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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  August 13, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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you're paying $300. >> i want a big goody bag! >> where are you from? >> albuquerque. >> area having a nice time? >> it's been great. i love it. >> it's 9:00! thank you very much. so that's the consensus. probably no to paying the money, but then again the couple said they had a really nice time and something like $70,000 or $80,000 was saved, guys. >> you should be able to turn a profit on your wedding at some level. speak of these people are crazy. >> lauren says when he proposes it's either going to be a ring or a wedding. he can't pay for both. >> do you want a massive wedding or a massive ring? >> her parents pay for the wedding. >> that's the way it should be, that all this modern stuff. >> see you tomorrow. >> great job, steve. >> stay within yourself, america. >> we support the medicare for all build. i think initially it was cosponsored by
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senator bernie sanders. i believe it will totally eliminate private insurance. for people who like the insurance, they don't get to keep it. >> listen, the idea is that everyone gets access to medical care, and you don't have to go through the process of going through an insurance company. let's eliminate all of that. let's move on. >> bill: so we move on now. kamala harris has a past of supporting medicare for all that might be coming back to haunt her. is it still part of her platform? today recently do not know because we don't have the answer. live in new york, back together with the team here, i am bill hemmer. good morning. what's happening? >> dana: good morning. i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." you know how you find out what her current policies are? you ask a spokesperson and tell tell you on friday night and expect you to accept that. back in 2019, harris said she wanted to completely revamp the american healthy system. she said, "essentially would allow private insurance to offer a plan in the medicare
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system, but they would be subject to strict requirements to ensure it lowers costs and expands services." "if they want to play by our rules, they can be in the system. if not, they have to get out." >> bill: years of folks getting kicked off insurance, they don't like that. reporters are eager to ask harris if she still backed the plan, but she's gone 23 days now with hardly answering questions. >> dana: more from our new york city newsroom. good morning. >> good morning, dana. reporters would definitely love to hear from the harris campaign on her policy issues. she is not yet outlined her official view on health care. we have her past record under 2019 presidential campaign to look at for clues. vice president kamala harris has been a vocal supporter of medicare for all, cosponsoring the bill of senator bernie sanders in 2017, and campaigning hard on the platform in 2019. on the campaign trail she called for the end to private insurance, and more. >> the idea is that everyone
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gets access to medical care, and you don't have to go through the process of going through an insurance company. let's eliminate all of that. let's move on. >> who here would abolish the private health insurance in favor of a government-run plan? all right. [applause] >> after that nbc debate you just saw, harris said she misunderstood the question. but we have her own words. harris had made her thoughts on that clear, advocating for medicare for all with a 10-year phase-in period and allowing private insurers to continue to operate at the play was intervals for medicare plans. finance experts tell fox business that a plan like this would add significantly to the nation's debt. >> over ten years, the cost would be $44 trillion. they're going to be proposing additional taxes, which is fair, but at the same time those additional taxes would still leave an outstanding cost of
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$24 trillion. >> we reached out, of course, today harris harris campaign for clarity on position. we have not heard back, but harris has run for president before and we know medicare for all is very much part of her platform in the past. all of this touches on the finances, but as you guys mention, as well, it doesn't even touch on the aspect of people having preferences for their doctors and their own insurance plans. dana? >> dana: thank you for catching us up on that. >> bill: thank you. charlie hurt is in the studio. aren't we lucky? >> i'm the lucky one here, are you kidding me? >> bill: abc debate 2019. this was then, charlie. watch. >> i want to give credit to bernie. take credit, bernie. you know, you brought us medicare for all. i support medicare for all. i always have. but i wanted to make the plan better, which i did. under my medicare for all plan, people have the choice of a private plane or a public plan, because that's what people want. >> bill: so we give credit to bernie. charlie? >> charlie: i think that clip
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here expands all this better than anything. bernie sanders, you may disagree with him, but he has spent a lifetime studying universal health care, government-run health care, for everybody. and along comes kamala harris, she's just trying to enact votes. she'll say absolutely everything. she's never spent 10 minutes thinking about it, that she thinks she can twinkle her nose and say, i'm going to give you everything. i'm going to give you medicare for all, health care for all, and will be great and lower the debt and there will be no problems. it's total b.s. she is saying whatever she has to say to get elected. she claims that she misunderstood the question? she didn't misunderstand the question in that debate. she knew exactly what it wasn't exactly what the audience wanted to hear and exactly what she needed to say in that moment to enact over those people. >> dana: that was the only specific she answered in any particular question. so i think she probably didn't know what she was saying. lost regional journal said this today. if you like your health plan, meet kamala harris. progressives haven't abandoned their aim to convert you into a
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european entitlement system with delays, shortages, and declines in quality of care. this is one more risk voters will have to price into their choice in the fall. the cost of this promise and 2090 will be over $40 trillion. here's the thing, charlie. the only system that is worse than ours is all the other rest of the world. it sounds like, yes, everybody will be equal, it'll be great. it doesn't work in practice. you want to wait six months to see a doctor? that's what happens. >> charlie: the reality is always the problem with these planners who think they have all these good ideas, especially when they are just trying to win votes. and again i go back to bernie sanders, because at least bernie sanders is being somewhat honest about it. he wants to take it all over. you have these middle grounds of people like barack obama who said, if you like your doctor, you get to keep your doctor. of course everybody found out the hard way that's not true. bernie sanders was like, if you like your doctor, you don't get to keep your doctor. you're going to have my doctor.
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i'm going to be your doctor. >> bill: a couple things on this. he wish he could clear it up right now if you go to your website there are no issues. week from today we will be in today two of the democratic convention in chicago, illinois. there is no issues out there. what struck me about the "time" magazine profile, not only was there no interview and no quotes from her, there was no quote from her campaign. no statement from her campaign to go to a magazine cover. you watch the trump thing is not on x with elon musk and he's calling her out, as well. we'll get to "one more thing" after this. >> they would take a pass at you. it's pretty sad, when you think somebody that does this for a living can't answer a question or is afraid to do an interview, and in her case with a very friendly interview. she's got often the interviews. >> bill: there might be a
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shift, charlie. "the washington post" is the first piece, the second piece is "the new york times." the third piece is the hill, all giving credence to the fact that kamala harris has to answer questions. >> charlie: obviously the left-wing press is doing all they can to pump up, harris. and they want to keep this honeymoon going as long as possible. but you can't keep it going forever. no matter how in the tank the press is for the harris campaign, at some point dodge forever. >> bill: last week she sat on the tarmac, i've talked to my team, we will get it done by the end of the month. if that's the case, what she means it she's going to fly to the convention and not due until the convention is over. >> charlie: than the real problem comes after that, when she starts to answer questions. we have seen her answering questions over the years and it's usually not very good. they're not even flip-flops. she's like the terminator.
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she is shifting into a complete different person on a lot of these very important positions. if she's going to have to explain all of that, i don't think she's going to be able to. >> dana: i always say she starts off strong in her campaign. >> charlie: yes, the one to beat. >> dana: yoon president trump, when she did her first rally in february 2019 she had a decent sized crowd and some cisco and he was like, while matt, pay attention to her. she never even went to a vote. but the timing is very interesting. because she learned from the person who did it first, which is joe biden. he didn't do any interviews, either, and it works for him. >> charlie: we have all focus on the fact that there is such a short runway between when she got settled in and the election. that might be actually -- and this is always going to be the problem for her -- it might be too longed for her. as you point out, the longer it goes, the rougher it gets for her. >> bill: do you have an etch-a-sketch growing up? we all did. we will have to pull it out.
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thank you, charlie. nice to see you. >> you have probably seen statements made by our counterparts about their expectations, the fact that they believe it is increasingly likely that there will be an attempt by iran and/or its proxies, and perhaps in the coming days i will tell you that we share those concerns. >> dana: israel on high alert preparing for what is being called a significant set of attacks by iran and its proxies. the u.s. also bolstering its forces, supplying a submarine and other pluralistic region. >> last-ditch diplomatic efforts are ongoing. to try to avert a crisis in the region. we do know overnight the white house release a joint with the u.k., italy, and france, basically trying to urged the
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escalation in the middle east. it was described with a release saying, "we called on iran to stand on its ongoing threats of a military attack against israel and discuss the serious consequences for regional security. should such an attack take place." earlier in the day the british prime minister spoke on the phone with iran's new president urging iran to reframe from attacking israel. the calls for de-escalation contradicted pencils of international law. analysts are concerned the attack from iran will be larger than what they launched in april including more than 300 ballistic missiles, drones, and cruise missiles. overnight former president trump discussed the situation with elon musk during a live x event, saying this. >> all the stuff you're seeing now, all the horror, look at israel. they're all waiting for an attack from iran. iran would not be attacking, believe me. when i was there -- and i say it with respect, because i think we would have been good with iran.
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i don't want to do anything bad to iran. but they knew not to mess around. >> a new attack could also include iran's largest proxy, hezbollah, that continues to target northern israel. overnight israel targeted has blood positions in lebanon as the cross-border exchange of fire continues. yesterday israel's credit rating was downgraded. it gives you a sense of just how big the impact is of this war on the economy of the jewish state. dana? >> dana: interesting. thank you so much, trey yingst. we are looking at this. as the pentagon ready for the seemingly imminent attack on our closest ally in the middle east? we have a return guess, sabrina singh. she will be here just a little later in the hour. >> bill: meanwhile the fbi says it will investigate suspected hacking attempts by iran on both the trump campaign and the biden campaign. the trump camp announced it had been hacked on saturday after reporters received sensitive internal documents.
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>> in this particular case they apparently got hold of an email list, including documents, one that including the vetting of vice presidential candidate vance, and it was marked personal and confidential. it shouldn't have been in the hands of anybody else. it was then shopped around some websites including politico, they got a hold of it. it's a kind of information no campaign wants out there. >> bill: three biden staffers were targeted by apparently a spear phishing email before the president bowed out of the race. it kind of sound like 2016 and hillary clinton's campaign a little bit. the hacking attempts were apparently unsuccessful and we hope to keep it that way. almost 13 minutes past the hour. we have a battle for control of the house, and we have a brand-new fox power ranking. one clue, it will hinge the outcome on only a few key toss-up races. >> dana: looking forward to find out more. plus, migrant crime ravages new york city. two more suspects busted, one of them out on bail, in the beating
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>> bill: about yesterday afternoon and an earthquake measuring 4.4 striking l.a. county. shaking a number of buildings and leaving folks rattled across the sou state. here's how some of that looked. numerous ring cameras and surveillance video capturing that quake. it's like a whole new medium for us, right? the ring camera. ctv could have a ring camera channel. >> bill: we could, ringcamera.com. giving a sense of what it's like as the crowd showed. large crowds seen gathering outside evacuated buildings. thankfully no reports of major damage or injury there in southern california. dana? >> dana: bad news, a migrant
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crime wave gripping york city. there was a women raped i find and please tell socks the suspect is an illegal immigrant from nicaragua. he was also arrested for sexual assault last year. the migrant accused of leaving the brutal assault on two was reportedly arrested again. he was arrested while out on bail. >> bill: good morning to you, sir. >> dana: i started reading and some other media that everything is so much better. it certainly doesn't look better if you are seeing these stories. >> it's clearly a hoax. when we look at new york city we operate a function as a sanctuary city and we clearly see those policies fail and have yet to uphold the social contract. we has the eight and half million residents in new york are under siege, and this migrant issue is a genuine concern for all of us as
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new yorkers. >> bill: here's kamala harris. again, we are reading between the lines on all of these issues because we are waiting for her to take a stand. this is from july of 2019. check this out. >> i'm not in favor of decriminalizing or not having consequence -- that may just be very clear, we have to have a secure border, that i am in favor of saying that we are not going to treat people who are undocumented and cross the border as criminals. >> bill: that's in july of 2019. later that year you have something similar about detention centers in america, what she would do that she had the answer, or the control. >> i want to know, when you become president, would you be committing to close the immigration detention centers? >> absolutely, on day one. >> bill: if she wins, what do you do with randall's island? and the thousands and thousands
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of migrants housed there? >> we look at new york city, one in five hotels are migrant shelters. we are losing a tremendous population of tourists that can come here, coupled with the tax revenue. it begs the question, when are one of our election officials going to step up and identify that this is a clear failure as it relates to the migrant crisis? i think now is the time for washington to step up and prohibit funding to cities that are sanctuary cities. no one has gotten the message, and it just baffles me, why the constituent base continues to vote politicians like this into office. we are under siege and nothing is being done. stephen look at this, it's a small city. >> dana: alexis mcadams showed us yesterday -- because you can only stay for a certain amount of time, so when they are leaving now there's these smaller tents you would get at rei popping up all around, as well, because they say they
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don't have anywhere to go and they don't want to leave. "the new york post" editorial board said this -- stop giving migrant thugs endless chances. just deport them or lock them up now. we talked about the guy who was harassing the nypd officers. he gets arrested and let go. now he's arrested again for multiple thefts while out on parole. at what point does mayor adams say enough is enough? >> he needs to be collaborative action not just from the mayor, but the governor. the bail reform we have adopted in the city of new york does not work. we operate a catch and release stream. when people get arrested, they get let back out. at what point to ramifications come into play? the time is now for adams and the governor to step up, but they're not going to do it. this is just going to manifest to epic proportions with no recourse moving forward. >> bill: you threw out a number there, darren. one in five hotels?
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20%. >> dana: the everything happening, there's a lot of great restaurants around some of those hotels. they are empty, because the customers aren't coming in. >> bill: thank you. we will keep an eye on it throughout the summer and into the fall. >> thanks for having me. >> bill: the republican party now taking emergency action at the u.s. supreme court. they are pushing to reinstate an arizona law requiring proof of citizenship to vote in the november presidential election. william la jeunesse watching this. could be a big deal. we will see how it goes. good morning to you. >> good morning, bill. this is a big deal not just because arizona is a swing state in this election, but because this ruling could affect other states considering proof of citizenship to vote, even a congressional bill. so here is the issue. republican lawmakers are trying to convince the u.s. supreme court, in this case, justice elena kagan is hearing this emergency appeal that every voter must show proof of citizenship when registering to
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vote. democrats and some latino groups say no, the lottery presses minority voters. >> house bill 2492 adds additional requirements which makes it even more difficult for a particular type of voter to show that they are able to register. >> bill: how did we get here? arizona already requires this kind of proof in state and local races. two years ago the state attempted to extend that to federal elections and got shut down by the ninth circuit, so g.o.p. lawmakers are now appealing to the u.s. supreme court. >> the law is pretty straightforward. you need to provide proof of citizenship. he needed to get a driver's license. you should provide that when you register to vote, and if you do not, the registration form should be rejected until that proof of citizenship is provided. >> bill: so why is this important? biden beat trump four years ago by 10,000 votes. right now there are roughly 25,000 voters who could be taken off the rolls if elena kagan or the full court decides proof of
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citizenship that is usually a birth certificate, social security card or passport, is required to register. >> the reality is a lot of voters could be impacted by this ruling. >> bill: arizona is a first and only state to do this. both sides expect elena kagan to rule by next thursday, the deadline for printing ballots. >> bill: william la jeunesse watching that from los angeles today. nice to see you. we have a live look at tel aviv as we get reports of a loud explosion there. it comes as iran and its proxy singly will make good to attack the jewish state within days. we hear from sabrina saying next. plus a terrifying scene on a massachusetts highway. how officers found themselves directly in the path of a charging bull.
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>> bill: it's 9:31 a.m. here in new york. breaking news out of israel. moments ago, reports of a loud explosion heard in tel aviv, perhaps off the coast. the idf saying a rocket launch out of gaza, fell into the sea. meanwhile the u.s. now bolstering its forces in the middle east, as washington braces for iran and its proxies and the possibility that it hits israel. the question now, when will that strike happen? sabrina singh, deputy pentagon press secretary, back with us today. thank you for coming on today. we will try and get through as much as we can at the moment. can you say that the moves the pentagon has made in that region, from the eastern mediterranean to the persian gulf, has given iran pause? >> sabrina: bill, thanks for having me on today. i really can't speak for iran, but we are certainly sending a message, and that is one of deterrence. we certainly do not want to see a regional conflict or a wider war spread out in the middle east.
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so the movements the secretary announced on sunday with the expedited movement of the carrier strike group moving into the region, i think that sends a huge message of deterrence. that carrier has f-35 aircraft on it, and previously, before the announcement the secretary had made on sunday, we also bolstered our air power presence in the region with an additional squadron of f-22s. while i can't speak for iran, i can tell you the message we are sending is clear. it is one of deterrence and one that we will come to the defense of israel should we need to if iran were to attack. >> dana: it seems like me that is a sign of strength that the united states is letting iran now, please, don't mistake us for somebody who will not do that. at the same time, you have the state department kind of blaming israel for the cease-fire talks when hamas is the one who walked away from the table yesterday. is there daylight between what the pentagon is trying to do and what the state department is doing? >> sabrina: no, absolutely
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not. there's no daylight at all. the state department, our colleagues and partners all around the world, are committed to working to get a cease-fire deal in place so that american hostages and hostages that were taken by hamas can come home. but we have course need decides to agree to the terms of that deal. so that work continues, but what we here at the department are focused on is everything in defense of israel and defensive in nature, which is why we have moved that carrier strike group, expedited her transit into the region. we have other forces in the region including the tr strike group that remains there. we have them stationed off the eastern mediterranean, and additionally we have moved cruisers and destroyers closer to israel, should we need to come to the defense of israel if iran were to strike. >> dana: i hear you, i just want to read this from "the wall street journal" editorial board, saying diplomacy isn't going so well. after days of yes warnings that israel had better cut a deal, hamas pulled the rug out from under president biden on the tax. hamas wants more war, not a
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cease-fire. i understand your position, what you do and we need to say here. i just want to point out, it does seem that israel is constantly being the one told that they need to change, but hamas is the one holding out. another saying they're not going to talk at all. >> sabrina: looked, diplomacy takes a lot of time. it takes a lot of effort, and there's a lot going on in the region. so part of getting this cease-fire deal in place is to de-escalate tensions. did we say it was going to be easy? no, it's going to take a lot of work. that's why you are seeing my counterparts, my colleagues at the state department -- you have seen president engage his counterparts from qatar to egypt, and just yesterday you saw a joint statement put out by the white house with our european allies pushing forward for a deal. but that means everyone has to come to the table to agree to those terms. it's hard work, but it's ongoing. >> bill: you announced the movement of a u.s.-guided submarine. that is rare. that doesn't happen very often and it doesn't very often go
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public. within iran itself -- i know you can't speak on what they're thinking, but they've got a brand-new president. they might be trying to figure out their own idea about what they want to do. here's what i don't get -- i don't get the end game. iran is not going to invade israel. hezbollah is not going to invade israel. hamas did what they did on october 7th and he saw the result of that. the houthis in yemen aren't going to do it. as you war game this out of the pentagon, what is the end game for iran in this process? >> sabrina: you raise a good point. i really can't speak for what iran's end game is, but i can tell you what ours is, and that is to prevent a wider regional war from spreading out within the middle east. that's always been our end game. we want to see our hostages come home. we want to see americans come back to their families, their loved ones. we want a cease-fire in gaza so we can talk through what a transition looks like, as well. one of our biggest messages to the region is to iran. do not attack israel, and if you
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do, we will stand in defense of israel should we need to. that's why you are seeing is no different carrier strike groups into the region and bolster our airpower. so that is our end game and that is what i can only speak to. >> dana: my question is, can you articulate a cost to the iranians that the united states is willing to impose on them if they do this strike? >> sabrina: i can't forecast the future, that you saw what we did on april 13th, and we had knocked down over 90% of the ballistic missiles and drones that were shot towards israel. the united states, other partners and allies around the world, came together in the self-defense of israel. what is the cost that imposes on iran? that the calculus in the going have to make. at the end of the day they weren't successful in what they intended, so i think that's a huge cost to probably let the supreme leader's thinking, what their senior leaders are thinking in the country, and i think it also sends a message of what we are able to do on ap april 13th.
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we are almost better positioned to help defend israel again, should iran attack. >> bill: we are watching it by the hour, literally, hoping for the best. thank you for your time. please come back when there's more news. thank you for coming on today. >> sabrina: thank you both. >> dana: new fox news power rankings. have them for you. we'll show you how the house is hanging in the balance. congress and michael lawler is running in one of the races that could swing control of that chamber. his thoughts on the key issues, plus an american gymnast suffering a setback in the fight to keep her bronze medal. the battle is not over. ♪ ♪ isolated...depressed... and embarrassed. that's how it felt to live with bladder and bowel incontinence. but that changed when my urologist told me about axonics therapy. a long-lasting solution that has really changed my life. this is not another drug, and it works. visit findrealrelief.com
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>> dana: two squad members have already lost primaries this year and now congresswoman ilhan omar is facing your own challenge today in minnesota, trying to avoid becoming the third. don samuels was on our show yesterday. he's running against her as a more centrist democrat. >> i think as far as ilhan omar is concerned, she is divisive and combative. she picks a side, including simply trying to divide her constituency, and ignores the other side. >> dana: four states are going to the polls today. we'll see what we get. >> bill: days before the big match up. last week we gave you the battleground states he saw as in play. today we will do the house rankings based on our power rankings and things shaping up. 86 days, anything can change, but today, this is the forecast we are putting out there. you need a majority of 218 to get control of the house, which
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republicans have right now. we have 19 concepts. if you go back to 2022, we had a number of toss ups that were higher than 19. that could change. maybe less, maybe more, but 19 is what we are seeing on the board at the moment. i will advance at one time. if republicans have a good night, if donald trump is to win, if republicans turn out the vote, they could see as many as 230 seats in the house. it would be a real whopper of a night, especially when you consider from the last couple of cycles now how close the house has been, between republicans and democrats. maybe that doesn't happen. maybe kamala harris wins on election night. maybe the democratic machine gets rolling in these battleground states. if that's the case, as of today we see 224 out of 218 for democrats on the mat. let me go forward once, and here are your toss ups. i would put you in the direction right here to new york 17. this is a battle. and they spent a ton of money. upstate new york, right on the
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hudson river valley. michael lawler is a republican in that district. he's with me now. good morning to you. whether it's your district or the other battles we are seeing right now, what decides this in 86 days, do you think? what are the issues? speak of the issues are straightforward. it's the cost of living and the economy under joe biden. obviously we have seen a rapid rise in grocery prices, gasoline prices, housing prices. the crisis at our southern border. kamala harris, the board of czar, failed miserably in her responsibility to secure our bon migrants have crossed our southern border, most of them illegally under the biden-harris administration. and of course the international crises we are dealing with, from the russian invasion of ukraine to the terrorist attack on israel, to the threats emanating in the indo-pacific from china, and obviously the greatest threat from iran right now in the middle east. >> bill: that's a big long
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list now. he's another one. columbia university on the upper west side of new york city has announced what it wants for its students. render all the protests, over gaza? here they say columbia braces for anti-semitic protests, locking down campus as students return. how do you think the issue of gaza plays in november? >> you know, bill, this is why we passed my bill, the anti-semitism awareness act, just a few months ago. overwhelmingly, 320 to 91 votes through the house. chuck schumer, the democratic senate majority leader from new york who represents columbia university, refusing to pass this bill to the senate. even though it has overwhelming bipartisan support. so i expect, when campus returns, you are going to see these protests flare up again. as we saw just two weeks ago
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down in washington with the u.s. flag being removed, burned, and the palestinian flag raised, and "hamas" spray-painted on monuments in washington, d.c., the pro-hamas wing of the democratic party is growing. so this is something where i expect we will see these protests flare up again when students come back. >> bill: probably in chicago, too, when you get there on monday. there is a key line in here that goes to this point. given reports of potential disruptions at columbia among college campuses across the country, we are particularly concerned about nonaffiliates who may not the best interests of the columbia community in mind. how do you define "non-affiliates?" other than the fact that they are not students at that school. >> it is just amazing. i went with speaker johnson just a few months ago at the height of these protests to
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columbia university. we stood on the steps and called out the students for the abomination that they were committing with these anti-semitic protests, and recall then-president shavit ton in disgrace. she refused to call on enforcement until the protesters seized control of campus buildings and started breaking and throwing chairs and desks and tables throughout the building and breaking windows. this type of conduct needs to be combated at every level, starting with chuck schumer passing the anti-semitism awareness act requiring the department of education to act and to take on violations of title vi. this is what is at stake in this election. in a district like mine that has 80,000 more democrats than republicans, that joe biden won
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by ten points in 2020, that is home to the clintons and george soros, these issues matter. i have one of largest jewish constituencies in my district, and obviously the fight against anti-semitism is something that we take very seriously. if folks want to support me in my effort not only to hold my seat but to keep a house republican majority, they can text "lawler" to 85007 to make sure we take on the important issues this november. >> bill: as i said, it's one to watch and it's a tough race. a ton of money thrown into new york 17. thanks for your time. our special coverage of the democratic national convention, don't miss this. a special show on sunday at 11:00 eastern time -- 10:00 a.m. eastern time. what time is that in chicago, 9:00 a.m.? >> dana: i just don't want you to be late. >> bill: live from chicago every morning next week, so come
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join us. >> dana: looking forward to i it. >> announcer: dana read sports. >> dana: this is not good news. her bronze medal is officially stripped. a court of arbitration turns down the appeal on jordan ch chiles' medal. it was originally awarded in the floor routine at the paris olympics, and then usa gymnastics to get to the court, but didn't win created vows to continue the fight to retain her bronze medal. >> bill: here's my idea, my lady. >> dana: you have one? >> bill: given both the bronze medal. >> dana: oh, no. we will make the exception. if you have this much controversy on both sides, don't rip off the american. don't do it to her. go ahead and make nice with both sides and call it a day. >> dana: wow, you are so nice today? >> bill: i think it's the right answer. it's not her fault. >> dana: i think we should have a debate. >> bill: are you saying she shouldn't get it? >> dana: is not participation, it's the olympics. >> bill: they both did participate, i just think you can settle it that way and
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everything would be cool. we'll see if they're listening. >> dana: you know what -- >> bill: do you think macron is listening to make? >> dana: we should make them do penalty kicks and settle it that way. >> dthat's my idea. spewing migrant accused of beating officers arrested yet again. migrant crime taking over new york city. sean hannity is live at the topp of the hour. we'll talk about that and much more. meanwhile, u.s. housing market set to break records as home prices climb. ryan's or hand breaks it down for us. he's coming up next. ♪ ♪ beth wants to get back to eating the food she loves. so she's been thinking about getting dental implants, but the cost seems like it's out of her budget. at clearchoice we specialize in permanent teeth replacement. offering a range of solutions to fit your budget so you don't have to wait any longer. finance your new smile
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inspire? inspire is a sleep apnea treatment that works inside my body with a click of this button. where are you going? i'm going to get inspire. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com. are you a veteran, own a home and need money for your family? newday usa can help. veterans have earned a lot of va benefits with their service, but the va home loan benefit is a big one. by using your benefit at newday you can borrow up to 100% of your home's value and take out an average of $70,000. use that money to pay off high rate debt and get back on your feet financially. >> dana: the market is set a record valuation and prices keep rising. there has been a 4.7 increase in home prices year-over-year in june and a 5.4% drop in existing
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home sales. experts say prices will remain high for some time. this is a big issue. a lot of people talking about it. we want to bring in ryan seaside. serhant real estate founder and ceo, here in manhattan. he is in soho, the cooler part of town and what we are in, and we are glad to have you. i was with some people who were a little bit mid to older millennials over the last week, and they are struggling. they would love to buy a house and they find they are they being out bit where there's no supply where they want to be. they have babies about to be born and they are stressed. what can you tell them? >> ryan: i tell them to have patients, and you have to remember that housing and affordability are affected by three things. today have the highest rate since the early 2000s, and come, meaning someone turning $77,000 year can no longer qualify for a loan on a $400,000 home, which means the average american can no longer qualify for the median price home across the united states.
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i don't think that's ever happened before. you also the highest pricing we have seen their homes. the median price has soared more than 50% since 2019. what goes up has to come down. hopefully it starts to come down slowly so housing can start to be more absorbed. but people aren't building houses the way they used to. it's too expensive, and people aren't moving because rates are too high. 90% of everyone in the united states with a loan has a loan under 5% today not incentivized to move. >> dana: do you think people should wait for rates to come down? or if they can get into a house, even if it is a smaller house than they wanted or a different neighborhood than they wanted, should they do that? or should they wait? >> ryan: is a double-edged sword. you don't want to try to catch a falling knife, that's for sure. if you wait for rates to come down, what's going to happen is pricing is going to go up, because you're going to have every seller in every developer he's going to say, more people can now afford my home, and
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they're going to push pricing further than it is now, and you have more people come to market, which is the positive. right now i think inventory is about 12.5% lower than it was in 2019. so there's less homes for people to buy, which means more demand and pushing prices even further. as rates start to come down, you have all the baby boomers, developers with shadow inventory, et cetera, bring their homes to market in a way they haven't over the past two years, which will bring more supply to the market but it's going to bring even more competition with lower rates. can you wait to? sure. but if you can use the current state of the world to get a better deal, to negotiate, you marry the house but you date the rate. always refinance. >> dana: i love it and i will never forget it. ryan serhant, where can people find you? >> ryan: everywhere. i'm easy to find. >> dana: thank you so much. >> bill: find him in tribeca. >> dana: i'll find you

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