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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  July 30, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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weird, keep venice beach weird. they are weird. this idea they think they'll sell her on an american public who doesn't like her on this idea that republicans are weird after three years of telling us men can have babies, you know what i mean? weird. not true. so i think they're kind of stuck but trying to make it seem like they are a lot more excited about this than they are. >> ainsley: now we're learning more about her policies and they call republicans weird. that's weird in and of itself. >> it's so weird. bizarre. that's where i find myself today laughing at this whole thing they've taken to the seventh grade girl level. did you see donald, he is weird? j.d. is weird? >> ainsley: we'll catch brian kilmeade. see you tomorrow. >> bill: good morning, everybody. here we go. we're about to see the brand-new head of the secret service took
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over for the old boss in about a week about to testify in the trump assassination attempt. will he be more forthcoming than his predecessor? we'll find out together when we watch it. i'm bill hemmer and welcome to our program. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." good to be here with you as always. the senate judiciary and homeland security committees are holding a joint hearing on the investigation starting at 10:00 a.m. eernl. the deputy director of the f.b.i. is also set to appear. >> bill: all this as we learn the former president has agreed to sit down with the interview with the f.b.i. and also revealing more about what happened on that podium in pennsylvania. >> once the bullets started coming at me and i got very lucky. i really have to attribute it to god. >> what was melania's reaction when she learned what happened on that field? butler? >> she was watching live.
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it was all over place. she can't talk about it. that's okay. that means she likes me, she loves me. let's say she could talk about it freely i'm not so sure which is better. she either likes or loves me and that's nice. i will say this, look, she was -- when i went down she thought the worst had happened. >> dana: you shouldn't have been allowed to get on the stage. >> one thing about secret service they were very brave. bullets were flying over me. i went down and they were on top of me. i had a lot of people on top of me. big, strong people on top of me i want to tell you. and they were very brave, i have to say that. with that being said should have been somebody on the roof, should have been communication with the local police, which there wasn't. that's a bad thing. >> dana: senator grassley released evidence relating to the investigation. we'll talk to him on a moment what he hopes to hear today.
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cb cotton is live in butler, pennsylvania. >> good morning. more than 450 interviews and 2100 tips later and the f.b.i. says it still doesn't have a clear motive for why the gunman, thomas matthew crooks, tried to kill former president donald trump. we do know, though, that crooks was diligent to hide his sinister plan. according to the f.b.i. crooks used aliases and foreign encrypted account to make three dozen online purchases of gun materials and materials used to make explosives from the spring of last year through the first half of this year. crooks did online searches of former president trump, president biden, mass shooting events, ieds and a tempted assassination of the slovakian earlier. matthew crooks, his father, left a building with two law firms
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but wouldn't answer reporters' questions. >> mr. crooks, is there anything that might have made you aware of what your son was up to? >> is there any statement you would be willing to share with us now, mr. crooks? >> text messages between local counter snipers on the day of the rally are likely to renew questions for the secret service about who was responsible for allowing trump to take to the rally stage. the text released were released by senator chuck grassley and show crooks was identified as suspicious 90 minutes before the gunfire and 20 to 25 minutes before photographs of crooks were sent to a command center staffed by state police and secret service agents. but the secret service agents directly protecting trump were reportedly never notified. grassley's office said the texts
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and other materials released including photos and a post shooting report paint the most detailed picture yet of the security failures that led to a gunman nearly taking former president donald trump's life. dana. >> dana: thank you for that update. >> bill: here is the timeline from july 13th butler, pennsylvania, here we go. 9:00 in the morning on that saturday there was a meeting scheduled apparently and the united states secret service didn't show up. they were supposed to meet with sniper teams from butler and beaver and washington county. 1:00 in the afternoon all those three sniper teams locals get on a group chat. 4:26 in the afternoon. beaver county sniper ends his shift. why he ends that shift i do not know but he ends his shift and then alerts the teams of the suspicious person at a picnic
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table. 5:38 the sniper sends the pictures of the subject sitting by the table. an hour before trump comes out. 5:45. beaver law enforcement alerts command, 26 minutes, 5.41 between 6:11 and the first shots fired. senator grassley is on the committee today and asking questions today. he joins us now. thank you for your time. you've done a lot of work on this. one thing from the release you gave us last night. local law enforcement officers communicated to their federal counterparts. why did he take the stage? as you go through all this right now, what is your lead question today that you need to know? >> well, i'm going to start out by asking about the drone. why the secret service had drones and it wasn't workable
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when they were ready to put it up into the air. and i think that's a shortcoming since the shooter had a drone that flew over the area. then we are going to follow up with this communication breakdown between law enforcement, local law enforcement and the secret service and why they didn't have a meeting before the event happened or a few days before the event happened. there are a lot of shortcomings. i think i've made everything available that's been given to me and i believe that within a few minutes i and my staff were asking the secret service for a lot of information and quite frankly everything that's been released, i got before the f.b.i. had it. and it is just bad when a member of congress has to get its information from local law enforcement instead of from the
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federal agencies. but i believe that we've turned everything over we have now and if we get more we'll turn it over. i believe transparency, the public's business ought to be public and the protection of a presidential candidate ought to be a top priority. this dangerous situation wouldn't have happened if there had been proper communication between local law enforcement and the secret service. and if everybody had listened to the warnings we had 90 minutes ahead of time, all of that is -- ought to be public right now. and we don't want to go through what we are still going through with the jfk assassination where there are still questions being asked. we shouldn't have to wait but a few hours or a few days or get this information out. i don't want to hear anything today to say that the secret
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service can't answer our questions because of quote, unquote, ongoing investigation. that's the excuse you get and don't get answers. >> bill: that's a lot. i hope we get all that today. >> dana: senator, you have a piece out there that talks about secret service director legislation that you and mass tow are saying the next secret service director must be senate confirmed and bipartisan legislation brings accountable to an agency in crisis. do you think that you will be able to -- these people today won't necessarily answer that but i believe that you might agree with this, the secret service is stretched. they have a lot of people they are trying to cover and a lot of things they have to do. is it your instincts that the people at the top of the organization were not as worried about former president trump as they might have been about other protectees under their umbrella? >> i think that you can easily
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draw that conclusion because they weren't as thorough as they would be as if he were president of the united states. for instance, just the lack of communication between local law enforcement and the secret service before and all this comes to light after the assassination attempt. i believe that we should have senate confirmation of secret service director. i put that bill in a long time ago when i was investigating the secret service when we found out from whistleblowers that they were paying prostitutes with taxpayers money down in columbia. and i thought we ought to have better direction secret service at that time. now, of course, with the assassination of a president, that's even worse than the situation i described in columbia and if you can have 535
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members of congress vetting this person where it will have a better outcome than just the president of the united states doing the vetting. >> bill: i want to get you to comment for 30 seconds, okay? you've known joe biden for a very long time. what is he up to with this push regarding the u.s. supreme court? as a member of the judiciary committee, what's going on there? >> playing to the very progressive left of the democrat party. i presume to help vice president harris get elected president. but it's a wrong step by the executive branch or even the legislative branch were to do it on a judiciary branch that's a third branch of government, very independent of the other two branches. >> dana: senator grassley, thank you so much. you have a big hearing and we'll cover it when it starts. thank you for joining our show today.
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>> bill: we'll bring that to you live. >> dana: fox news alert here. president biden raising eyebrows over these remarks about house speaker mike johnson. >> mr. president, mr. president, has speaker johnson said your supreme court is dead on arrival? what is your reaction? speaker johnson said it's dead on arrival? >> he is dead on arrival. >> dana: the president attempted to clean that up an hour later. >> president biden: i got off air force one republican speaker of the house said whatever he proposes is dead on arrival. his thinking is dead on arrival. >> johnson said it would erode the rule of law and tip the balance of power. >> bill: mark zuckerberg's meta admitting to making a mistake amid claims tech giants were censoring coverage of the assassination of donald trump from users.
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"new york post" called it rigged tech. we dig into the details for us, madison. >> meta definitely has explaining to do. social media giant says it mistakenly censored the photograph of former president trump raising his fist in the air after being shot earlier this month. they called it an error saying the fact check was initially applied to a doctor's photo showing the secret service agent smiling and meta 's a.i. is making mistakes. "new york post" reported it asked the a.i. engine was the trump assassination fictional. it responded there was no real assassination attempt on donald trump. i strive to provide accurate and reliable information but sometimes mistakes can occur. meta says they're in the process of implementing a fix to provide more up to date responses for
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inquiries and possible may continue to see inaccurate responses in the meantime. it does appear the fixes have been implemented after we tried it. it comes after google's search feature did not show auto fill results or phrases related to the attempt on trump's life. it related to the other attacks. google has protections against auto complete predictions associated with political violence. we're working on improvements to insure our systems are more up to date. all of this happening just two weeks after former president trump had that attempt on his life raising questions of what happened further down the road. bill and dana. >> bill: 98 days and beyond, right, madison? we'll watch it. thanks for that. madison here in new york. a brutal attack in britain. a third child dad after stabbing at a dance class. more kids are fighting for their
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lives and we'll get the latest on the story and condition in a moment. plus this. [siren] >> dana: 12 children killed in hezbollah's strike on israel. retaliating without sparking all-out war? israel's next step. >> bill: back at home. trump with a new line of attack painting harris as radical left zoning in on her most progressive areas, including the border. >> do you have any plans to visit the border >> we're going to the border. we have been to the border. this whole thing to the border. we've been to the border. >> you haven't been to the border. >> and i haven't been to europe. just text glass to 45277 to schedule a replacement you can trust. text glass to 45277 to schedule today. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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>> dana: welcome back.
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fox news alert here. a tragedy in the united kingdom. a third child died after a mass stabbing at a taylor swift themed dance class northwest of manchester yesterday. eight other children and two adults were also injured in the attack. most of them are fighting for their lives at the hospital while the community prays for their recovery. there is a 17-year-old boy in custody and are working to figure out his motive. >> bill: doesn't make sense. also israel's weighing its retaliation after the deadly hezbollah strike. that strike over the weekend killed 12 children and teenagers at a soccer field in the northern golan heights over the weekend officials saying they aren't interested in dragging the region into a wider conflict. trey yengst follows that story today and back live in tel aviv. trey, hello there. >> good morning. israeli officials continue to weigh options today about how to respond to that deadly hezbollah rocket attack on saturday in the
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golan heights. reports do indicate that israel will try to walk a tight rope here avoiding a larger regional war but hitting hezbollah hard. overnight israel launched air strikes in southern syria targeting an iran-linked group. not part of the expected israeli response against positions in lebanon but it does come amid the back drop of cease-fire talks for the war in gaza. talks appear to be on shaky ground again with hamas blaming netanyahu of procrastinating with military and diplomatic planning underway an internal crisis after protestors stormed a jail at an army base. those demonstrators were trying to free soldiers arrested on suspicion of torturing and abusing palestinian detainees. we saw more rocket fire and drone alerts coming into northern israel and can report unfortunately at this hour another israeli civilian has
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been killed in those attacks. >> bill: okay. it continues. trey yengst, thanks. we'll be in touch with you live in tel aviv. >> i think she is a worse candidate than him. far more radical left. she was for defund the police, for open borders, for having anybody come in. >> dana: former president trump is calling out vice president hair's past progressive position. the headline why the kamala harris of four years ago could haunt her in 2024. times reports she ran to the left as progressive ideas dominated the last competitive democratic primary. now in a tough general election republicans are digging up old stances. want to bring in rich lowry editor in chief of national review. you never forgot. a new trump ad hits kamala on the border. >> under harris over 10 million illegally here. a quarter of a million americans dead from fentanyl. brutal migrant crimes.
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and isis now here. >> dana: the four words at the end of that ad is failed, weak and dangerous. >> they think they can do a 1-two punch hit her on all the biden record stuff. vulnerable on all of that and owns that especially the border and hit her where she differed from biden during the 2019 presidential campaign and then if she denies it all and disavows it all they'll call her a phony. the final step. biden's age was an advantage. you couldn't really attack him as a radical. he had been around forever. dotering old man. attack him as failed, incompetent and too old. you can attack her as radical with a much better chance of sticking. >> bill: inflation and border is a big story. a bit of the previous statement and points made about that border, watch. >> there is no question that we have to critically re-examine ice and its roll and the way it
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is being administered and the work it's doing. >> so you support giving universal healthcare and medicare for all to people in the country illegally. >> i am opposed to a policy to deny any human being access to public safety, public education or public health. let me be very clear, we have to have a secure border but i'm in favor of saying that we're not going to treat people who are undocumented and cross the border as criminals. >> you are confident this border is secure? >> we have a secure border. >> bill: last clip was september of 2022. it seems like a target-rich environment, right? here on the screen opposed treating illegals as criminals. closing the border violated federal law. compared ice to the kkk. at one time said we don't need more cops we need fewer and banned private health insurance. you package this, frame it.
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how do you execute it in a way that's effective? >> you play the clips. we've seen it in ads for republican senate candidates coming from the trump campaign as well. not things she wrote for the college newspaper 50 years ago that you have to unearth it in the archives and just in print. it is all on camera as trump was saying. it's all on camera and not too long ago. >> dana: the media is quickly erasing the archives. here was president trump last night whether he will debate kamala harris. >> probably end up debating. i think actually the debate should take place before the votes start being cast. if you have a debate you have to do it before the votes are cast. it is important that you do that. the answer is yes but i can also make a case for not doing it. >> dana: what do you think will happen? >> maybe he is trying to get the leverage. biden had all the leverage in negotiations over the debates they agreed to.
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he needs to debate and should debate her and i think he will. >> bill: she will announce a vp before next tuesday i would guess and then you have the dnc in chicago and they will get a lot of oxygen in the room. any guess on the vp and do you think? -- >> it seems obvious, josh shapiro, popular governor of a state she needs, pennsylvania helps 10,000 votes that could matter. this still seems the most likely path. she could lose all the other swing states we talk about. if she holds the blue wall she wins by two electoral votes and he could be a key pose of that. >> dana: one from the left said he is vouchers for kids in poor school districts. >> a benefit of him. she needs to moderate and he could help on that as well. >> teachers unions will be for her anyway. rich lowry, thank you so much. >> bill: moments from now we'll
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take you to a high-stakes hearing on the senate side with a new acting director of the secret service. i don't know if we've ever heard him speak before. he has the job after cheatle stepped down. senators will press him about the trump assassination attempt. we'll have a member of the f.b.i. there as well. so get ready. it is not common in the senate when you have two committees come together but they are doing that today. it begins in minutes. jim caviezel here. you know, saint john paul this second profoundly impacted my life. and i just finished recording some incredible new meditations on his life, on the hallow app. this content is incredible. why don't you join us in the saint john paul the second challenge? it'll change your life. download hallow and join me today. god bless you.
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>> a dangerous situation wouldn't have happened if there had been proper communication between local law enforcement and the secret service, and if everybody had listened to the warnings we had 90 minutes ahead of time. all of that is -- ought to be public right now. >> bill: that's chuck grassley republican senator from iowa still at it, dana, right, pushing 90. the senator was with us for ten minutes a moment ago.
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he has a lot of questions and has made a lot of information public over the last week and he has his questions lined up. the acting secret service director has arrived so we'll bring it to you momentarily. chris swecker, former assistant f.b.i. director with us now. we asked chuck grassley what his questions were. he had a lot of them. i guess one question i have just reading through all the material this morning and i think we can say we know a lot more now than we did a week ago even with kimberly cheatle not answering questions we know a lot more. one thing that hasn't come up, it has been reported that he was in contact with people from overseas. now, there is no new information on that today. does that suggest that that is an idea that is dead in the water now or not? >> no, it suggests it's an idea that has to be run out to the end degree by the f.b.i. and
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given the difficult access to certain platforms they may still be trying to get cooperation from a carrier somewhere overseas. these encrypted communication apps are very difficult to penetrate and sometimes that information is not even stored so if it's not on the device itself you won't get it. but it's hard to believe that this 20-year-old would be in communication with sinister elements outside the country. i have an open mind on it. the f.b.i. playing it close to the vest, that's what i think it is. >> we'll see if they clear it up. >> dana: can you explain to people the percentage of staff at the secret service that are focused on protection versus investigations? >> i think i heard kimberly cheatle testify she had 30% of the secret service resources devoted to protection. that means fully 70% of secret service are doing investigations of one variety or another,
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financial crimes types investigations. that's the shiny object for them. they like to do investigations, it is a lot more fun and rock them sock them than protecting a dignitary and the hours are better. they've strayed from their core mission of protection. obviously in the case the assassination attempt they were under resourced and had to rely on the locals and don't know how to work with local officers. >> bill: here could be the evidence with that. an interview with abc that aired yesterday some local snipers teams who gathered in pennsylvania. >> we were supposed to get a face-to-face briefing with the secret service snipers whenever they arrived. that never happened. so i think that was probably a pivotal point where i started thinking things were wrong because that never happens. we had no communication with the secret service. >> you had no communication with the secret service at all on
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that saturday? >> not until after the shooting, i believe. >> what do you make of that, chris? >> i read a touch of arrogance in snubbing the locals. when you work interagency operations and leverage local resources you better bring them into the tent and make sure that the communications are seamless even not on your network have one of your officers with their radio sitting next to the secret service agent in the command post passing information realtime. that is event protection 101. they failed miserably on that account. >> dana: google and facebook are facing some fire this morning for -- meta 's case admitting they censored the trump assassination photo and trump just posted this on truth social.
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facebook had admitted it wrongly censored the trump assassination photo and got caught. same thing for google. they made it impossible to find pictures or anything about that heinous act. both are facing big backlash over censorship claim. here we go again. trying to rig the election. we're all wise to them and be much tougher this time, maga 2024. why would these tech companies get caught up in this get? you can understand why some people would say they were doing it on purpose even though they might say it was a mistake. >> i'm not a political commentator but highly skeptical of a.i. in general. when i see the response is a.i. based i'm very skeptical. those mistakes and acts of censorship never seem to fall to the left of the political spectrum. they always seem to fall on topics and viewpoints to the
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right of the political spectrum. i don't understand that part of it. i think that you can program a.i., your own ideologies and biases into a.i. and i think it's the big problem. >> bill: people are on the lookout now in a significant way. there is a reason why musk but twitter and when x exists today. the f.b.i. meeting this week. watch. >> when you agreed to an interview with the f.b.i. it's called a victim's interview. >> they are coming on thursday to see me. i'm so disappointed. if you took a poll of the f.b.i., i bet i get 95%, but not at the top level. not at the people, political people. >> why don't people trust the upper echelon. >> they have had a bad period of time. >> yeah, this is kind of a nothing burger as far as the interview itself. it is routine, not much he can
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add to what they don't already know but i will say there is no love lost between the f.b.i. and trump. the f.b.i. clearly has infused political ideology into their investigations. that's another ten minutes of speaking. but it is a situation where the f.b.i. needs to turn back to just the core mission of investigating and get politics out of it. >> bill: thanks for coming on and we'll watch it together when it begins in 20 minutes. >> dana: thank you, chris. and vice president harris ramping up outrage joining tiktok trying to get the hollywood elite. >> i'm white, a dude and for harris. >> the vibes right now are incredible. with dupixent, show off your clearer skin and less itch. because you have plenty of reasons to show off your skin. with dupixent, the #1 prescribed biologic by dermatologists and allergists,
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but it's under siege from big out-of-state media companies and hedge funds. now, california legislators are considering a bill
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that could make things even worse by subsidizing national and global media corporations while reducing the web traffic local papers rely on. so tell lawmakers, support local journalism, not well connected media companies. oppose ab 886. paid for by ccia. >> dana: fox news alert. we told you the hearing on the
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senate side will get underway about the failed assassination attempt and deputy director of the f.b.i. is walking in ahead of the joint senate judiciary and homeland security hearing. this is very unusual to have a joint hearing like this. it gets underway in about 15 minutes. we'll bring it to you when it happens. >> bill: stand by on that and see what we learn together. vice president kamala harris rallying in the city of atlanta with a special guest, rap star. she is trying to secure georgia and unlocking young non-white voters. donald trump 50% plus and has been for a couple of months. does it change? peter doocy with more on that today. >> the harris campaign is trying to put georgia back in play. it looks like it was gone when biden was the candidate but since he dropped out harris for president says they've got 200 million new donations, 2/three of that from new donors and
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putting $50 million worth of that cash into an ad that tries to recap the race like this. >> the one thing kamala harris has always been, fearless. >> donald trump wants to take our country backwards. >> georgia was decided by fewer that 12,000 votes. the campaign wants to use the volunteer, the ones in battleground states can knock an doors. non-competitive states can make calls to people in places where the polling is tighter. and how to best use president biden who claimed very early this morning he is already helping. >> are you going to go out and campaign for the vice president? >> well, i did today. >> who do you think she will pick as vp? >> we're talking.
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>> the harris campaign claims that president biden's is freeing up. the week ahead schedule for president biden still has not been released. that's something we usually get from the white house sunday night. >> bill: right on. thank you, peter. we'll follow it. nice to see you on the north lawn. peter doocy, thank you. >> i will be there alongside of you guys making calls, knocking on doors, banging on that glass ceiling until the damn thing shatters once and for all. >> it is time to have a woman. that sensibility is something we've never experienced. >> i don't like trump. know he is a bad guy. >> how in hell can that guy be a candidate for anything in this country? >> the vibes right now are incredible. >> i'm white, dude for harris. >> dana: white dudes for harris, membership consisting of
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hollywood elites and lawmakers claiming they wouldn't let guys be bullied into supporting the trump/vance ticket. joe hails from tampa, florida. i want to get your take. when i hear racial segregation and you need this democratic, i don't like it and want to reject all of it. how did it go over last night? >> well, i mean, this is typical of the democrat party. divide people up in groups and set rules to be part of that group. they basically took biden's idea of you don't for me and ain't black and mormorphed it into a campaign strategy. >> coming out of milwaukee there was a hyper focus on the -- you
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had hulk hogan. the statement that comes out last night. white dudes for harris, together we aren't going to sit around and let the maga crowd bully other white guys voting for a hateful and divisive ideology. we understand under maga everyone loses. my sense is, joe, from a political standpoint they try to appeal to folks in the upper midwest and say not so fast, we know what their message was to you two weeks ago but think again. >> that's the thing is i don't think anybody really looks toward the democrat party to define what is manly. that's never their best path forward. but i see what they are doing is trying to define what the rules are to be manly or part of something and it is not going to work especially using all these celebrities on social media. celebrities have no actual currency on social media. authenticity is the currency.
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celebrities when we know they're paid lose all that. >> dana: here is harris joined tiktok even though the biden administration is continuing on the path to get a change in ownership. she was on with lance bass. >> kamala, what will we say to donald trump in november? >> bye, bye, bye. ♪ >> dana: to me we have a chuckle. cute and funny. you are saying that doesn't actually work in terms of engagement? >> no. especially when you are going back to creators to appeal to the gen x and millennials. that's a part of our growing up and part of our childhood. again when you are using stars on tiktok doesn't really work because we know they are being compensated to do that as well as if you grab a celebrity you don't grab one that is now hosting a shark tank rip-off. you aren't hitting the top tier at the moment. >> dana: you say the dnc is winning on social media right
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now. why is that? >> you have to look at it is who-the time people have to put in. me as one of the largest creators on the conservative side i have a full-time job, business ventures. i have a lot of things going on. when that is complete i make tiktok videos. dnc side you have creators who they are compensated through pallet management or through act blue and midas touch and do it full-time. the rnc is not making the same investment in the social media that the dnc is. it is to their detriment. creators get more views per day than cnn. >> bill: there was a white women call, too. we don't want to leave them out. joe, thanks. we'll talk again, okay. >> it was a pleasure. >> out of tampa, florida. thank you. moments from now high-stakes hearing with the acting director of the secret service.
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what do they know? what are they preparing to tell us? senators will press him on the assassination attempt on president trump. we saw it on the house side last week, senate side this week in ways it may take on an entirely different tone. let's watch it together moments away. ♪ ♪ have you always had trouble losing weight 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,
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microscope and highlighting her career as a prosecutor and the policies are very progressive. we got the follow-up live in los angeles today. william, good morning. >> four years ago harris ran to the left of joe biden on criminal justice. she opposed mandatory minimum sentences and supported a national panel to review police shootings. >> i think san francisco wants a progressive district attorney. >> throughout her political career she governed as a progressive. >> the issue behind it is that we need to reimagine how we are creating safety. >> harris said defunding police would allow cities to spend more on services. >> to believe by putting more poll it on the street you have more safety is wrong. >> she supports sanctuary laws and decriminalizing illegal immigration. >> we won't treat people who are
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undocumented crossing the border as criminal. >> as san francisco d.a. she promised never to seek the death penalty. it outraged critics. >> i think this district attorney made a very big mistake. matter of fact if i had known she had said that in her campaign i never would have supported her. >> harris favors federal legalization of marijuana. harris supports ending cash bail in private prisons and as prosecutor she favored second chances. >> i will tell you standing up for the people also means. it means challenging the policy of mass incarceration by recognizing the war on drugs was a failure. >> harris wants a ban on so-called assault rifles like the ar-15. america's most popular weapon. >> we need universal background checks and a

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