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tv   FOX News Sunday  FOX  July 28, 2024 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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like, you can learn about nature, you can learn about chemicals. yeah, there's just a lot of categories that you could learn about in science. if you want to see this show again or previous episodes, a reminder, you can see the entire voices for change library on demand with our new fox local app. download it on your smart tv right now. that's our show for this month. thank you for watching and thank you to our small team for making this happen. you can catch us on the last sunday of every month, have a good one everyone! ♪ >> i'm shannon bream, what does the exit from the race and his lame-duck status mean for national security. ♪ >> i love my country more. >> reporter: this comes at a
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time of geopolitical uncertainty from israel. >> to concerns that iran is weeks away from creating weapons grade nuclear materials. >> where we are is not a good place. >> countering china. the challenges sign this -- on the spotlight amid her bid to become the commander-in-chief. will she advance president biden's agenda or break from it? >> i believe we face a choice. between two different visions for our nation. one focused on the future... the other focused on the past. >> we will discuss is one the names on the presidential shortlist and also with senator ron johnson, a member of the homeland security committee. >> did they confront him? did they go up to him? did they talk to him? >> on how those details at this
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time. >> when was the last sweep of this roof done prior to the rally. >> i do not have that information at this time. >> the bow director kimberly cheadle resigns as answers about the attempted assassination of former president donald trump remain elusive. >> that was a dead aim right onto the stage. >> we'll ask the sunday panel about the bipartisan task force formed to investigate all this week on fox news sunday. ♪ >> shannon: what does the exit of president biden from the race mean now for his lame-duck status and for us national security? well, there is this. and mark's 100 days to election day and its turn to the democratic party and presumptive nominee current vice president kamala harris. the delicate -- delegates and top democrats rally behind her after president biden dropped
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out just one week ago. new fox news polling states that michigan, minnesota, pennsylvania and wisconsin showed democratic voters support harris as the replacement nominee. democratic delegates are up going to nominate harrison her vp pick before the dnc convention using virtual voting. they cite august 7th on -- ohio ballot deadline for publicans dispute that said there's been a legislative fix to suspend this to the first. they will speak with that vp pick who's been campaigning with the vice president and is appearing in a personal capacity not speaking on behalf of the bye demonstration with us today before to get the live coverage with a foxbusiness correspondent in st. cloud minnesota with the latest on the trump and harris campaigns. we begin with tray in the soccer field, the idf says they were hit by a house below rocket while children were playing injuring dozens and killing at least 12. tray?
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>> good morning channing, 12 children were killed here when a rocket slammed into a soccer field. all the victims were under 17 years old. you can see the aftermath and the level of destruction caused by this rocket that was made in iran according to the israeli military, the prime minister net benjamin netanyahu arrived with meetings in the united states and there was an address to congress in key discussions with president biden vice president harrison for president trump. netenyahu edge of the cabinet meeting upon his return is the region braces for what promised to be a strong israeli response. the tragic event in northern israel comes as the war approaches day 300. william burns meeting with the egyptian negotiators aiming to get closer to an agreement between israel and hamas and avoidant expanded conflict.
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with these really evacuation orders from palestinian civilians and fresh air strikes cutting through women and children. with the possibility of a larger regional war across the middle east it does come amid other key for -- foreign-policy concerns we know there is new publications by the chinese against taiwan. shannon? >> thank of a pretty much reporting live from a show for us this morning. back here at home, to the heated race medicine joins us on the campaign trail in minnesota, telemedicine! >> good morning shannon, with 100 days to go to election day with a likely new democrat nominee vp harris is making her push to get her side and doll trump is taking aim at his new opponent. drumming his way here to minnesota in the deep blue state. they part of the expanded map his camp hopes to make
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competitive state in this cycle. they have won the presidential race every cycle since 1976. the polling is not currently in trump's favour. fox news polling shows kamala harris leads here with 52 percent favourability. that didn't stop trump from hitting harris on the issue of the border economy and crime. >> kamala harris presidency means four more years of extremism weakness, failure, chaos, and probably world war iii. i really believe it. >> the vp pick jd vance also took -- jd vance also talked about it. >> without receiving a single vote for president. they call this a coronation i think there's another word, i call it a coup.
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>> harris is undeterred and she's coming out of the big first week is the likelihood of the ticket banking $200 million in donations. >> we are the underdogs in this race, but this is the people part of the campaign, we have momentum. >> is unclear who will join her lead to get the governor minnesota has been floated as a pick and so has the governor of pennsylvania who will be on the trail again monday. the harris campaign calling this a weekend of action sprinting to election day. >> my glass is half-full and i will tell you why, kamala harris and all of you! [ cheering and applause ] >> you see, i'm optimistic because i have seen the great spirits of pennsylvanians. and you all are all the epicenter of this battle.
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>> with 100 days to go, campaigning is full steam ahead. shannon? >> on the campaign trail, thank you medicine. joining us also fresh on the campaign trail. he's appearing today in his personal capacity no disrespect we are using your cabinet title but you're here is pete today. you been on the trail, a week ago we were doing the show president biden was still in the race not have a presumptive new nominee. less than a week later brad stevens' writing this new york times and the one thing democratic party is not supposed to be his antidemocratic a party in which insiders selected nominee for the top-down not the bottom up and which expects the rank and file to fall in line and clap enthusiastically, that's a playbook of ruling parties in autocratic states. you know the optics of this that it was donors who pulled the plug on president biden they are the ones from the shots about how this proceeds. >> is true the democratic party is not famous for falling in
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line. that's part of why it's a remarkable in a matter of days kamala harris has consolidated our big ten party and this is something that's coming from the ground up. you can feel it. i was in the field office in michigan close to her home yesterday and saw an extraordinary energy was only people from different corners of our party ready to support kamala harris and ready for her to defeat donald trump and it's a level of energy that frankly i have not seen on the campaign trail in a long time. >> you actually got more delegates though that she has. when you write back in 2020 she crew them -- you crew them and cheating get any she dropped out and they say she works with this coronation she wrote about in the atlantic saying she wasn't tested and tried a worried about that? stevens also says that she's unpopular and has been a bad campaigner and a been a bad manager and she's a blue state demo has to win purple states and she's anchored to the presidents were record and he worries well, maybe democrat you were worried that there has been
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a thorough vetting so when she gets into this head teapot with donald trump there be wishes she had been vetted. >> the idea that someone hasn't been tested or vetted when they have been vice president of the united states for nearly four years just doesn't make any sense. obviously she's in one the most visible leadership roles in the country and she's demonstrated both her effectiveness in that job and a vision for the country americans agree with and that's a real reason i think she will win. most americans already agree with her on the issues that they care about the most and that affect them the most weather we're talking about choice and her stance on defending women's right to choose verses donald trump who eliminated the right to choose in this country. >> shannon: he sent it back to the states ought to be fair. >> let's be clear he's happy he demolished the right to choose in this country. >> shannon: roby wait. there are states that are figuring this out, there are some it's nearly impossible with a six-week banner last with
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their states in this country that allow no restrictions up until the due dates. >> there's national right to choose in this country. while the land for 50 years which the vast majority of americans believe was the right thing to do. with donald trump made a promise when he was a candidate while the few promises he ask you, by the way, heating keep his promise of 6% economic growth he didn't keep his promise. >> shannon: he did have a pandemic to deal with. >> you before the pandemic in america went to a manufacturing recession which really hurt places like where i come from in the industrial midwest. >> shannon: the appointment was low. >> he broke his promise what kind of economic growth and he broke his promise to pass the infrastructure bill he said you would do that and he failed to do it. the biden harrison ministration got it done. even broke his promise to the january 6 mobile eset i'll be at your side when he marched down to the capital. he did keep two promises, he kept his promise to destroy the right to choose in this country, and he kept his promise on tax
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cuts for the rich and if you want to know what a second trump term would be like, i was start by looking at those rare promises he asked he managed to keep. >> shannon: he did say you want to get rid of roby wait. but again sent it to the states. >> yes power the state to eliminate women's access to abortion and also as you know the publican party continues to be interested in a national abortion been. >> was she estimates about it completely. >> he disavowed a lot of things but he also time. >> you think his pledge that he would not pass a national ban is one... >> that will go down most of the promises he's made and broken. >> aside with this because we're still talking with a transition to the brand-new nominee apparently with a ticket, questions about why the vice president maybe didn't speak up earlier about what she might have seen is the presidents declined. they put this way in the opinion piece and say of all these other figures can see the country was being led by very unsteady president mentally and physically wouldn't harris be able to see that sue?
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at what possible scenario is president biden's vice president not directly involved in with the cover up or perhaps even more embarrassing, was she so dispatched from the highest levels of the ministration that she simply hadn't noticed? >> the simple fact is that joe biden is good at being president and you can tell by the results he's getting. what donald trump tried and failed to get. each foot tried and failed to get the job growth that joe biden has presided over. trump tried and failed in infrastructure so at the end of the day you judge effectiveness based on the job they are doing. 's president made an extraordinary,'s story, selfless choice to take himself out of the nominating process and concentrate 100% on the presidency and i think that was the right choice, i know you will want to continue the work of the presidency, meanwhile we have a new nominee. >> was she aware of how he was doing? >> we are all aware of how he's doing, the country has watched our president lead and yes,
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we've also seen the fact that he is ten years older than he was ten years ago unlike republicans who in trump's personality cult will take a look at donald trump and say he's perfectly fine even though he seemed unable to tell the difference between nikki haley and nancy pelosi even though he's rambling about electrocuting sharks in hannibal lecter, even though he is clearly older and stranger that he was when america first got to know him. they say he strong as an ox and leaps tall buildings in a single bound we don't have that kind of warped reality on our side on the contrary the president confronted this reality and what must have been where the most difficult decisions for american president to make ever any did something i'll think donald trump could even conceive of doing which is putting his own interests aside for the country.
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>> bota say they are pretty much less worried about the physical cutie -- mental cutie and physical strength. >> impatient they are worried about the agent cutie president trump compared to kamala harris -- kamala harris who is a generation younger and how could nobody watch the stuff he is saying in the rambling on the trail and not be just a little concerned? >> that's only offer talking points and wanted yours to. >> as of the most americans believe. >> most markets and have a worry about them the way they did what president biden. >> americans are worried against him and he's not running against biden anymore and you can tell you definitely want to be buddies not. >> let's talk with this. you believe it american samoan line with vice president harris where she is on the issues that matter. the economy and inflation is at the top the list and they give a substantial margin to president trump on that in the polling is also the issue of the border and that something weather you want to say -- whatever time you want to use this is mainstream media in march of 2020 when describing her role biden puts her in charge of order -- border crisis was seven the migration on
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southern border and washington post, wants her to handle border crisis makes for the point person on immigration issues amid border storage. that was their explanation of her having some leading role on the border and it's only gotten next financially worse, these are not right-leaning organizations or media outlets so what do you understand her role to be and how does the situation -- has improved or worsened? >> let's be very clear what this because there has been a lot of mischaracterizations, she was not in charge of or the homeland security department isn't control the border she did you say important though she was assigned to conducted diplomacy with central american countries knowing that this is part of the bigger picture what's affecting the border and you know what? the central american countries are when the few countries to see the numbers go down in terms of the source of migrant seen at the border. >> not by pretty much. >> point is this was engaged diplomatically and effectively and of course the bigger issue on the border in migration is the biden harrison ministration
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supported a bipartisan compromise to actually do something about it. one that had very conservative provisions that was hard for many are party to support but there's a bipartisan deal even mitch mcconnell was four at the head of the cpp unit was forwarded in troop -- trump swooped in to kill its not because he thought was bad policy would be he want that issue to get better because of a got worse to be better for him politically. >> there is number provisions that they end up with the final product and felt that there is a mean they cannot vote for there and they could not move forward. >> we know why they didn't move forward. donald trump swooped in and he said i don't want joe biden to get a win. >> it's a flawed pizza legislation had to any loopholes and things they couldn't support this how washington post is how they described the border situation illegal border crossings stored in the months after biden took office in a mealy rollback may trump air restrictions and they go on to say the number of people taken into custody by the us border patrol reach the highest levels in the 100 year history under biden averaging 2 million per
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year and there's a lot of that attributed to the fact that there was dozens of things down to the trumpet ministration, that they rolled back and vice president harris as part of this ministration and had a leading role according to the mainstream media on handling the border. >> let's get real, border crossings are down in the wake of president biden's executive actions he took after congress failed. >> so he could have taken action? >> you want to congress to resolve it because it would've been more durable when trump came in and talked republicans out of their own bipartisan project because he didn't want the issue to get better, the worst things are the border and the better things get for donald trump. he has a vested interest in a remaining chaotic and i also think this helps expand why he didn't exactly conclusively solve it when it was his turn by something else really important happening with the republican national convention on the border and the talk about immigration which we all recognize the problem. they try to paint this narrative that if you live somewhere far from the border and immigration hasn't affected you personally,
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you need to thank immigration is a driver of crime. that was the real message. >> shannon: there is governors and peoples that say every state is border say that's democratic. >> the full smudge of the urgency was that this is leading to an increase in crime. with people not having been this country illegally that he was still be alive. >> this my point. try to make people think that crime is up on crime is down under joe biden and crime was up under donald trump, i don't know how often i get to report on this network so if you are watching this at home do so a favourite look up the data. >> we invite it. >> for looking up at home you will know crime went down under biden and crime went up. >> certain categories. >> the important thing to ask is why would america want to go back to the higher crime we
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experience on a donald trump? >> they might also want to ask why did they want to go to million to your people illegally coming across the border and everything a person that was here and involved with the crime it's like that and have to be lost i think that the argument they made. we appreciate you coming and we hope you'll come back anytime may be as a vice presidential contender, we will see, thank you. the former president says he's going back to the side of that failed assassination attempt in pennsylvania as investigations ramp up with the federal law enforcement agencies have growing questions and subpoenas on capitol hill centre ron johnson will preview tuesday's hearing with the acting director of the secret service next. ♪ >> announcer: sponsored by charles schwab own your tomorrowient .
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>> the secret service has a new acting director following the resignation of kimberly cheadle. take the helm of the agency as they come under fire in the centre's plan to grill him tuesday in a joint healing on capitol hill after the assassination attempt on form president trump and in a moment the bringing in the public senator and first the white house were fox correspondence lukas tomlinson has the latest on the efforts to try and get answers about this massive security breakdown. hello lucas! >> hello shannon. the city secret service was shortstaffed and unable to communicate with local law enforcement. >> the secret service failed. the fact that the agr building which was a hundred and 30 yards away was left unsecured, they also didn't have a counter surveillance team.
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>> reporter: seat -- they say that the secret service team would have likely discovered 20-year-old thomas crookes after he was identified by the local law enforcement as looking suspicious. trump says he was not were before taking the stage. a former secret service special agent explained how critical information was missed. >> you think it was also on the failure points here. you didn't have a common operating system in place because the secret service has a self-proclaimed encrypted system that communicates. >> reporter: in a candid admission the former secret service director told a house panel a suspicious man in the crowd was not enough to stop the rally. >> why was he allowed take the stage with a suspicious person having been identified in the crowd? >> if the detail have been passed information that there was a threat the detail would never have brought the former president out on stage. >> so you distinguish between someone who is suspicious and so on who's threatening is that true? >> i do.
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>> they cease to build the stage three times before the rally and he had a clear line of sight to work trump was speaking in at 611 he opened fire. they were obstructed by trees and the second team located farther away killed the shooter, 26 seconds after he started firing. power president donald trump say he will be returning to butler pennsylvania to do another rally for the his supporters. shannon? >> in the white house thank you lucas. welcome to the show senator! >> mete -- good morning shannon, hope you're doing well. >> you very particulars pretty much information as you could find with a preliminary report getting new things every day had a briefing with the acting director secret service is at that joint hearing this week do you thank you will be forthcoming and have you been able to get more information from him aware of the top questions were tuesday? >> mostly information we have
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obtained his from the local law enforcement and i appreciate the acting director briefing the homeland security committees on thursday, only for an hour, he appeared to be more forthright, he told us he'd be providing documents that we were requesting what the proof will be in the pudding. to see if he follows through he'll be testifying before a joint committee hearing on tuesday and he has an awful lot to explain. he did say in the briefing he cannot defend what happened in butler, i don't think anybody could. i did ask him and i found out because there were reports that snipers had the assassin in there sights for minutes and asked for permission and were denied permission to take them out and apply that to follow as they told us they acquired him out of the shots were fired. but we need details and interviews with these individuals to find out exactly what happens. itself a believable how little information has been coming from federal law enforcement.
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those are just some of the questions i have is exactly what happens, we wanted detailed timeline and we need all the cute occasion's written e-mails and and text wheels new voice recordings verbal communication, here's what we did find out when the committee staff went down to butler on friday at 545 secret service did receive the photos before you took so that we have not confirmed we also have confirmed with local law enforcement gave the secret service sniper teams were never used by the secret service. so all the skin occasion was channeled, this vibrant swat teams run different munication channels that the patrol officers in different communication channels from the officers all funding through the system along the tragedy to
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happen. >> you say that you have the ranking member of the subcommittee for homeland security, you in a bipartisan way have sent out a number of local state and federal agencies we have more information from the local agencies and they didn't appreciate being tagged or held responsible for selling they are now coming forward to say they were in the mix up. with a lot of finger-pointing you'll be hard to see where this happened or do you have confidence and you can tell the american people that they will get answers and so on will be held accountable? >> the federal agencies are doing what they always do, their height behind the excuse so we will see if the rec -- i conjecture is as forthcoming as he said you would be we need this information. our committees and wright now we have the investigation with the
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homeland security as well as the subcommittee with blumenthal. with the subpoenas, the housefather investigation and the inspector general's and the fbi there's a lot of people investigating this by all these individuals at saw something, first thing need to memorialize it now and they need to make sure they save any recordings or videos they've taken and we need to talk to these people and be in these innard -- transcribed interviews. they take hours. we should be able to develop the true that only 1963 when you had this one. we had these audios and hundreds of witnesses and we need law enforcement and we need the local and federal whistleblowers coming forward to tell so we know. there's going to number of different offices and media personalities me this people to
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come forward and again, tell us what they know or really, what happened in this scene. that's my biggest concern, will the agencies, the fbi will be invested getting crookes and the secret service and inspector generals, congress need to investigate exactly what happen with the breakdown was in the secret service. again, the deep state keeps and seekers pretty close to its vest. >> we will have full coverage that hearing is to try to get more answers and i will make sure you get a couple other issues and we're not referring to him a secretary because he wasn't here in the official capacity but more of a campaign style visit but he talked with what's going on at the border and this came up this week again. at the white house briefing. with some interaction with the secretary -- the white house press secretary and they say that republicans are the ones not helping at the border, you had a chance to send better resources and sign on to this law essentially and you didn't. the democrats say, and her the judge say, it's because present trump told you not to in the
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chaos of the border is a great campaign issue for him so why did you vote know? >> i do know any senator that donald trump contacted to tell him to vote know. surely don't contact me about know because it was awful bill. with four or 5000 illegal immigrants today and obama said 2000 today was he mentoring crisis basically during his ministration is averaged over 7000 people a day in december it was 10,000 a day average they had 14,000. president biden is in the same authority president trump used to close the border and open it up pretty pretty much his first day in office is or was had the authority to close that he just doesn't want to. they won open border of the democrats and they want open border, think hub that process the bill was an awful bill and it actually reduce the presidential authority so that's why that bill died within 24 hours to being introduced. >> i want get those for policy we start with this rocket firing into northern israel. they are denying responsibility
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dozens injured and killed. with some that they would have some reporting with want the reporter said this last night he talked to the foreign minister who said to him this cross all the lines anything we are approaching a moment of an all-out war worse in different opening up of the pretty much better armed opponent. >> i'm highly worried. they want to live in peace, they just need to be recognized as a state! that the palestinians that contribute to to be the grocers. with a barbaric attack on october 7th there's a piece available of palestinians are willing to accept it just doesn't seem like they are. >> sabrina from the population which it seems has a growing
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resentment now for what's happening with him also recognizing they are often used as shields with these are certainly terrorist groups it seemed to be doing the bidding of any case it -- many cases of iran. >> next time they have that opportunity to vote for government 70% of vote for a government like hamas. has blush and not try to continue to fire missiles into israel and, of course,, it's all being sponsored by erie -- iran who bind in the demonstration of coddled and scent hundreds of dollars basically today military allowing them to sponsor a house below on there hudy's and hamas. is the weakness show by obama and the vitamin is ray and kamala harris is partial to the same problem. >> thank you for weighing on multiple issues you will see at the hearing tuesday. >> have a good day. >> they say that kamala harris going to the top of the democratic ticket is bringing a whole new enthusiasm to their efforts to hold onto the white house, we have brand-new poll showing exactly how she matches
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up against president trump and several blue wall swing states. we'll bring our panel in for this tightening race 100 days out from election day. ♪
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screen that exists on this race. >> i want to debate her and it would be no different. they have the same policies i think it's important for a presidential race i really do. have an obligation to debate. >> we look forward to it including an open invite here on fox. vice president harrison for president trump over if these debates will happen. the editor-in-chief and mario parker. the managing editor for economy and government. let's start there. who thinks the debates will happen? 's anybody doubt this? >> is a good talking points harris campaign so say he scared you won't show up. >> we see that happening before but you see them ramp up in the invitations to have a debates
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with the best line of attack against terrorists leadership in the house was saying stick to her policies of course there are certainly some members at straightaway. >> have gone broke. >> there is new polls that show them had to head now. then match up in critical states when minnesota michigan and wisconsin. in this race is pretty much tighter now because if you look at them numbers and there is low on the screen there's been a shift from when it was widened as the nominee and now perley the vice president in favour of the democrats. they are all in a dead heat except for minnesota where she has a six-point advantage. >> what we are seeing is what was happening in biden was the nominee. it wasn't just you was losing to trump was able to have this
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collapsed. they were facing the loss of five, six, 78 seats but they were not prepared to do that even if they -- they might lose the presidency. it's really better than what they were doing with him but the fundamentals of the presidential race are going to be the same they were able to presents as pretty much more moderate than kamala harris you has this new tape record of being probably the most extreme hard left democrat now many and 75 years with this replacement of the person that was chosen by democrat voters was so when yet to receive a signal delegate is not just about try to save the senate. >> the polona polling that hasn't been good in recent weeks notes this change.
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they saved mr trump leads ms. harris among likely voters and had to head match. by six percentage points this is close and this will be a dead heat. >> they are up in the air right? but anecdotally walking around a neighbourhood just the number of zoom calls for vice president harris as well. some of these numbers you saw from biden are baked in right? kamala harris has about 60 -- 60% of black voters right now. is given her background and 1100 block sorority, et cetera, she should get more than that 70% going forward. he just saw that excitement over
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the past week. >> also they talked about the shift where they worried about certain voting blocs were biden. do they show that she's garnering 70% support under 30 and hispanic voters that they consistently struggled with the bone folders and ten percentage points. >> is generational despite the age being quite similar. >> they are the so-called double haters and i'm tired. we've seen this before with biden versus trump and i don't have that and now you have harris putting out her first piece of the campaign talk about freedom in the future with what
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they described as chaos and those coming from trump. numbers and base remained steady. i haven't seen his numbers decrease! what i have seen is the democrats picking up on the point that democratic base coming home, these people that has some pieces getting said and going out for biden are now quite excited and enthusiastic about kamala harris and the attacks coming from the trump team calling her a san francisco liberal. i cackling woman, a single woman who had no babies. that is all gone and fallen flat and in fact it hurt the trump team and the vice president nominee jd vance! >> what we hear this morning is $200 million since a week ago
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with president biden dropping out and a hundred 70 new volunteers signing up. we do know it takes money to win a campaign and running for president is actually expensive and that seems to be one or the things that pushed president biden out of the nest if they said no more money for you maybe not for the down ballot people who won't turn on you either. >> yes, he was pushed out he want to be the nominee, he explained all that, but he was pushed out by the donors and top democrats who knew he was a drag on the ticket and there is a lot of understandable excitement that they were able to push him out, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it will be particularly great for kamala harris who i think a lot of voters do view her as a san francisco liberal, she is, her policies are very popular in california and they clearly were never popular in 2020 with a national democrat audience, she was unable to get a single delegate there and when you look at her actual positions whether her support for the deal with a
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radical position in the opposition to fracking, they will work very well for her. >> she says now that she does not. >> she had the anonymous spokesperson claim that but they never went on the record. >> can i interject just a second saying this san francisco liberal thing is so wild. the reason she didn't do well on the 2020 primaries is because a lot of democrats saw her as too aggressive a prosecutor. and she was seen in the aftermath of george floyd as being a tough woman that wants to send parents to jail because the kids are there from school and now she saying its prosecutor versus the falun versus the guy that's found liable for sexual assault and fraud. >> in 2020 she posted a link to bailout writers during the blm riot. >> it still up. >> and it still out. that's not true people thought she was too hard. >> there's no question they thought she was a hard prosecutor and that's why she was winning in california!
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she was seen as a tough and successful prosecutor! >> at this point in the race for years ago trump was down ten points and that was a tied race and he's out 10% of where he was her years ago. democrats are in a real bind and they need to be doing pretty much better in the polls and they are right now. >> have a take a break and we're starting it off over here next time, president biden is targeting the supreme court which changes and probably rolling out tomorrow. another thing that will fire up democrats are panel will debate that next. ♪wealth
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>> i'm on the call for this reform because it's critical to our democracy. >> he wants to pack the court which is the number 1 agenda and we can't let that happen we are not going to let that happen. >> president biden in a reversal of some of his long-standing resistance to changes how bound to push for reforms in his last six months in office supporting legislation to try and oppose term limits and enforceable ethics code and the more we find out when this rolled out tomorrow mario, the editorial
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board talks about what he has had on this and says a put them on the spot and she can distance yourself from these ideas without depressing the progressives but she can't embrace and without alarming other voters, how do you think this plays? >> you're getting a glimpse with the next six month will look like for president biden where he will reprise his role essentially his vice president biden. for obama you will see them take on more progressive leanings beyond the attack a lot more, we know based off of the senate numbers that there is no way he will get scotus reform at all but this is the messaging document this is in the messaging play for for progressives for kamala harris in a way she doesn't have to say as pretty much but biden is doing the work for her. >> does this then turning to a campaign issue knowing that this current house and senator will pass the stuff is just give another -- give her another thing to campaign on? they tell you how scary and out of touch the supreme court is
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except on days they do get opinions like them to get their passion leaf like the cork all right this time. >> sa think there because especially biden have been growing in their scrutiny of the supreme court especially after roby roe v. wade and the presidential immunity decision so we are expecting them to roll out a recommending term with an enforceable code of ethics which some, some justice, i think that justice kagan was in the interview saying she supports it but they want to be a panel of judges that decide that put out that that's going to get a lot of support by republicans at the moment. >> definitely not. they talk about this and maybe even going even further, the growing public support for reform in her own dire warnings about the courts future ruling suggests that she might be even more forceful and pushing for broader reform with the court expansion! >> i think that would be a legitimate thing to worry about,
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soap -- what we have is the left march through every single institution basically hollow it out except for the supreme court , that seems to be the one remaining functioning institution in this country you have seen a lot of attacks on the left of the senate majority leader chuck schumer calling for attacks on the justices cavanaugh from the subs of the supreme court a few years ago which was before an attempted assassin went to justyn -- justice cavanaugh's home, you hello people attacking in part because of the body ministration being so bad at the court they try to bunch of pretty reckless attempts to go after their primary political opponent donald trump and they were really brought down low on these things so that's a very political thing but i think a lot of americans think this is our one institution working in a functional and healthy way and they don't want to see it destroyed just for political reasons. >> at some popular because of a major propaganda campaign. >> i think because of the abortion decision most people think was political that's what
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the court is now seeing it as basically republican institution a political institution and people have lost faith as a result. >> shannon: i will say this if you look a few years ago when the court was different and there was different decisions coming from the court it was unpopular with a different segment of the country. >> in terms of total members this i think has 56% of americans disapproving of the supreme court. >> selling president biden has said is what he has to get done he has 48 open federal seats and that's a legacy that goes far beyond any presidents term or terms. so he will want to get those filled, on how pretty much cooperation there will be for that. >> i think it's an effort to do those kind of things and use executive pieces with the six months rebooting, but a lot of it has to with legacy. the speech he gave this past week it was the end of a public servant that's been around washington for 50+ years and
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been involved with some very sensational supreme court nominations and nominees. he's been here and it was kinda sad but i think what he has laid out as one, he wants to keep the economy going, record low unemployment and he wants to keep wall street hi, you want to keep going in terms of giving opportunity to entrepreneurs and then you think about some of the issues, the policies that kamala harris will inherit and you think about things like student debt, social safety net programs, is it what he sees as his legacy as well as potentially saying i stand against the politicization of the supreme court. >> even though he didn't like the decision on student loans he just said he'll go zone weigh. >> is executive authority. >> that speech was the very sad and to a failed presidency. in fact the economy is in tatters and america people think so. >> the american economy is in tatters? how is that! go to wall street ask the big boys! >> most parts of the country's
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are suffering from inflation, they can't buy houses and there is no control over the border in the foreign policy disaster, that speech by the way, he said he was not going to campaign but he didn't explain why he was not running for reelection. there's not really good explanation why he can't run for the nomination he just one but remain as president and it was very disturbing. >> you for we go i want to get we talked with ron johnson about these investigations going onto the assassination attempt. the house put together a bipartisan group, olivia, what do you think about this and moving forward, you're the senator talk about this he thought it was the speed bipartisan. >> i think they both agree that this would be bipartisan and they want serious members and i think they are looking at someone from a legal background, base picton to announce names -- and things recently but there seems to been a delay on the front but mike elliot was talking to humans while the
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republicans at the shooting, the saturday shooting and he says he wants to know information why wasn't trump removed, we started to get those answers will bit from secret service, but there is a lot of questions to be known and celibate task force wants answers by september. >> that's all the thanks of the point is we are seeing some bipartisanship no matter where people are putting politics aside on this instance. >> hopi with that issue they can do that he get answers for all of us bipartisanship today on this panel to continue in the commercial. they you so pretty much and see next sunday if you're feeling stressed out about the state of the world you will want to miss my conversation with our next speaker and that previews coming up. ♪
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♪ >> a quick note that livin' the bream drops today and it's fresh this week and i talked with pastor max okada about his new book what happens next? a traveler's guide to the end of the age and he says you should be prepared and not scared. a lot of people feeling scared these days he's a great encourager plus, you can hear all of today's program on the fox news sunday podcast download and subscribe to either of these
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podcast at foxnews podcast.com or wherever you like to get your podcasts. i'm already scheduling one coming up soon. >> that's it today. i'm shannon bream, we will see next fox news sunday. ♪
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