tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business July 14, 2015 12:00pm-2:01pm EDT
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david as in is in for a neil cavuto you are getting the tv show 10 seconds early. >> he would not give anything away. i am david asman. we are watching twitter of theory closely moments ago we rallied up 8% on this news now we can say it is a river of the buyout deal suggesting it would be bought for as much as $31 billion but now they are pulling back with the suggestions it could be a hoax now trading up 3%. but that has come way down and now we hear the people that are putting out the story of a possible takeover to pull back now bloomberg and self say it is a hoax.
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surprising is still up over 3%. so some people are still suggesting that twitter might be the subject of a takeover. we will monitor that closely but the biggest story of the day is that historic deal when you saw the president come out at 7:00 a.m. to talk about a deal with iran because he was speaking to the iranian public they are cheering about this deal so what kind of a historic deal? we have to presidents with chamberlain and hitler leading to roll the court to then another successful deal with reagan that led to the end of the soviet union and
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more peace in the world for about a decade so which the deal will it resemble? where does it go from here? rich edson is in vienna with the latest. >> secretary of state john kerry will not say what this portends for the future of the middle east. but this still requires the iranians to dismantle a significant portion of their infrastructure the administration says it will take at least one year or more for iran to develop a nuclear weapon if they decide to violate the regime they have agreed to. they have decided they will subject themselves to international inspectors but
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there isn't the type or they can just show up to examine these facilities. they could slow walk those inspections for more than 20 days then it gets access to more than $100 billion of frozen assets. it has the arms embargo lifted on the timeline with the missile embargo. sectors of the economy that will be lifted and from this point it is up to the obama administration and jews sell this to a skeptical congress. your even hearing from some democrats to say they have issues as well as leaders of the arab world and even prime minister netanyahu they say they are pleased but there are plenty who have questions and are an opposition.
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david: and saudi arabia and a lot of arabs are very unhappy because they have a lot of problems with iran which is not an arab country. there could be trouble in the middle east. now we have to pay him more money now he is a part of fox news. [laughter] now people say the price is work to and. that the price was coming down because there was suspicions as it would come on line but look at that job you can see that three-quarters of the way that the president cannot to suggest there was the deal that you buy on the news so people were saying when the deal came down all of the discounting is finished with
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probably not enough votes in the house or the senate to override the deal so that means all the discounting of oil is about finished deal i have that right? >> i would say maybe a price is a the possibility of iranian oil. we will not see that any time soon even if we can bring that back onto the market it has been many years if they have the capital to invest in production capability. and it is not in very good shape it could take some time to be a part of the coal oil market. >> is the discounting over for the discount?
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>> i think it is. obviously we still have other issues to be concerned about china to see if this is actually over but from the iranian san point it is an opportunity. david: now go back to iran we should note that four days before it was signed the spiritual leader was at a rally in which they were chanting death to america. death to israel to burn both legs that was just four days before the deal was signed. sometimes you have to deal with the enemies but it is worth noting we are the number one enemy those that control those in vienna. no deal was made but dad
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with the absolute approval with the people is into ron. we want to go to our terrorism analyst former helicopter pilot to analyze this said more detail. they are still a terrorist nation that created has the law -- has blocked that now have immediate access to $100 billion they did not have access to before at least some of that goes to terrorism? >> without said that that is what this regime is all about. they have killed more americans more than al qaeda bombing 243 iranians killed it will continue to support
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hezbollah as the paramilitary force is a creation funding the islamic jihad and the taliban in the past it does not see that divide so it is in only israel in the cross hairs but the united states remains with his ideology. >> there are four americans you are held hostage by this nation including one was a former marine. >> this administration treats them as if they are a reasonable priscian that can be reasoned with. remember what they are and what they stand for a day twi and death to america on a daily basis they want to wipe israel off the face of the earth and directly responsible for hundreds of
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america is the ambassador said iran was directly responsible for more than one-quarter of u.s. military death in the al rapport. that is unacceptable that they directly fund hezbollah prior to 9/11 was responsible for more american deaths than any other terror organization in the world. david: this is the parallel real looking at we have deals of world history between chamberlain and history the other turned out pretty good with reagan and gorbachev. which one is this more closely resemble? >> it is worse than chamberlain. david: that led to about 40 million dead at least. >> it could lead to a nuclear war in the middle east it is not an exaggeration and.
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this will kick off a nuclear arms race in the muslim world with the saudis sanofi turks and by the way israel will not stand pat. i believe there will be forced to act against the iranian nuclear facilities. >> we have to wait and see. we appreciate you being here. now to our ambassador food joins us now. as you look historically at the two major moments of agreement between two nations that were enemies, which does this more closely resemble to
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you? >> it is in arms control agreement and reagan was doing that wafts gorbachev but there were not doing that with hitler but buying him off to give him czechoslovaks get. david: but the argument is made today we are buying off the iranian they have access to $100 million. >> it is sent immediate access it don't get that it could be $150 billion could not and tell they employment the key obligations of this deal. david: isn't that a pay off? >> of course, . the money they are getting is frozen assets those that are frozen because of their behavior the sanctions have then imposed with the
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non-proliferation entreaty they're violating those. what we're doing here is engaging in a deal that we can block their access by having them assume a series of different obligations the nuclear program will be limited. the issue for me is what happens after? it is the nuclear threshold state the difference is not that great so for me a focuses heavily on what will we do to in scheerer to go to all weapons status? david: lindsay gramm is running for president even before we knew the details. i will play a sound bite. >> the president has taken
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in the world most destabilizing power the chief antagonist that has killed hundreds of americans to guarantee there will become a nuclear nation and. instead of dismounting the program they have locked that in. david: do you agree it is the guarantee they will become nuclear? >> not that they will become a nuclear weapons say but there will be a threshold meaning what the deal does for 15 years to reduce the stockpile of the uranium that they have that could be than bombs were still less than one bomb but it does not dismantle the infrastructure itself they have to roll back the stockpile and the centrifuge but they don't have to dismantle the centrifuge. so it depends where rates during for those 15 years? what do you do with it? there are questions that
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have to be answered before you have a level of comfort. david: is said to us a stable world. that they are more afraid than the israelis are. told they begin nuclear proliferation because they are afraid of the future? >> it is an important question. today have the same infrastructure that a lot -- iran is allowed to have? it commits to not having nuclear weapons are to pursue any activity but they are allowed to have the infrastructure that permits them to create that in richmond that creates the potential of how do they decide we want to save every structure or that intrusive verification? it is an important question.
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>> for people to control their own lives and their own destiny ha. that is what we stand for. david: we just took a day off to do celebrate the fourth of july and not the 15th of april because in america we celebrate our independence from the government cannot dependence on it. david: people are cheering him on but the left jumps on his attack of big government. he is not the first republican to slam dependence. >> 47% to people who are dependent on them that the government has a responsibility who believes they are entitled to health care and food and housing. david: now why a dependency is hard to address. mitt romney failed said that
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a temp of becoming more dependent on the government. weld scott walker fail as well? >> they say we want to make them economically self-sufficient and self reliant. what has happened in the last 67 years that so many people on disability or unemployment insurance and other benefits. that is one reason looking at the evidence that the labor force participation rates is low because so many people who could be and should be working are collecting welfare benefits and everybody knows somebody like that. >> has that grown so much that the electorate who go out to vote than tromp anything conservatives try
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to reduce? >> that is part of the agenda to get so many people looked on government that you cannot downsize. exactly that's is europe. it is greece and argentina and france and spain and italy. there is the mindset. remember the stimulus plan that obama said putting people on food stamps is a stimulus that is absurd. more people collecting benefits is not a stimulus to agree how different it is from bill clinton 1982 when he ran on welfare reform he did sign a bill that cut people off of welfare. david: he was pressured him that the era of big government is over. when mitt romney said 47 percent he may have been
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misrepresented that looked at his background. the silver spoon in his mouth but scott walker has such a common man image the republican version of harry truman the college dropout dropout, doesn't that mean something else when it comes out of him? >> mitt romney was a worse person to rouge say that because people thought he was an aristocrat. but scott walker is a working-class hero coming from a middle-class background he did not graduate from college. pricing that is an asset. [laughter] but when bill clinton talks about welfare he boast how many people would work off of those roles that is a different mentality. david: i wish we to get everybody to agree welfare
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. . david: donald trump and cheryl casone. what more needs to be said. cheryl? >> david, we just finished an interview moments ago with donald trump, presidential candidate donald trump here at trump winery outside of charlottesville, virginia. nothing was off the table when it comes to mr. trump and issue of politics. we asked him of course what else, his views on u.s. economy. take a listen. >> if you look what is going on with our country. we're losing jo jobs. we have a negative gdp, gross national product. it is very sad when you see what is happening. build huge plants in mexico,
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china all over the world and we're like why not here? our real unemployment rate is 21%. somebody said on one of the shows, one of our shows actually, it could be 40%. it might very well be but 19 do 21% is the real number. it is a shame. we have to bring jobs back. if i was president i would get them back. >> let's talk about that, one of the things that changed as a businessman, i've always known you in new york as a businessman, now that you are a political candidate i think basically business has been affected. we saw one estimate maybe $50 million of trump organizations value was pulled away. can you talk about that. >> companies like macy's are being politically correct, doing very bad things for this country. macy's bailed. i'm sorry. and then they want to bail. you know what? macy's is having credit cards cut up. people are boycotting macy's. look at some of the others.
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others like espn, a golf outing all over the world. trump. they were golf outing. we rented it to somebody else. the other was nascar. that was a banquet. everyone said too bad you lost nascar as partner. they were renting trump national bore ral for evening ballroom. it gets exaggerated. still it is a lot of money. i don't care, much more importantly what i'm doing is something to make our country great again. we can make this country great again. but we have incompetent leaders. we have people that don't know what they're doing. >> let me ask you this obviously one of the things that developed over the weekend you have a mexican drug lord going after you on twitter. i asked about this earlier, are you worried about security? are you worried about safety? or are you worried about the backlash this caused? >> it is not backlash. people are realizing the i was right. a lot of great people are here. illegals coming in. causing tremendous problems and tremendous amounts of crowd.
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i respect mexico if they can get away with it. their leaders are sharper and more cunning than our leaders. frankly if mexico can get away with it, my hat's off to them. the fact i made a point. the point has been accepted. it was very hot a week ago. everybody is saying trump is right. >> we read your statement on air a few moments ago a hillary clinton. you called her a sad candidate. >> she is a sad candidate. she is collapsing the campaign is collapsing. i wouldn't be surprised if she lost like she did to obama. people don't digger her. come out with statement about tone. not about tone. it is about competence. about getting results. that is the problem with us, has to be tone and so per he can in terms of tone. i want perfect in terms of results. much more important. >> talk about issue of iran, how would you deal with iran? how would donald trump do that. >> i think the deal is horrible. i think the deal is absolutely horrible for us but it is really, really bad for israel.
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one thing. we have four people over there, prisoners they're keeping, hostages whatever you want to call them. that is not part of the deal. why isn't that part of the deal? why are we giving them all the money back? make a deal. keep the money. why are we doing that? most importantly we don't have the right to unfettered go in there to check whenever we want to anytime anywhere. we don't have the right to do that. what kind of a deal is that? we though that they will cheat, we know that we know the persians are great negotiators. frankly i think the deal is terrible and it is certainly bad for israel. >> you're here to support eric about the winery today. do you even like wine? >> i'm not a big drinker to put it mildly but i'm very proud of eric. we have according to all of the magazines we have some. best wines in the world. it has been a pleasure. john was a friend of mine. he was a great gentleman. to take this over to bring it back to health was a lot of fun. >> you got a great deal on this place. we are going to close. >> you got a great deal.
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this is smart business. >> i know how to negotiate. that is what the country has to do. the country has to do with trade deals, with china, with japan, with everybody. with mexico. has to do like i did here. and they can do it but we don't have our great negotiators. we have people that are incompetent negotiating trade deals for us. we can't do it. we need to bring jobs back to the united states. >> we, david, a lot of jobs will be had here at the trump winery. mr. trump here to support his son eric but it was all about politics and of course about the run for the presidency. 2016, david asman. real quick if i have a moment, i have to tell you when the interview ended one of the lights almost fell on me. guess who saved my? donald trump. that is the kind of guy. david: i want to see footage of you running to tackle him to make sure you got the interview. i heard it was just spectacular. >> i had to push aside a couple of other networks. i had no problem doing so. david: good for you.
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cheryl casone, we love your gumption. thank you very much. might have been a rumor but twitter still trading up 3%. it was up 8%. there was a rumor of a takeover. came down after that, but it is still up over 3%. so what is going on with twitter? the latest from charlie gasparino coming in just a moment.
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at least it puts him in the paper. gets free publicity. >> saw, charles, amazing interview. he is the gift that keeps on giving for tv, especially business journalists. here is the thing with donald. he understands the calculus. he doesn't have to spend a dime on this campaigns. he lost business dealings with macy's es and few others. i did a story with "the daily beast," it adds up to $50 million. david: that is lot of cash even for donald, no. >> no. if you think he is worth 1 billion, 5%. if you think he is 4 billions as forbes says a less. and nine billion a lot less. david: perhaps a billion 1/2 by hillary. >> and jeb. jeb bush. so, you know, even ted cruz has to raise $50 million. so i look at it in that context. donald is not going to buy i believe any tv ads. has crazy instagram. i can't imagine he spent a lot
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of money. will keep doing interviews. david: you think he pulls out before the end, before the republican convention? >> this is business decision donald is doing hire. at some point he will realize he milked for all he can go back to being reality tv star. david: no danger of him running a third party candidate, being ross perot at the garden party? >> listen i'm not in his head. if he thinks he can take his brand higher, yes, there is a danger. this is all this business calculation for him -- david: if he runs a third party, hillary is shoo-in right? >> but here's the thing. does he think he can take his brand even higher by running as third party? does he think that? that is the calculus. david: all about his brand? >> i think so. people say it is hurting his brand. i don't think so. he always was controversial. at some point someone will want another reality tv -- david: so 50 million in losses accounting error.
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>> would another network put donald trump on "apprentice," would you be more to watch him? david: oh, of course. to question, he is the most entertaining, whether you agree with him, most entertaining candidate out there. >> most entertaining businessman. most of these ceos are boring. look at him. david: twitter what is the story? >> a fake report they were talking to buyers and it, it was fake bloomberg report. we should point out what i reported about two months ago, that twitter, my banking sources say twitter is open for sale. now you need two to tango, you need two sides, right? there is a lot of, people have said for years that mark zuckerberg at facebook is interested. david: right. >> that google might be interested. i think those are parties twitter would like to sell to. i should point out if zuckerberg goes for it he will get a backlash from his investors. they don't want that deal. google could have a backlash as well. david: getting backlash from the producer the tell mooing he to wrap. >> takes two to tango. david: charlie gasparino, good
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to see you, my friend. oil keeping the dropping ways. where is the relief at the pump? we're paying a lot for gas even though oil is dropping like a steen? what is going on? when do we get benefit from this? a new bill would hike gas taxes by 10% on federal level. the congressman sponsoring that bill coming up next. ♪ [announcer:] what if one stalk of broccoli could protect you from cancer? what if one push up could prevent heart disease? [man grunts] one wishful thinking, right? but there is one step you can take to help prevent another serious disease- pneumococcal pneumonia. one dose of the prevnar 13® vaccine can help protect you ... from pneumococcal pneumonia, an illness that can cause coughing, chest pain, difficulty breathing, and may even put you in the hospital. prevnar 13 ® is used in adults 50 and older to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13 ®
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david: so oil prices are down over 11% just this month but when you go to fill up at the local gas dealer you're still paying a lot of money. gas prices were up overnight even though oil was down yesterday. it is up a little bit today but gerri willis on more as to why we're not getting some relief at the pump. >> it takes a while, right? not like putting oil into your gas tank. david: i understand.
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oil has been coming down for months and months and months. >> it's a process. the guys who own gas station in first place go through existing inventory before they get to the cheaper gas. the big reason you're not seeing lower gas prices are myriad. first of all refineries in california having lot of trouble. they're paying a lot more. affecting national average. eight to 10 cents is california induced increases because we're refinery constrained. david: california has the deal in summer months you have to pay more to add all the additives supposed to cut down on pollution, right? >> that is true but there is more than that going on. they're having refinery issues. we haven't up graded refineries in a long time. in fact it has been 30 years. it used to be a 30 years with a new one. we finally built one in north dakota, you things to the epa. regulations make it i'm possible to for refiners to make money. >> absolutely right.
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demand is very high. people traveling to tourism destination by car. demand is super high. refineries are not keeping up with what we need to have produced. the result is higher gas prices even though iran will come on board, come online at some point, probably not until december 15th. i have to tell you, blame california. because they're raising our prices. david: blame california. gerri, great to see you. thank you very much. >> thank you. david: as oil is falling, lawmakers are looking to hike the national gas tax. congressman tom rice is a republican pushing for 10-cent hike per gallon. congressman, i got to ask you really trust congress to raise taxes in a responsible manner? i don't. >> well, david, the other side of my proposal is to give everybody $130 a year income tax credit. the 10-cent as gallon -- david: congressman, how many times have we heard this before where, okay, we're going to raise taxes but we'll offset it
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with -- offsets disappear congressman. new taxes don't. >> well, mine is tied to a funding of a six-year high way bill. my credit will not disappear. this is a revenue neutral proposal. all i'm talking about doing is moving revenue from the general fund into the highway trust fund. you see my friend, right now the highway trust fund is going broke. and i believe in american competitiveness and -- david: maybe, let me put out a really revolutionary suggestion, congressman. maybe the federal government should pull out of the transportation business? maybe they have been doing such a terrible job of it, that's why they're going broke? >> most of the highway trust fund money goes back to the states. i agree with you, we should diminish the federal role in highways although i don't think it should go completely away. here is what i want to avoid. the call i got from the south carolina transportation secretary last summer, i understand the highway trust
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fund is going broke. so what am i supposed to do? am i spoused to not take new contracts? am i supposed to cancel my contracts? with our infrastructure crumbling and our country becoming less competitive, you see my friend, you can't conceive of, plan, and construct these projects on a dime. david: hold on a second. you just mentioned the biggest problem with it, congressman, with which is it simply doesn't make any sense for the federal government to take money from individuals and states and then to give it back to that money and states for them to fix their roads. that doesn't make sense. like giving myself a blood transfunction from one arm to the other. you will lose some blood in the process. >> well, all i'm telling you is, i'm trying to work within the system to -- david: but the system is broke, congressman. you don't work with a broke system. you change a broke system. >> to give certainty to the states, so they can plan and construct infrastructure, make this country more competitive and make new jobs.
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david: congressman -- >> i'm revenue neutral. i'm not raising any new taxes. david: you're a republican. congressman, you are a republican and you're supposed to be for smaller government. this expands government. the more money you give to government, more expands government. >> doesn't put anymore revenue -- david: paul ryan who was the chairman of the ways and means committee, that is the committee that constructs taxes had said there is no way, no way -- >> i'm aware of committee works. david: there is no way we'll raise taxes. i thank god for paul ryan and i think you're making a big mistake. >> revenue neutral. doesn't put anymore money in the federal budget. david: all right. we'll leave it at that. but how many times have these gas taxes gone to things that have nothing to do with transportation. >> my friend, if it we don't mick this fund -- david: the system is broken. >> we will make this country less competitive. we have to get our economy back on even keel and bring jobs back to america. we can't do it with short-term fixes that washington keeping on
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heads of business and our economy. they can't plan. they have to have certainty. this creates that certainty. david: well, congressman i gave you the last word, i have to say washington and fixes, that is not in the same lingo. they don't go together. you're laughing. i think you know what i'm talking about. congressman tom rice, we thank you for coming on. you're a good sport. i appreciate it. >> yes, sir. david: appreciate it. for amazon, it is christmas in july and now we know why. why shoppers shutting retailers out, could mean more deals are going to be pile be up for you. we'll tell you about it coming up. ♪ you're driving along,
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bibi netanyahu prime minister of israel speaking to president obama on the phone, expressing israel's deep concern over iran nuclear deal. as you might have heard, breaking news, we played part of it for you, netanyahu called the deal an historic mistake. he has spoken out about the deal, even process of it for the past year. so that is not surprising but you would love to listen in on the phone call, wouldn't you? homeland security secretary jeh johnson facing tough questions on capitol hill today, all about sanctuary cities. of course that is hugely in the news today for many reasons. senator rand paul preposed a bill to end sanctuary cities. peter barnes with the latest from washington. a lot of questions constitutionally about how that can be done because states can do certain things on their own but begin if this leads to death of americans, the feds might be able to override it, peter? >> that's right, david. there is a growing backlash in
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capitol hill especially among congressional republicans against sanctuary cities. 300 localitities established non-compliance to detention policies by the federal government especially illegals with criminal records. lawmen anger is growing especially with the death of kate steinle killed and allegedly by an undocumented mexican immigrant with seven felony convictions who had been deported five times but was released from jail in san francisco under the city's saying wary law. >> when i hear the phrase, sanctuary city, as benign sounding as it is, it may have been a sanctuary for that defendant but it sure as hell was not a sanctuary for a young woman walking with her father. >> now senator paul and others support legislation to cut off federal law enforcement funding
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to localities with sanctuary policies. another proposal called "kate's law," would require a mandatory five-year sentence for any illegal immigrant who gets deported and returns to the u.s. and is caught. obviously there are some other other proposals out there as well. in testimony today the secretary of homeland security jeh johnson did not comment specifically on senator paul's proposal or "kate's law" but he did say that he prefers trying to improve detention of illegal immigrants through croptive efforts with sanctuary cities saying that the tougher federal programs to take illegals into custody through local law enforcement agencies have been struck down by courts for violating illegals right to due process. dave? david: by the way, any democrats in favor of ending saying wary cities at all? >> didn't hear any of the hearing today, from many democrats. david: didn't think so. peter, thank you very much. retail sales are down but sales are piling down.
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and we have amazon coming up. meanwhile dagen is coming up right now to tell us -- i just showed you on my phone i have it listed as number one thing to do tomorrow to check amazon for sales. >> you need to get out more. david: wait a minute. you said your husband is doing the same thing. >> he needs to get out moore too. he is well, to be nice he is thrifty, anytime there is a deal. david: jonas and by the way are cheap just for the record. i think we would both be proud. >> god help you both. nice tie, david. david: thank you, thank you. >> the retail sales were bad in june. they were down unexpectedly, even taking out autos. this does beg the question, so walmart is stepping up to compete with amazon. walmart is doing its own sales, doing rollbacks on a couple of thousand items. reducing the amount of money it costs for free shipping. it begs the question did they see this coming in june? they are on top of their sales. are they doing this because business is so lousy.
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david: and what's the answer? >> some of it is i think amazon is doing one-day prime sale because it is trying to boost the people who pay for prime annually. that is part of it. walmart sat back way too long and let amazon eat its business online. walmart trying to compete with amazon but target has been doing a july black friday sale for five years. best buy has been doing one for about three years. david: bottom line, in the end we get benefits and benefit from the discounts. >> and do something stupid to buy suggest don't need because it is on sale. david: sounds like you're talking to your husband. i'm sure i hear the same thing from my wife. >> did we need a bocci bowling set? david: so much like my wife. you can't resist that. >> enjoy. david: dagen, thank you. next hour, angry protesters getting personal taking to the ultrarich's playground, the hamptons. the message behind their madness coming next. ♪
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. neil: well, the iran deal finalized and congress has 60 days to review it and all kinds of things could happen possibly a veto and then an override to the veto. and maybe all the powerless to stop it. blake. >> hi, david, well, here was the message earlier from the president. he said this was the deal that was negotiated from a position of strength. he also called this a comprehensive long-term deal. now, that would be part of the pusher going forward for the focus. now turns from negotiations with iran to selling american lawmakers on the agreement as congress will have a vote on the deal. the main points, two-thirds of the centrifuges will be eliminated. however, the
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inspectors cannot show up at will and iran can delay that process for up to two weeks. the reaction here in washington is pouring in through statements and almost every republican we've heard from has called this a bad deal or remains skeptical. they have the numbers as we all know and both chambers of congress. so the president vetoes a vote needs democrats in this can equation. the key number here is most likely 34. if the president can get 34 on his side, this deal will stick. any short of that might be able to override his veto. and there is a 60 day deadline so this will play out in september. . neil: thank you very much. well, one senator who is not playing it out is -- of course there's an entitlement against him. the justice department has been going after him for a long time. but there's a question about the motivate from the justice department. let's play a sound bite first
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and then get somebody to respond to this. >> we have to make very clear that there's a deterrence in the longer term because if not, 12, 13 years, we would be exactly back where we were today except iran will have 130 billion more in its pocket and promoting terrorism throughout the middle east. >> well, that's what senator said. he's been against this for a long time. probably since the late-breaking details of the deal. and the senators indictment recently definitely helped the administration. vince, how so? >> well, there's no question. it's sidelined their top democratic credit. and this guy is a powerful senator. he was the head of the foreign relations committee and then obama drops this indictment on him for corruption charges with a broad array for really, really difficult to escape from corruption charges. this guy want to bat big time for one of his donors to get
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tons of money out of the government. it's pretty bad for him. >> right. >> but what we know is that the government had this in the works for years. he's been under investigation since 2012 and finally they decided to drop this on him with both normalization of cuba and both of these things and senator has been really outspoken on the obama administration. >> so timing is everything and the key is what you're suggesting is that the timing of the administration was perfect to stop him from roadblocking this iranian deal. >> well, it absolutely was. that's absolutely true. now, whether or not we can say that there was intense there, really difficult to tell. the fbi is often filled with career professionals who move at the pace that the investigation's take them. but when it comes to the justice department, it's not unheard of for the obama administration justice department to governor in a political way from time to time. and who knows why it dropped when it did. but this really did sideline a
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huge opponent to this iran deal. and now the iran deal looks like it's a shell game for the iranians to move around nuclear materials before inspectors can even get in there and take a look. >> well, now there's not a politician in washington that doesn't have some skeleton in the clause. and i'm just wondering if the message to other democrats was, hey, if you opus on this deal, the same thing that happened to menendez is going to happen to you. >> well, it's really difficult to tell and certainly difficult to say that without being able to report it out further. but what i can say is that when you have this intense pressure of an investigation bearing down on a top senator who is part of your own party, democrat, who is totally opposed to the deal that you're pushing forward. this is really debilitating and i think a lot of democrats look at that and say i would not like to be menendez. >> well, bottom line 34 votes. that's what the president
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needs of democrats to support him, despite veto on this. what do you think will happen? does the president have enough votes to override the veto? >> i think the sidelining of menendez has a big role. and nows committee as it stands has some response to this. but, you know, everybody is pretending they have a tempted response. so the actual numbers i think sidelining menendez is going to have a big help to push this through. >> vince, scholar, thank you very much. >> my pleasure. >> so congress has 60 days to pass this. but some congressman already trying to stop it. former chair roy says after the deal the future is bright if you're iran. not if you're the rest of the world. congressman, first of all, on this menendez indictment, do you think it was timed by the justice department to prevent him from opposing the iran deal? >> well, there's one that thing isn't any question and
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that was that the bob menendez was the leader in the senate in terms of putting the original sanctions on iran. also the outspoken critic of the president's party. and the the president's policy here. and frankly not just on this issue of iran but also lifting the embargo on cuba without getting any human rights agreement from cuba in the process. so he was -- i think the important point right now is to get the facts out on this deal. >> right. >> before the american public because i can tell you this about the deal -- >> well, hold on a second. before we go onto the specifics of the deal, i assume that's a "yes" that you think that there was a political intent by the justice department in going after menendez to stop one and i know two cuba. >> i can't know the answer to that. but i do know that when this deal came out, the most
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forceful speech as the grame began to come together and we learned the details, the most forceful speech on the topic that i heard was from senator menendez, you know, going full bore at the agreement before he was sidelined. just before he was sidelined. >> okay. let's talk about the deal itself. are there enough things about it that you think democrats besides senator menendez may oppose to carry through a veto of the deal? >> well, here's why i think there might be. 367 members of congress signed my letter, which directed the president in this agreement to achieve four things that have not been achieved. one was the right for inspectors to go anywhere anytime. the second was not raising sanctions and the signing bonus. and the third was getting answers to those 12 questions
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that the iea has put on and the last of course was a multiple agreement rather than just ten years. so we haven't achieved any of those objective. but there's a second reason why i think a number of members of congress besides the 84% that signed that letter might be concerned. and that is this new development where iran and russia demanded the ability of having a separate set of un sanctions that control the icbm, the intercottages ballistic missile program. they demand that that be lifted so that russia could share that technology with iran with the realization that those could be aimed at the united states. there's some real concern that we've heard in my hearing today in capitol hill. >> very interesting. former chairman ed, thank you, sir. so will it stop african-american getting a bomb?
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they say it's just delaying that pass. secretary, how so? >> i don't know that it will delay it very long. that's another problem. but the idea that even the president himself has acknowledged is that when this is over, iran can go like that into a full nuclear state status. why is that? it's basically because they're preserving all of the infrastructure they need to have nuclear weapons. they're going to continue -- not only their nuclear weapons ambitions but also as several of your previous guests mentioned, terrorism, ballistic missiles, other arms and the ability of-to-use them activities in the region. but the trouble that i have most fundamentally is the belief that somehow we're going to be able to compartmentalize this relationship with iran, they'll behave really perfectly on the nuclear
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weapons program and we'll be indifferent all that stuff going on. this is malpractice. >> how soon -- they have access to all the extra money because of the ending of the sanctions. some people say it will happen almost immediately, they'll have toast billions, tens or 100s of billions more. >> well, they've been getting billions along. the signing bonus -- >> you say progress payments. would that be a bribe? >> yeah. i think it's been an inducement to them to stay at the negotiating table and continue the conversations even though at every term we were making the concessions to them not they at the table. so where you find yourself now is whether the money all flows to them if immediately or whether it flows to them at the end of the year, and i've heard that that's kind of the key milestone. or whether it's a little bit longer. they're banking on two things. one it's coming.
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and two businesses back. they're able to begin getting billions of dollars from folks who get to get access to their oil resources, natural gas or otherwise do business with that market. all of this from a business point of view translates to declared the selling the rope which to hang us. >> if not in reality. and former secretary of defense under ronald reagan. thank you very much. good to see you. well, the whole war on the vatican insiders. we have a holy insider on the positive about capitalism. right after this
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>> just tweeting quote i am saddened and shocked that in enwent to this deal, hillary clinton has so clearly forget the lessons of 9/11. former new york governor and presidential candidate is going to be stuart varney's special guest tomorrow. no doubt stuart will ask him about his views on iran. meanwhile what are the views of the pope? that's -- a lot of people pope francis making very controversial economics lately, even some within the vatican are wondering what's going on. and producer raymond saying that people are confusing infallibility with with the
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fact is that you know the battle is for the heart and the mind of the pope within the vatican. i know some people in the vatican who are very pro market, who must be frustrated as heck by what the pope is saying these days. >> i understand their frustration. everybody's got to take a breath to begin with. remember this. and, david, this is what's critical. people are advertising this, and it's being reported as if the pope has changed. what the pope says about the economy or who is going to win "dancing with the stars" or who is going to within i the stanley cup is secondary. >> it's not secondary to our viewers who care a lot about what the pope says. >> and there are people inside the vatican. >> i know people inside there high up that economies -- social economies that he seems to be advocating. >> uh-huh. >> are contrary to christian values. contrary to the whole notion of free will. >> and catholics can hold that
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view, and you can disagree respectfully with the hope. this is not part of his infallibility when he talks about these economic systems. the pope doesn't know any more than economic systems than most of the people walking down the street. what the pope is trying to do is call from a moral vision. he comes from the perspective of latin america. he's lived in argentina all his life. >> but why go so far, the ignorance of economicification and presence him with a crucifix made out of a hammer. >> yeah. >> you have to have been living in a cave for the past 100 years not to know that it represents the murder of millions of people. including millions of men's, specifically because they were christians. >> and the catholic church has been detected to it for decades and decades. and this pope lived among many
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who were part of that communist reality, liberation theology that took root. he does have a heart for it. at times he goes a bit far. this time he said, oh, i didn't know. that's what he told the president. he said i didn't. but i'm taking home. it's a piece of protest art. that message is troubling for a lot of people. i guess you try to see pass it toward the moral vision that he's trying to put forward that there are excesses in our free economy when we ignore everyone around us. that's important to. >> yeah. >> to consider the poor, which is at the heart of his message. but i can understand. this isn't an economics lesson. he's the pope. and spirituality. moral teaching. that's his strength. >> and the vatican we should emphasize, it has weathered storms in the past. >> yeah. >> we go back 2,000 years. >> and the pope has said that things later retracted, so
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we'll see what happens. >> raymond ewtn, if you watch ewtn, you know this face. >> thank you. >> well, the global cloud photos are gone after you delete them, you better think again. jolene kent has some bad news for you. >> if you use google photos on your android phone and you delete the app or even delete photos off your phone, they're still being uploaded to google photos. and the reason is on the setting on the android on your phone has not been snapped back. so google says they're working on this wash but it's a privacy concern for a lot of users out there. >> in what way can we avoid this? is there any way we can enjoy the advantages of these google and appears yet avoid having people what an we're doing? >> exactly. you have to know your settings and in terms of google photo and enjoying that very visually pleasing app, you have to reset everything on your android settings, not
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reset the entire phone. but go back into the phone settings not just the google photo settings. so going in a little bit deeper, paying a little bit closer attention attention. but i also want to show you the stock today. 8.8%. >> yeah. >> it's the best improvement we've seen over four days in the last couple of years. and why? you're seeing a tightening of the belts inside google, the new cso, coming over from morgan stanley. they are also planning to do a couple of new products out as well. so we're seeing tightening there. and that nice pop. 2.7%. >> investors are betting on google. >> they are. >> thank you. >> well, a small business is the backbone of america. small business owners just gave a huge warning about america. [siren. [. ♪
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tumbling in june but both sides saying the policies will help small businesses. and here to tell us who is the best presidential candidate for small business. >> you know, i don't think anybody has crystallized anything at this stage of the game. let's talk about the macro of it. the best guy ald tap app to be, someone who ran something. be it a governor, a general, a military governor. what it's not is a senator who is a legislature and a politician. >> but you the mitt romney back in the last presidential, he was a governor, he ran businesses. >> yeah. >> did both very successfully, also ran the olympics. >> yeah. >> and he couldn't get anywhere. >> well, was he as we look over our shoulder, we say wow what a mistake. >> the small business owners say that. >> oh, yeah, without a doubt. again, it's somebody that has a budget, has to hire, has to fire, has to do all the things and big business for that matter. let's look at the model.
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everybody's got greece and iran and china on the radar screen. just down the road here is puerto rico; right? no one's looking at puerto rico. it hasn't really, david. there's about $75 billion of pension funds that's invested in their paper. if that has to take a big haircut, what do you do about your pension fund? number two, do you know the largest employer, i happen to be on a board of burger king -- >> you're on the board of everything,. >> because you can't hold a job. but we're based in san juan, so i've watched that over the last decade, i've watched down float, down float, a couple of interesting facts. largest employer in puerto rico, the government. by far. tax incentives in puerto rico which made it hop right along, it brought the pharmaceutical industry. >> by the way, they had a governor.
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it doesn't matter rapport democrat. >> if you hire everybody, they're going to go fork. the problem is it's an inverted pyramid. and now it's coming home to roost. so the largest employer, we may be -- in we may be the second or third largest. >> small business people have a sense for things the way the economy is doing it that most people don't have. >> correct. >> you can be a ceo of a mule mullety national corporation and not have an idea of what's going on on the ground. >> yeah. >> do you have a sense of going on on the ground that the american people are changing their views that they're not persuaded that more government involvement is the best for the economy? >> i think they're at the 50/50 line. i think they were all the way in favor of that and after two terms of obama, there's questions -- >> you did vote for obama the first time. >> i did, david. >> so you think that the transition you've taken is just unique to the fact that
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you're a small business owner. >> no. i think -- >> i think it's much more, much more prolific throughout the american economy. and, by the way, i'm proud to say i voted for obama the first time because i don't want to be pegged as a rapport democrat or independent. i want to be pegged for the guy that picks the right guy. and obama looked like that. boy, were we all sadly mistaken. >> scott walker. >> not graduated to college might not ally to the base because people can relate to that. but, yeah, he's brand-new, he just through his hat in the ring yesterday. i liked it he faced down these public unions. unions don't help anybody other than the union leadership. >> this man always gets himself in trouble. he always complains and calls me on the phone after an interview and says why did you
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diminish concerns over terrorism. he also said that the defense secretary ash carter is going to israel next week to kind of assure the people that the united states hasn't forgotten about israel being a close ally. meanwhile busloads of angry demonstrators descending on hedge fund owner dan loeb during his andrew cuomo fund-raiser. dagen mcdowell, liz macdonald and dan shaffer are here. dan, i got to admit a little pressure out of these hedge fund guys who vote for people more anti-capitalism, than pro-capitalism bet getting back to bite them. >> that is ridiculous. if they only understood what these managers actually do, the risks they take every day and how that he add liquidity to the financial and economic systems including the food system, with the commodity trades, you would need somebody on the other side of this trade to take the risk. they get paid well for the risk.
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david: you know, emac, certain very small sliver of what occupy wall street protests i'm also in protest which is crony capitalism. >> yeah. david: but hillary and andrew cuomo are the epitome of crony capitalism. making big deals, with big companies, hand-in-glove with the government. that is what crony capitalism is. that is what these politicians are in favor of. >> crony capitalism is socialism by another name, david. what happened here, dan loeb had $5,000 a place in east hampton. 250 protesters. a lot were teachers union workers rather. they don't like the fact that cuomo did all the teacher evaluation reforms. in fact we got a statement from above cuomo about this, basically saying these are just performance, paid protesters that are performance artists under a different name. the governor's progressive accomplishments are nationally recognized. i will say this, these
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protesters at end of it bought five dozen boxes of pizza and went in the ocean. david: we've all seen the protesters with their apple cell phones and all the other stuff. they condemn capitalism while at same time have money to pay for iphones. >> told to go after a fund-raiser were people are, right? get exposure on this network. i want to see if they go after hillary clinton? hillary clinton's biggest donors historically since the late '90s have been major wall street banks, city group, morgan stanley, goldman saks, you name the bank, it has given her campaigns money over the years. are they shining a lot on her as well? and anybody. david: but you know, dagen, funny thing is, the democratic party used occupy wall street a bit to go against mitt romney in the last presidential election. so, i'm wondering if the occupy people can afford to dizzy wade them from continuing to be their
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allies? >> it remains to be seen how this plays out but again, sue caught at this park, at least it looked more fun. david: that was the park in lower manhattan. got to ask you about the mind of these -- you ran a hedge fund at one point. why do they have a tendency? once you get hundreds of millions of dollars instead of millions you kind of lose sight of the economy, maybe you would file more sympathetic to the democrats like andrew cuomo and hillary? >> i think is more the way the tax structure is how they get paid. they have a lower tax bracket because when they make profit it transfers to units of fund. they don't recognize the tax until they exit units and those are considered long-term capital gains. the protesters should go after the tax structure and maybe wooing democrats in the loopholes they don't take that out? >> paying half of what they should owe, or even a fraction.
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>> less than that. >> 1/3. you're right carried interest tax issue is serious one for private equity and hedge fund crowd. they are instead saying too much conservatism influence in the public sphere. they're trying to dial that back. they want minimum wage hikes. they want, you know, the teachers union to gain more power. dan loeb is the chair of the success academy, charter schools. so the teachers don't like that at all. they don't like charter schools. they're talking to paul jones and dan loeb. >> bigger picture you're a democratic candidate. you take money from these institutions that you then attack. wall street, also hillary clinton, taking aim now at the contract economy, not by name but certainly by business. uber, airbnb. again the left coast, silicon valley, a bastion of liberalism, big donors to democratic causes. david plouffe works for uber for
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pete's sake. david: former obama guy. >> we'll see if they keep giving money. david: the answer too this is steve forbes flat tax. occupy wall street, still would have something to complain about. >> go to 70,000 pages of statutes and rules because of crony capitalism. >> they're not protesting because of the tax code. they're protesting because being wealthy is evil. david: although i had ralph nader agree the flat tax was way to go. in ralph nader, talk occupy wall street friend. >> accountants don't want it. i'm from greenwich a couple of months ago. they were in front of paul true door jones house by the beach protesting. >> robin hood foundation and good robin hood done for the poor in new york city. david: ladies, stan, great to see you. texas governor greg abbott speaking out yesterday on this show against sanctuary cities. i wonder what border sheriff paul babeu says about that? he is here coming up next.
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>> i'm dagen mcdowell. this is the fox business brief. stocks building on gains yesterday on energy shares. best-performing sector largely due to the iran nuclear deal and spike in oil prices. prices initially falling but bouncing off the levels. investors may think iranian oil will not hit the market that
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soon. majority of energy stocks in the s&p 500 up led by drillers and exploration companies like drew, southwestern energy, new field exploration. s&p 500 on track for the fourth straight gain which would mark the longest winning streak in almost five months. big consumer names hit record highs today, lifetime highs. starbucks, amazon, ebay, all up. stay tuned. "cavuto: coast to coast" will be back in one minute.
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mitigating risks across your business. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. >> i think washington, d.c., either, a, doesn't care, or worse is promoting this. remember this. a concept embedded in the united states constitution is the federal government must protect our sovereignty. they have completely failed in protecting our sovereignty and securing our border and that's why the states are stepping up and doing what the federal government has failed to do. >> presidential candidate senator ted cruz and senator rand paul sharing texas governor abbott's frustration with sanctuary cities. sheriff paul babeu, from arizona, joining us now. sheriff, there is a big question out there about this whole sanctuary cities and whether or not the federal government specifically the obama justice department, supports sanctuary
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cities and is kind of pulling back from dealing with immigration. do you agree with that? >> well, there are 276 plus sanctuary cities but in fact, president obama has really sanctioned this entire country. it is a sanctuary nation when it comes to immigration. we see this murder out in san francisco. sadly this represent one of thousands and thousands of crimes that happen throughout our country because of a lack of enforcement of the laws on the book when it comes to immigration an the president's responsible for this. david: well, actually, to tell you the truth, you get back to the original meaning what is a sanctuary. a sanctuary is a place where the rules don't apply. >> correct. david: the rules are not being applied with regard to immigration. >> well if you look at a safe harbor, it is evidenced in secretary jeh johnson's six-page memo. obama says national tv, if illegals have been here for five years or more, they're going to
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get deferred action when at the very same hour his secretary of homeland security releases a document directing all 22 agencies under his authority saying that if they have been here since january of this year, there shall be no action taken against them. and at the same time, release thousands and thousands of criminals that they held in their custody. so this is the president's fault that all of these future crimes that will occur, you don't have to be the sheriff to figure out what is going to happen. you have murders, you will have rapes, you will have armed robbery, burglarly and everything else. david: we already are. >> it will get worse. >> as you know bill o'reilly has been pushing the "kate's law" provision that would stop a lot of sanctuary city stuff. he had on last night, bill o'reilly did, the parents of kate, the girl that was killed in san francisco. >> yes. david: what are your views of that particular law, of the law that is proposed by bill o'reilly?
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>> i fully support it. what which need to do is just enforce the laws that are on the books. you and i have to follow the law and there is consequences for american citizens, yet what has turned up on its head right now, is the fact that all immigration law, with a wave of the president's hand, are now null and void. there are no consequences. this is why we have illegals that we continue to arrest in my county, that have been deported eight times, 15 times. heck, even 20 times. and this is why they're emboldened. last year they released 193 murders. 400 plus convicted of sexual assault and rape. 300 plus convicted of kidnapping. these aren't american citizens i'm talking about. these are actual illegals who have been convicted of these crimes. the president's only defense, oh, these countries won't take them back. well force them to take them back. deny their visas for diplomats. question foreign aid to these
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countries and there is no excuse for allowing this to do on in our country. david: well the president is not going to do what you suggested. i think you and i know that based on his track record. is there anybody out there, any politician that has the guts to do what you suggest? >> well, absolutely. the congress needs to stand up and demand that these laws be enforced. hold the to his oath. you see great leaders like trey gowdy and chairman food late in the -- chairman goodlatte in the house. others in the senate, senator sessions is doing a great job. we need congress stand up to demand this president who swore an oath to faithfully execute the laws of the land and failed to do that. he should be held accountable for think, but bottom line, you're saying even if congress was successful banning sanctuary cities that would not be enough if we don't have a justice department not willing to get rid of these people? >> correct. the president himself, with eric holder and now his new, his
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new ag, and secretary johnson have literally handcuffed federal law enforcement. in fact they sued and supreme court has ruled that local county, state, law enforcement can't have anything to do with immigration enforcement anymore. so this whole idea of sanctuary cities and there is pockets is a laughing enforcement, heck, it is the entire country. that is where it is going to get worse and worse. david: sheriff pal babeu, always a pleasure seeing. >> you thank you, david, appreciate it. david: vladmir putin applauding and welcoming an iran deal. why someone here says putin is the big winner in all of this. remember i'm going to be all over iran a little later today on my show, "after the bell." tune in to melissa and me at 4:00 p.m. eastern. look at this lineup. where else are you going to get that?
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david: president obama just releasing a statement welcoming the greek bailout. meanwhile the greek prime minister alexis tsipras is facing revolt of his own within his own party. to the teleagainst report host trish regan now. i'm wondering, trish, will he be out of a job soon? >> he should be. this is classic bad leadership. he waited to the 11th hour which did no service ultimately to his people. they never to the what they all wanted. at the end of the day they're looking decrease in their pensions we knew had to happen. let's not forget the greeks don't want that. lo and behold a massive vat tax. so basically sales tax on everything there. which means you and i will be less likely to go to greece this summer on vacation and they need us there. this is bad news for their economist.
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he has been a disaster as a leader and it is probably high time he step down. david: yeah. so funny, you remember all of them cheering wildly when the deal was made, when they decided to vote against, decided for the no vote. they were cheering then. they're not cheering now. trish: you know, don't forget, david, right? he put that referendum forward he said essentially if you, if you vote for austerity, as opposed to no to austerity, that is a vote against me and i will step down. ultimately they voted his way. yet here they are back at square one. they're getting austerity. david: fascinating stuff. we'll watch at 2:00. thanks very much, trish. watch the wildcard. putin is saying the world can breathe a sigh of relief now that there is a deal with iran. what is good for putin is good for iran might not be good for us. former u.s. navy seal carl higby joining us for more details. what does this deal mean for russia? >> i think what this deal means
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for everybody, that iran will get to produce more nuclear material and not show anybody. like the agreement says we have to notify them 14 days ahead of time before we inspect. that is 14 days to move it. don't have to give up all their nuclear material on only 2/3 of their centrifuges. that is no security for anybody. david: what it means for oil prices they will probably come down. iran will put all the oil on the market. the price of oil has been coming down in anticipation of this deal. it is up today but that might be a blink in terms of what is happening. that is bad for russia. why would russia support something bad economically. >> russia does a lot of things nobody really understands but one thing we need to look at, what is russia growing to do? will they partner with iran? i know that was a worry long before about the nuclear issue, if we respond to them militarily where would russia stand on it. you wonder if there are back door deals made by putin. david: you wonder whether
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putin's ambitions for russia, maybe not soviet style but at least the day when the czars were in control expanding into the baltic regions with our eyes focused on iran we may not have the time or energy to focus what he may be doing in the baltics. >> absolutely. it's a come switch on us. look what he did when he invaded crimea peninsula. he could use this to poe things diversionary tactic for future strikes and military expansion around his country. you never know. david: former navy seal. i have a son in the military and marine corps. i wonder what the people in the military who sacrifice their lives every day for this country think about what is happening in the world in regard to all of the risks that we now face? >> i think a lot of people we have been sold, military person, especially we've been sold down the river. our commander-in-chief doesn't care about us personally. i was involved in court-martial. david: i will get to that. that is a pretty dramatic charge to say about the commander-in-chief that he doesn't care about people under his command.
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>> i think if you asked any military member nine out of 10 would agree with me. his precautions that he has taken to appease political correctness far outweighed necessary care that needs to be provided to our servicemembers. david: you were going to mention a court-martial. >> in 2010 myself and teammates were court-martialed for capturing of butcher of fallujah. any president would defend my guys -- david: put bush had lawyers prevent some of the stuff he wanted to do. >> at end of the day i would love to sit hire to say bad things about president obama all day long of the fact of the matter this iran deal i don't think is a good one for us. it will allow them to get uranium, enriched-uranium and potential weapons down the line. we need to be prepared to respond military. david: carl higby who sacrificed a lot of his life. thank you for your service. battle on the home front is the
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david: focusing a lot on twitter but what about amazon? it is releasing the black friday style deals, some teases of it today. shoppers are anticipating huge sales. i've got it on my calendar. i don't know what exactly they will be try to be giving away or how much of a discount they will be offering but 2 1/2% is how much the stock is up right now. investors clearly are optimistic that tomorrow is going to be a huge win for amazon, but, here's a question, will shoppers get a little too comfortable with the deals? one retail expert is fearing that shoppers will only spend if they're get a deal. we're all over it tomorrow on "cavuto: coast to coast." don't miss me at 4:00 p.m. here eastern time, fox business
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actually the same studio. this is the lineup we have today. we have a great lineup. you know who else has a great lineup? trish regan. she is here now. trish: thanks so much, david, see you this afternoon at 4:00. the president stunning the international community, everyone, with word that he finally reach ad nuclear deal with iran. president obama believes this deal will prevent iran, a known supporter of deadly terrorist groups like hezbollah, from am choiring a nuclear weapon. listen to this. >> this deal demonstrates that american diplomacy can bring about real and meaningful change, change that makes our country and the world safer and more secure. trish: but will it really make us safer? will it make the region safer? doesn't it make it more possible for iran to enrich uranium and thus, make a nuclear weapon? doesn't it make every other
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