself? you will remember when just as kolya died in february 2016, the republicans blocked the presidents nomination, president obama nomination to fill that vacancy for nearly a year, by making up an entirely new standard that they are be no confirmations of the court in the election year, but then, one just as kim berg died in 2020, republicans rushed to the presidents trump no money at the very same time for -- votes were being cast in an election that trump would lose.
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it is outrageous! [ applause ] i know i don't look at but i've been saying it for 36 years,. [ laughter ] the judiciary committee, avenue been told i will receive more supreme court nominations as senator, vice president, president than anyone in history, anybody alive today i should say. [ applause ] i very much have respect to our constitutions and the separation of powers, but what is happening now is not consistent with that doctrine of separation of powers. extremitism is undermining the public confidence in the court's decision, as soon as i can be a bipartisan presidential commissioner onto the supreme court of the united states got comprised of constitutional scholars both liberal and
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conservative, divide recommendations of potential reforms to the court. i would be careful with these deliberations because serious decisions. in face of increasing threats to american democratic institutions, i use the commission's analysis and today i am calling for three fold reforms to restore trust and accountability to the court in our democracy. as i get off air force one, republican speaker to the house had whatever exposes is dead on arrival. i think what he's thinking is dead on arrival. [ applause ] calling for constitutional amendment, calling that that nobody is above the law amendment. [ applause ] i mean it sincerely, no immunity
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for crimes former president committed while in office, i share -- [ applause ] i share our founders believe that it president must answer to the law, the president is accountable to exercise a great power of the presidency, we are a nation of laws not kings and dictators. [ applause ] he says it can be boiled down to title i case, trump versus the united states, the court asserted it was making a ruling for the ages, that is not true. the court made the ruling for one, a former president, no other president in our history has asked for this kind of immunity for criminal actions and no president, no former president, not me, not one, not one, has been given the immunity
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exception to this, is such immunity. second thing i'm asking for, terms a president of the united states for 75 years, after the german restrictions. i believe we have a term limits for the same court justice as well. [ cheering and applause ] and faguy the united states is the only major constitutional democracy to give lifetime terms to the high court, term limits would ensure the court membership changes with some regularity. that would make timing for the courts nomination more protectable and less arbitrary, reduce the chance that a single president imposes under influence of generations to c come. the bipartisan commission i can lead and lies with various terms
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and structures based on a report i believe the best structure is a term limit. it would ensure the country will not have what it has now, extreme court that will attack the confirmation process, weapon eyes to are those seeking to carry on the extreme agenda for decades to come. finally these guys needed to make these guys needed, projects 2025 israel and the mean it. -- is real. am also calling for a binding code of conduct for the supreme court. [ cheering and applause ] the supreme court is current code is weak and voluntary. any court of congress must be
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enforceable, with the reform and i propose, justice will be required to dispose gift, refrain from public political activity, recruit themselves in case which they have a financial or other conflict of interest. most people don't realize -- that congress passed a law decades ago that says all federal judges, including supreme court justices have to recruit themselves in such cases, is the current justices insist on a requirement themselves, no public oversight? see that as their decision, and the no need to tell us how they mated. work and forcing those requirements, but they are not, the court is not self policing, the court is not dealing with the obvious conflict of interests, we need a mandatory
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court of ethics for the supreme court and we need it now to pause. [ cheering and applause ] our fellow americans, based on all my experience, i am certain we need these reforms. to restore trust in the court, preserve the system of checks and balances that are vital to our democracy, also commonsense reforms, though the vast majority of americans will support and leaving scholars can progressives and conservatives. i look forward to working with congress enforcing these reforms, and members of congress here today, let me close with this, president johnston signed in the civil rights act in 1964 just taught what days before the fourth of july. he said in that it built signing and i quote "this as a proud triumph, those who founded our
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country, the freedom would be secure only if each generation fought to renew larger mean meanings". that is what i tried to do with throughout my career, despite of these silhouettes. [ cheering and applause ] that's what got me involved initially. my state was as stated was segregated by law, we were one who were fighting this side of the south and could not get there. i am serious. what motivated me to be a public defender, at councilman, i will never forget, had a job with a big firm, in delaware you have to start -- study for the bar
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for six months before you are allowed to take it, in the meantime i was studying for the bar, that's when dr king was assassinated. the only state in the nation city in the nation that had a military station wasn't by units it for ten months, for ten months. we had a very conservative, democratic government. in those days, when the democrats of one of the could choose to be part of the southern or northern gover governments. they choose this out governments all the time. but guess what, got me engaged, i knew that i was going to run for president. [ laughter ] i remember walking in to the public defender's office, part-time at the time, and asking for an application to
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join to the public administrator office. eluded me and said don't you work for sanders? as said yes, so why the hell do you want to do this? [ laughter ] not a joke. i said let me do it. and became a public defender. focus here is the deal. what got me engaged like a lot of you do, you get engaged and you want to change things, i kept trying to change the democratic party in my state which is very conservative, and a group of people came to me is my senator that chris koons, came to me and said, you should wrana for senator and i said i can't, i'm just starting a law firm part-time public defender. then i came back and said it went to the county counsel is that i can't, he said stupid [
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bleep ] is right across the street. [ laughter ] i'm serious! so my sister, and my best friend managed my campaign and we picked a district that we could possibly when, no democrat has ever won, my problem was i had my sister campaigning. [ laughter ] and we won! think you know, part of a group with youngest senators, younger elected officials to try to bring the party around. and i was put on the commission with a lawyer, turning the lights on after every meaning. her member going down to the democratic convention, off year, over in delaware, and in the afternoon session went back and i was in my room, had to drive out and walk out the door there,
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in an eight by ten bathroom with a shower and a stall, and had my towel around me and shaving cream on my face and bam, bam on my door! i thought it was the guys who had a talk show, and it was a big civil-rights guy. and two others. so there was a former governor, former supreme court justice, swear to god, the state chairman and the former congressman. the said -- i said i'm sorry gentleman, walked in, ran into the bathroom, put some underwear on, walk right back out, and headboards nailed to the wall, sitting across, and we are
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thinking, you should run for united states senate. i said are you serious? [ laughter ] and they made their case? i hope all of you had professors like mine, had one, my political philosophy professor at the university of delaware, between delaware and where i was going home. as to provide you see him and decide what do you think i should do? he said it joe, remember what plato said, is said, what the hell did plato say? serious! plato said the penalty people pay for not -- said it you are working 40 hours a week, in a law firm, working 40 hours a week as a public defender can't get in or get out. next thing you know i was
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running, got 60 percent of the vote won by a staggering 400 votes. [ applause ] at her not know what the hell was doing. and i went on, had to wait to be sworn in, had to be 30 to be sworn in. i was a vice president of america. [ applause ] first woman vice president. [ cheering and applause ] i made clear how i feel about kamala harris, she's been an m. -- incredible champion partner, she will continue to be the aspiring leader projecting the idea of america, the very idea that we are cleared equal.
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we never walked away from that. never walked away because like johnston, our fellow americans, unit two years we will come right at the 250th anniversary of the signing of the declaration of independence, this july 4th 2026, it will be a moment not only about a past but about our future. imagine that moment and ask yourself, what do we want to be? week must protect and expand our civil rights we can and must prevent the abuse of residential power and restore faith into this up in court, we can and must strengthen the guardrails of democracy, you must remind ourselves who we are, the art of the united states of america, there is nothing beyond the capacity had nothing we can't do together so let's stay together and god bless you all, ladybird johnston, may god bless the
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whole family pack leaders and gentlemen, may god protect our troops, thank you for your support. [ applause ] [ ♪♪ ] >> jesse: that was joe biden in a rambling address where he laid out a plan to break up the supreme court and then told a lot of great stories from the seventies. you had something you want to say before you were so rudely interrupted? >> the supreme court it is now more political than ever, he brings a project 25 and 13 mackinaw the fact that john roberts the supreme court of justice saved care and i think an opportunity to balance it out but he made a campaign speech, saying that he will make that part with. >> commentator: was as great leader of the future probably was not in the original copy he was going to say last week because he dropped out on a sunday. it is disappointing that supreme court, i think every time this up in court just as instead of walking around with pride they will walk around feeling like
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they are a target. >> judge jeanine: i want to say something as well, he started talking but a fundamental fairness and they will undermined of the civil rights protections, while joe biden work is with five or seven senators and robert berger when he came to the senate to block integrated public schools, in those six senators filibustered the civil rights act of 1964, and he called berg his mentors so you know, this guy says one thing. >> he gave a eulogy. >> judge jeanine: he gave his eulogy! another thing, making sure the supreme court justices have an ethics guideline? so do my -- air stop always priding people in college and libraries to buy her books! don't make it about just one side! anyway. >> dana: thanks things are not -- >> judge jeanine: not what? >> judge jeanine: >> jessica: they are not comparable. >> judge jeanine: i am not so sure, you want to make a
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criticism about thomas? >> jessica: and i decided not comparable. >> judge jeanine: they are both, you were going to impose on people, my bosses book and going out wherever she lectures? >> jessica: waving off on private jets to remote islands -- >> judge jeanine: this is not worth it. >> jessica: it's not going your way anymore. >> judge jeanine: as that in mind, let's turn to this! if you thought the democrats and tight maga agenda could not get a more rigourous, the party rail link behind kamala harris by leaning into the word weird to attack donald trump and his running mate jd vance an apparent callback to kamala harris attack against trump, if she were ever to face him on the debate stage. >> just plain weird. [ laughter ] >> it sounds just a weird child that he brings, it's that this leads to weird policies.
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>> is weird behavior. >> more extreme, more weird, more erotic. >> they are just weird. >> 32 ounces of weird. >> donald trump and his weirdo running mate. >> by the way they are weird. >> is bizarre, is weird. >> jd vance, is pretty weird. >> judge jeanine: jd vance brushing off the attacks saying keep them coming. >> it is not hurt my feelings, of the price of admission meaning the price of getting to serve the people of this country the democrats will attack us with everything they have at thank it's an honor. >> judge jeanine: the media's honeymoon was kamala harris as far from over, new york magazine is that with this cover of harris and her democratic cheerleaders, with this title, all right, okay? al-assad with you bryan, they are changing, the where -- we were extremist, we were radical, now we are just weird, why are they softening the terminology
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when we needed to be d. programmed that we are our occult now we are weird? >> my opinion, not sure i was on a part of that think tank but i will say this, the whole democracy at stake was not working, saying that donald trump will overthrow democracy was not working, trying to put him in jail was not working, and they say these are the candidates, we got the team together so let's make him a weird. i thought that donald trump junior put out a couple videos, kamala harris giving her pronouns before a big speech to chris cuomo before a major think and this talk about her stanzas when it comes to aoc saying we should start taxing people 80 percent, she's like you know what that is a good innovative idea, that is weird? also outside of jesse most of us are weird, outside of jesse, most of us have something that is nontraditional. i think by calling people weird makes it more relatable. >> judge jeanine: is as part
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of their efforts to appeal to jen's the because they may buy into that? >> dana: may be, obvious it was a poll tested word, but what i think it is is not thinking for yourself and listening to the bad signal and saying today we call them a weird, audit and everybody does it, i think it is so bizarre i rather speak for myself. i think it is language, like weird can be good, but i thought online it's being interesting to say, jd vance is weird and then you click on the picture and it's a craziness on the left. at her know where this is going, i think both sides are trying to land on how they want to define each other now. >> judge jeanine: coded to be jesse that people are just tired of the name-calling between i'm not tired of it, i love the name-calling and i love laughing but i guess we will have to go with crazy. it hard to keep up with. listen, i think it november 6th, the democrats will look back at this landslide they got
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handed in a single why did i waste three days in late july calling the trump people weird? the only way kamala harris has a shot, any shot is if she distinguishes herself from joe biden. she has to say how she is different from joe biden, nowhere out of there, this is as far as we've gotten. she would have to say what she would do differently and why, if she just runs as a new phase of the biden administration, it's fallacious disaster. now if you were ever called a racist nazi dictator and they call you weird? >> judge jeanine: a yelp. >> jesse: when i saw trump demolished joe biden i do not see weird, when i said trump go like this, fight, after surviving a bullet, i did not think weird. people don't see that when these he donald trump, if you want to play that again we can played all day, also to the biden white
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house, you have cocaine, rabid dogs, good parkinson's doctors, dylan all opened that place. it is a political projection, trump calling her weird so she's like, okay,, this is like the lamest thing ever? him as to the dates is like the days of the debates about nuclear policy and the eighties that's what i miss jessica, and we get back to that, please? >> judge jeanine: jessica while i was gone, kamala harris apparently one of the most unpopular politicians in the country has gone up eight points and i don't know that she has done much in the week that i've been gone but isn't this not show how the media can formulate the public's opinion about who they want to? >> jessica: at think that applies to us as well as members of the media, people watch us on tv and it affects their opinion and there is no doubt she has had a very good week in terms of coverage but she had a good w week, she has done very effective rallies, her team of surrogates and that's where weird comes from, from governor
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tim walz in minnesota was a very plain way speaking way about him that, and he said they are just weird and it caught on from there. i think people are they covered,'s sake of hearing that it's the end of the earth if something happens, people lived through four years of donald trump and came out the other side and went to an elector joe biden but they don't feel like he is the exits a -- existential threat as brian brought up so there has to be a reframing. to that point that people don't think that donald trump is weird, you listen to rallies when he talks about shrugs getting electrocuted, if you are not a diehard trump supporter, the great late hannibal rector does not is made to the same way, the weird stuff about batteries. donald trump is not a normal human and it's only jesse that is normal in all of this. >> dana: pull up the tapes of kamala harris.
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>> judge jeanine: six i just think -- >> jesse: you want to talk about batteries? that's weird! [ laughter ] >> jessica: what i want to talk about is whatever the strategy is now, it is working, kamala harris is now running either tied or ahead a national polling, same in the swing states, it's up 12 points, donald trump has gone down five. >> jesse: she is the next obama, i'm so nervous when you talk. >> jessica: oh, my god. >> jesse: she is going to win, on my god, kamala harris, the next to barack obama, it's a cultural phenomenon of, how do we stop her brian? [ laughter ] >> judge jeanine: outrage over the olympics opening ceremony coming up, outrage over the olympics opening ceremony, mocking christians and the last supper, here we go.
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[ ♪♪ ] >> jesse: the olympics opening say many>> taking home the whole
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gold medal for being woke, and to showcased the greatest alleys in the world, instead, featurear to drag queens appearing to act out scenes from the last supper, debated by leonardo da vinci, one of my favorite painters, after backlash to boycott theth games the official olympic a w youtube page wiped from the video page because it was getting pretty roundly criticized, pairs 2024 spokesperson apologized saying they did not mean to offendis n anybody, is no way they could have watched that and thought this would be perfect. >> dana: they did not watcht the and gowa while this is weir? i also just don't like that it took away from all of the athleteses, , they have worked hard theirfo whole lives for ths moment and he think mike if youo think the london olympics, member the queen parachutingmes with the james bond, they had a spice girls reunion, they had -- the french have a rich history be one even russia and chinae ar
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set, okay,, we will emphasize our country and make our countrp look good, do think the french are happy with how they are being portrayed around the world, signifying weather countries about? b3 i think the french lowered, they have a rich tradition in theatre, if you go to paris and i do recommend you travel outside of the country, you should take in that country itat -- culture. am i shocked there is a gendero. bending in paris? , i had elections to win, i can't chase every robert they throw at us! this was not the last supper, i believe it was great goddess, will take them at their word?.a i know when la has the games and 28 there will be trans, do you think la will not try to out to transit the french? get ready brian.e frian. >> joe biden praised the olympic is a money saying it is high t praise, it is a lot to live upi, to, do think joe biden's on the money? >> jessica: it was a spectacle for sure, i watched chicago was very excited and that marie and
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her not to think incredible, it was so fun mockingwa -- no, no one? >> m. is that part. >> royal being beheaded to lift you up? [ laughter ] >> judge jeanine: it is supposed to be about unity and commodity and how we are all basically in this together, they are tone deaf, they just insulted 2 billion christians and you would think in a couin country, with tax in 2011, they did a cartoon of mohammed andam they endedme up killing all of those editors in this firebomb.s >> closing ceremonies with o mohammed, have some fun. >> judge jeanine: they knowno whatw happens, christians turnri the othestr cheek.ho >> dana: plus they are the one sabotaging the olympics, not the christians. >> we still don't know what is behind it, the 'the five' has "one more thing". or[ ♪♪e ]
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american dynasty. streaming now on fox nation. >> it's time now for one moree r thing. tonight, jesse watters, primetime, 8:00. we will have patrick. ick da mbut david, we will havee shellenberger and johnny bellisario. lisari rest hthere he is. >> judge duke, i'll tell you about my trip to portugal. so there is a place in lisbonswa called time out. wherr out market. i swear they have a hundred you restaurants aroun cand this area where they can hold like five, 600 people. and you go and you buy food. and i have my food there. i have the sardine. i beat the sardine. tion. it is the algarve coast, which isn't much of a coast, but that's another question, another issue. and then we went to the wine country, porto . >> it's magnificent. it's beautiful. and i was there. i went awanificent y with four my girlfriends. we had the best time. and you can se bt tie after this one that we had some wine. >> and then there was a church e in sintra, which is in part of portugal.
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it was wonderful. we were at a cafe, the paris cafe in sintra, and these cent with thetures girls. but the most incredible restaurant there is a place called genesis, to which i had pictures of, and it was magnificent that, ladies,00 in you got to hear this. it's open like until three inwhl the morning. you can go to the ladies room while are eatie you're eating, n you can shop in all the stores in the same area. >> fantastic. and fox nation didn't pay for this. you paid for this yourselfu pai honey. i paid for it. let me go real quick. okayit.yle maga. t i'm instyle magazine. i had an interview with them about hoondw to keep your mind and still do your civic duty. it's on instylne wite magazine with christina perry. she was a great interviewer and appreciated thd the opportuy there. >> also, bring on politics with michael duncan. just posten pod i'm sorry, just like michael dunn, we're just not going to be able to give you th e last word. >> i apologize. that's all for us. have a great welcome to jesse watters. >> primetime tonight

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