tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business March 29, 2016 12:00pm-2:01pm EDT
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workers the manager of donald trump's campaign. he has been given a notice to appear in court on a charge of misdemeanor battery. this is all happening right now. donald trump says he's completely innocent. he will plead innocent. my time is up to charles payne, it is yours. neil: thank you connoisseur. welcome to "cavuto coast-to-coast." i am charles payne. all of the candidates holding events across wisconsin today. this ahead of next tuesday's primary were 42 republican delegates and 96 democratic delegate rsa. senator ted cruz a big boost from a constant governor scott walker. before we get to that, we've got breaking news. the trump campaign manager has been charged. let's go to blake burman in janesville, wisconsin was more. >> hi, charles aired we are
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indeed in jane bill wisconsin where donald trump will hold a rally later this afternoon at 4:00 local time. the big stories to run a this hour course involves his right hand, his campaign manager, cory luendowski, a misdemeanor for an end event that had been back according to jupiter police on march 8th involving breitbart reporter michelle fields. i believe i just heard stuart talking about it. the new video they just released. they say shows a more clear picture of what exactly happened, to remind back to the night, march 8, donald trump had cleared up the primaries that night. michelle fields says she was just trying to ask donald trump a question or two at the last and that is when she says she was grabbed. here is from the actual police report by jupiter police.
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and that quote. holy bleep, she is different language than that. i can't believe she just did that. i was so hard. without cory? you should've thought how hard he just grabbed me. that is what the audio set according to jupiter police. the audio from the event. the trump campaign standing by cory from the beginning. the noon hour in janesville they are doing again today. here's a statement the trump campaign put out moment ago. mr. luendowski was issued a notice to appear and given a court date. he was not arrested. he is not ugly and it's another search. he will enter a plea of not guilty and looks forward to his day in court. he is completely confident he will be exonerated. there is some high-priced lawyering going on. that i can assure you. scott richardson is a lawyer in palm beach to which i cannot speak to.
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kendall coffey of coffee, burlington is representing miami, which i can't speak to you from growing up there and covering news there for more than six years or kendall coffey is one of the biggest names in alice south florida, one of the biggest firms in alice south florida. today they are now representing the campaign manager for donald trump, and cory lewandowski. there's certainly a lot of security in janesville. a holiday inn express. this is just supposed to be your typical donald trump rally and it might be that. we will see if he addresses what happens to his campaign manager and the charges everywhere you look on the roof, on the ground up front and beyond. there is security here and one might have to imagine that will be stepped up going forward. charles: blake irvin, thank you good appreciated. "washtington examiner" on how this reflects on the trump campaign. susan, the timing certainly
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doesn't help coming out of last week for donald trump was now trying to distance himself away from the war on the wives. >> and the other campaign you might see that maybe it's time you might suspend her campaign manager, fire him. as we know, this is not a normal campaign. i don't think it is convincing. i have seen some of the videos out there. i don't think it is convincing evidence that it was battery. let the courts decide. certainly this is not going to stop something donald trump full text in say. this is the moment i'm going to clean up my act. charles: suzanne, did you see the video released by the jupiter police? i have seen a lot of other videos that i hadn't seen that particular angle. >> i have not in that particular video. the other videos are not convincing to me. you have michelle fields having
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a conversation herself. several other incidents. i don't think this is the moment donald trump will say i'm going to distance myself from my own campaign manager and clean up my act, even though you had people like ann coulter expressing frustration about the wise incident last week. they might be a good time to do so increasing frustration among conservatives trying to support you. like i said, i don't this is the moment donald trump will say i'm going to go ahead and clear my act now. charles: i am definitely no law expert. i'm not sure what justifies him what i saw on the video while you were speaking. i will say it is interesting to your point, ann coulter said their candidate could make a 16-year-old. she didn't hit the ground speaking of michelle bills. this kind of stuff happens i'm
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also the time. the mainstream media will go crazy. to your point, donald trump standing up for cory lewandowski to solidify his core following. from your experience, does it help him get beyond this because this is what a lot of folks who may be in the middle of the road are writing. if you want them ultimately when you can't have any more incidents. >> bright. but his base gets fired up when things like this happen. it's really hard to predict. charles: unless you're saying that's enough to win the general election, it is null and void. they have to get more voters. >> is to start cleaning up exactly for the general election is going to be the nominee. in my experience in rough-and-tumble politics, i've had members of congress. charlie rangel. i have not filed charges against him. this is a rough-and-tumble
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business. i had anthony flipped me off. this is something when you are confronting lawmakers every day. you have to accept. he needs to shift gears very, very quickly. charles: we appreciate it. we have lawyers to avoid topic coming up very shortly. meanwhile, a scary situation for passengers. authorities have arrested a man who is claiming an oath of bass to be diverted to the island cyprus. questions are being asked, who is this man, why did he hijack the plane? good luck with that, charles. no doubt about it. he forces and that of cairo to take hostages, let them go.
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we see pictures of that and eventually gives himself. this is egypt air flight 181 you look cap with the passengers getting off the plane on the tarmac after they were originally taken half edge. they had something like 81 passengers on board when they took off from alexandria. this guy has a suicide vest when he tells the pilot of the plane, linda cyprus. he looked almost everybody off, but he keeps seven people on board for quite some time and it turns out according to authorities this is not terrorism in all. it was all about a woman, his ex-wife cheered him on that a letter his ex-wife. this picture is the guy himself climbing out of one of the windows. why we are not sure. he ends up on the tarmac, runs away and is arrested and he's in custody. it brings up a number of questions about security obviously in egypt already that this guy gets on the plane, says he has a suicide vest.
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they weren't real explosives about what it may be how he gets through security with this fake fats, something in his bag as it went through security. they didn't pick up on what it was because at the end of the day it wasn't anything. everybody safe. that's the bottom line. charles: the ultimate moral of the story -- let's go to wall street big enough to hear from jim mccollum this hour. she's going to make or break the session. a big drag on the market. let's go to nicole petallides on what else is moving. >> let's start it off with oil. 50% off his clothes, hasn't run its course. down more than 3% for two week low and dragging down any oil names. down 7%. simon off shore is down 8% and many things are down big time. chesapeake and 70% in the last 52 weeks. airlines, virgin america living
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to the upside on the possibility of a takeover could be jeb blew. recent consolidation. some analysts think it makes sense. more expansion into the west and so is alaska air right now. virgin america is down one quarter of 1%. moving onto yahoo!, microsoft is an ongoing story. just like with the virgin america running up this past month about 20%. yahoo! is also a winner this month of about 13%. both of these are takeover stories and you can see within that narrow a 2.5% and microsoft is working with private equity and tried to put it together. in the meantime, setting a deadline for two weeks and apparently there's a slew of bad they could be stepping up here which has been obviously in the midst of a turnaround. charles: nicole petallides, thank you very much.
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back to wisconsin. ted cruz getting a nice boost. take a listen. >> ted cruz is in the best position by far to both win the nomination of the republican party and to then go one and defeat hillary clinton. we want people who are principled, common sense conservative who do what they say and also people who can win the nomination and you want to defeat hillary clinton in the fall. for that reason i am proud to endorse ted cruz. >> the last stand for the establishment. >> i think this lewandowski news helps them. you know, i don't remember -- yes, they are flocking to ted cruz. he is the one thing that can not donald trump in wisconsin and maybe kasich will win in pennsylvania. i will say this getting back to interfere in the last woman who
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basically said this is a rough-and-tumble world so we should expect to be treated like this. i don't know. maybe i've just been socialized by my wife so much. you are not supposed to expect that type of behavior at a campaign managers. women who are victims should not be called to the carpet. there's pretty compelling evidence that cory lewandowski did but michelle said she did. i will say this. republican women are going to recoil of what is going on here. that's going to hurt him. if he doesn't get 1237, cory lewandowski just gave the republican establishment one more reason to deny donald trump the nomination. charles: well, yeah. there's still some weeks ago i miss daddy has a notice to appear. he wasn't arrested. he's pleading innocent. blake points i've got a pretty good lawyer, a guy named kendall
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coffey. on the other side of this, with one said at a time. wisconsin is next. in my mind, everyone who has had donald trump can get 1237 before the convention have penciled him in winning wisconsin and winning at it. i'm not sure this happens after the endorsement. the mac i don't think it's happening. ted cruz i think there's a good chance -- it's not a winner take all state. he's going to deny some votes no matter which way it comes out. there's a good chance that cruz will win wisconsin. charles: you think the establishment waited too little too long. rubio wants his name off the ballot to help ted cruz. all of the losers trying to rally around ted cruz. there's a chance at kasich may join for dual ticket. that's the speculation. remember a month ago kasich wanted to be trump's vp.
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>> they don't match up on immigration, donald and kasich. why did i always think donald was not going to make it this far? a lot of reasons including the fact image state people average 38% and i thought for sure these guys would drop out and have a one-on-one debate, one-on-one contest and they didn't. so they kind of screwed themselves and they deserve what they are getting. with every crazy thing that donald trump engages in and i like him personally. i just wish he would stay on the straight and narrow. i think it is a quote, i'm quite establishment. i hate that term. another chance to deny him the nomination. that cory lewandowski thing is not good. he met the leave me, before it's all said and done. the government in the meantime choppiness suit against apple. next, find out how apple may have lost in more ways than one.
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walker's predecessor says he just made a big mistake. here where the former governor thinks he's got the right candidate. wall street waiting non-genocide three. she wanted to break the market. has she convinced market. i should convince you there's not a result of the federal reserve. next. many people clean their dentures
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our claim centers are available to assist you 24/7. for a free quote, call liberty mutual at switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. charles: donald trump campaign manager hasn't called against michelle fields. one interesting thing you'd like a studio. jupiter police getting the security footage from a trump hotel. the trump national hotel. we are waiting for reaction from other candidates. so far cruz and kasich have been quiet on the charges but we will keep you posted here the government telling apple we
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don't believe you and alice got to way to unlock all these isos. liz mcdonald has the latest on the ongoing battle. liz: that's right. telling the court they do not need to proceed with a court order to get apple to a mock the iphone use by the san bernardino terrorists. it is not successfully accessed the work used by said farouk. here's the thing what is going on. we know that other law enforcement officials want to open another iphones. for example, the manhattan says 175 he would like to unlock him a murderer -- attempted murder and sex abuse cases and the like. the fbi is not saying how they got into the phone, and they basically do they have to tell apple how they did it. that is what is key right now,
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charles. what we hear from cybersecurity acts versus the white house passed a rule a few years ago after the virus was found to be catastrophic to intranet e-commerce. it is basically stealing passwords. after the virus was discovered, the white house pastoral that they listen, government, if you find a security flaw, and you need to tell silicon valley and tech companies at issues that you found a flaw. whether or not the equity's review to be invoked by apple is key. i will tell you one thing. apple on the press conference calls has indicated it would like to talk to the fbi in court to ask them what the security flaw they discovered and how they are getting into these homes. back to you. charles: thank you very much. we have heard from!
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that law enforcement officials want the ability to get many sons to fight local crime. internationally, is this going to be a key to help prevent terrorist acts? >> well, from a counterterrorism perspective on what's in the interest of american public safety, this was the victory of an fbi, now that it's out in the public in paris no that the fbi has the ability to basically i'm not iphones. they are in the ways that they are communicating and the way they get their finances. this basically is not going to give the fbi the upper hand long-term. all it is this giving them an ability to look into this i found for any intelligence that
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can prevent future attacks. charles: we know in the brussels attack one of the safehouses if you will escort a lot of the chemicals in the body make enough for common there was a broken ipad. not sure if that was left deliberately as a ploy or weather information is on that. any captured phones are ipad can certainly use the technology. to your point, maybe it's temporary, but how would the terrorists get around not using smartphone technology? >> they were using different forms of technology for communication. for example, playstation's rx boxes. terrorists are looking for ways they can exploit some of the cracks in the system to their ability to stay underneath the radar. i thought it was a little bit hypocritical with what we heard from apple coming forward and saying we want to know how the fbi is getting into our apple
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iphone, especially when the fbi went to apple juicer to get help in terms of doing this for counterterrorism purposes and apple turned them down. charles: amber smith, thanks a lot. hypocrisy runs deep at apple. no doubt about it. we've got breaking news for you. we talked about janet yellen speaking this hour. the fed official said the monetary body should proceed cautiously on rate hikes due to global risk. as you can see stocks are moving higher, not loading is certainly moving higher. there have been a lot of fed officials who have gone 100% not occur. it will be important as she embellishes on this at the market rallies continue. she has signaled her desire to rate hikes march 26th and a lot of folks say you're wrong. we need three or four. wall street wants as few as
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possible. she would say this 3-d had that -- they look silly. let's face it. one of the reasons. it is kind of goofy if you're not into sci-fi. oculus rictus here and it's causing a wreck after this. trump's campaign manager has been charged with ample battery. he will have a chance to defend himself in court. first, lawyers to preview what that battle is going to look like. the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it.
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>> welcome back. business headlines from coast to coast. federal reserve chair janet yellen said on a slower path giving global insurgency. economist robert shiller will react in just a moment. facebook oculus riffed virtual reality headset is on number market. critics saying it is enhancing the gaming experience that excited about a device not
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cheap. later this year, oculus will face new competition from sony and htc. lenore reporting a strong quarter in every city except houston, texas had a home builder be fostered fostered expectations with delivery of 12% year-over-year. the central and western u.s. drove the growth and he's been taking a hit as oil prices weaken the economy. the stock trading higher is you can see today by 2%. dow and oil paring gains on janet yellen. we will get back to you, charles. charles: janet yellen in the new housing data. let's go right to the man himself and the robert shiller with the action. janet yellen in a war within the federal reserve. it is pretty clear that some of these folks inquiries should be higher. they should be liz: rate hikes. they be trying to reassert herself today and the market happy with it, but not leading to the upside. who is right on this? >> is probably a good thing
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people are expressing different opinions. it is sign of a healthy discussion. this is an unusual market. we've never had mixed to before in the history of the fad or we have basically zero interest rate for years and years. you know, it would seem interest rates should come back to normal. the experiment with more than 25 basis point rate hikes and it wouldn't be a catastrophe. i think it is a close call because nobody understands why the world economy is as weak as it is. charles: i think i understand that. no matter whether you're a communist, socialist, government keep buying time and the damage beneath the surface or the ticking timebomb only gets bigger and bigger and bigger. i want to switch gears because the housing data was surprisingly strong. 5.7%, how does housing rent so much further ahead in people's wages and how do we reconcile that?
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>> good question. that is not just for the u.s. people have been saying that about china, australia, canada for years. an outcome of these markets are substantially driven by psychology. the psychology now it's a little bit hard to interpret. if it is with the price increases are successful tech entrepreneurial cities in many cases. maybe it is some sort of people to kind of belief in this market as their salvation or their hope. charles: i mean, there's no doubt that new york city is certainly an anomaly. they are building hundreds story apartment buildings, condos and selling 100 million. a lot of them being sold to foreigners. getting money out of these countries. you always wonder how long it can last. we were told of this going to come down and 2009, 2010, 2011.
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maybe people don't believe it anymore. is there anything wrong with the average person think in that home, home ownership is a cornerstone to a long life and a sound investment because that's gone away. >> people are not impressed by homes anymore after they saw how they collapsed in price with the financial crisis. it is not such a clear case. i don't think people are impressed by big mcmansions anymore as they used to be. the other thing if you put yourself into a mortgage and pay it off, you are putting yourself into a savings program. a lot of people don't save outside of some kind of discipline device like that. in that sense, housing is a good investment. charles: before i let you go real quick, you have a special way of measuring the valuation of the market. how should investors -- >> stock market.
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charles: donald trump's republican rivals reacting to charges against campaign manager. blake irving has the latest. >> hi, charles. corey lewandowski charged with simple battery and florida. that is a misdemeanor as we've been reporting the trump campaign is standing by lewandowski, arming and the south florida area. other campaigns are waiting in and take an aspirin might imagine the opposite stance here.
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alastair wood is a top communications person or senator ted cruz. of the charge, unfortunately this abusive behavior seems to be part of the culture of the trump campaign. personal attacks, verbal attacks and no physical attacks have no place in politics or anywhere else in our society. john weaver is one of the top strategist for john kasich. weaver tweeted out a little while ago, campaigns reflect the values of the candidate. i know ourselves. if this works he would have been fired long ago. so far as far as we can tell, no statements being put out for hillary clinton or bernie sanders. we are in janesville, wisconsin holding a rally here. about four hours from now there is a massive security presence here. i may give you the lay of the land. over there you can see supporters starting to line up.
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that is police officer of some kind over here. just about everywhere you can see. stay with me and want to show you something. goes down into it online. this is a holiday in the outside to the highway. they've got tractors there so no cars can pull to the backside of this hotel and no protesters cause any sort of trouble for damage. charles: extraordinary security measures. we are talking about an uphill battle for john kasich in wisconsin, that is something maria bartiromo asked the governor about. >> what is your take endorsing
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ted cruz? it's not a blow to your campaign? >> no, we knew what he was going to do. secondly, endorsements don't mean not match. the woman or a guy watching the show is not going to say i've got perception because someone endorsed him. charles: you can watch the entire interview tomorrow morning on "mornings with maria" at 8:00 a.m. eastern time. right now we've got scott maccoll -- scott mccollum on why he says walker is picking the wrong candidate. governor, thanks for joining the show. >> thank you. charles: why do you think ultimately walker was with cruz? when i read his statement he talked about electability, beating hillary in the fall. he didn't discourage any other candidates. it's coalescing around ted cruz now and later on.
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his numbers are very good and the general election. i think what you say and has a lot of the money now going and particularly the dependent groups are spending is going towards stop trump. the feeling right now in wisconsin is cruz has the greatest ability to be able to stop trump in wisconsin. the numbers are very difficult during a candidates right now including trump to get the number of delegates needed to win the first ballot. how do you stop trump firm reaching 54% to 60% of remaining delegates he needs? pick up different candidates and that's where the money is going to see what the money is going in wisconsin. charles: of course kasich can only benefit -- he's the contested convention, the only
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way he can be elevated to a nominee. do you think we will see the same shift towards him when it comes to pennsylvania? recent polls have shown him surprisingly competitive just coming on like gangbusters in the last couple weeks. do you think some of the same money that made behind cruz in wisconsin will shift gears and be behind your guy in pennsylvania? >> john kasich has been gaining momentum in every state. particularly strong from the start to the eastern states. a lot of momentum coming from the kasich campaign as we wind down the number of primaries taken place. the field is narrowed. further, people are taking closer look at the candidates. they look at what people are saying and issues, who stands where, what they are doing. an important aspect was so much negative, who's the person that can bring the country together? who can lead us in a fire? charles: on a similar note, the
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arrest -- not the rest, but the charge against the donald trump campaign manager. we have someone associated with the kasich campaign theme this reflects the candidate and he would fire or terminate the employment of cory lewandowski. will this have a real impact on the campaign at all? >> well, i'm going to speak for myself, not for the campaign. i am going to speak as a father and as an employer. it is unacceptable to have this type of activity going on. of course a person deserves their day in court. but there's also the court of public opinion. if my daughter was manhandled like that and ended up with bruises because of overt place setting, my court of public opinion and the top of the person, the candidate needs to accept full responsibility. if i have that going on, there's
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just no room for it in any type of business. charles: donald trump is spending 100% behind the campaign manager, which i think to be quite frank into your kidney been more. i've got to let you go. we've got some breaking news. i am sorry. you made them fantastic point. i want to get to this news. donald trump is just now tweaking wide cory lewandowski, a campaign manager and decent man much a stretch of assaulting a reporter. look at tapes. nothing there. more after this. thanks for doing this, dad. so i thought it might be time to talk about a financial strategy. (laughing) you mean pay him back? knowing your future is about more than just you. so let's start talking about your long-term goals... multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors.
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to what happened. before she found out the episode was on tape. he also said look at the tapes. nothing there. is there something there? soon we are going to have lawyers read here that we'll debate it and help us figure it all out. fox are now session highs. the fed chair signaling a slower path to raising rates this year. it might be to embed solid wall street is thrilled. janet yellen saying the global economy, and the insurgency there is holding everything up. part of battered by the war among isis. isis operatives lobby for paris or the brussels attack. former reagan officials going to be a very long battle ahead. why is the battle going to be so long? it feels like we know they are there. it's been acknowledged by many. a lot of the rest of the weekend. now is the time to strike and maybe put this thing to bed.
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>> unfortunately the battles are going to be long because islamic jihad is them, radical islam is not going to go away even when isis is defeated as i expect they will be. i might not happen in this administration. it's unlikely because the administration in the future if an administration decides they want to destroy isis, that changes the game completely. charles: in other words there are two battles. we've got the military battle in places like syria and mosul. limit their ability to control libya. are you saying the military battle and the terrorism battle that they are connected. one will solve the other? >> i think we have to deal with this as we would with anonymity.
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a fervently anti-western, anti-democratic ideology. we have to take into account the military situation on the ground and destroy them. that doesn't anti-ideology. the ideology -- the principal part of the motivation. if that isn't addressed, it will go on. >> a lot of folks are saying i'm hoping if we do win the war it takes the weight of invincibility to the big selling point. thank you very much. really appreciate it. charles: coming up, more health records going online. hackers just took an entire hospital offline to a digital dilemma that has your health records at risk. more after this you both have a
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charles: a major hospital chain offline in that situation is sent out. hackers are holding computers hostage for three big points each. the cybersecurity expert on hackers now hitting hospitals. we know the fbi probing mess. a major change. they party shaken down organization. it's a pretty interesting business model. if you use insurance to pay them off, and maybe too much. can this be stopped? this is dangerous stuff. >> you know what, what you said was so one point. this is precisely a business model. the cybercrime business model
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for over two greatest return on investment. it is where critical information is least protected and where it can yield the highest return. at the end of the day like any other market the health care industry has got to begin to harden the target and stop being such a soft target with how information is protected. they simply aren't doing it. charles: over the last five, six years as an a lot of times in hospitals unfortunately. if i was floored me the biggest hospitals in new york city how antiquated the equipment names. they asked the same questions over and over again. for one wing of the hospital to the other in the information can be transferred. we talk about how many people die in these hospitals. is it all about the bottom line. what's the hold up.
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i truly believe whether or not they are going to invest in the electronic communications of the data. i agree with you. i stayed in and out and it astonishes me how once i doesn't know what the other is doing. here is the real frightening part about what we see today what we will see going forward. is this an identity theft issue. can actually get and manipulate data so one side of the hospital can't communicate with the other. and it's going to come down to board members saying they need to invest in an investment in the data. end of story. >> before that you go, is there federal law or local line for
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his rent? >> with these hospitals and targeting. should we as the fed to stop than a little bit more? visit the hospital corporations? >> the government really can't do anything preemptively. they will risk on but at the end of the day this is on the hospital. they have to make a decision to protect our data. end of story. thank you, charles beard charles: radio host charlie sykes joins me. the radio interview of the year yesterday morning trip us to get the latest reaction and john kasich as we await an event of his fellow begin any moment now in them.
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trump campaign manager corey lewandowski has been charged with misdemeanor battery for allegedly grabbing a either, michelle fields, now we're getting reaction from his attorney. jeff flock is in wisconsin with the latest. >> reporter: yeah, the latest from corey lewandowski's attorney is he will plead not guilty and vigorously fight these charges. already his to opponents are beginning to weigh in on this latest development. i'm at a john kasich event. he is just about to come out, we think, although he is now 30 minutes late. clearly, these developments over the last half hour or so, well, have roiled a lot of things here. although john weaver, chief strategist for the kasich campaign, did issue a statement saying, and i quote him now, campaigns reflect the values of the candidates. we know ours does, i know ours does. if this bully worked for john kasich, he would have been fired long ago.
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and if you think that's a boilerplate statement, i would point out that the kasich campaign itself was faced with a problem with one of their staffers earlier this month, a domestic battery charge against that staffer that the campaign was unaware of. when they learned of it, they immediately separated him from the campaign and fired him. so that's the latest from the campaign trail. but again, charles, the candidate has not come out, we haven't heard his reaction yet. we'll get back to you when we do. charles: i'm sure it's going to be fiery. jeff flock, thank you very much. now to lawyers on what to expect, and nicole thinks he will be cleared while doug burns is not so sure. nicole, listen, i'm no lawyer. i look at this, and i feel like it's, i mean, assault, even a misdemeanor, seems like it could be a -- this feels like a very serious charge. >> it's extremely serious. these are crimes. and the good thing is that our constitution requires that when you're going to charge someone
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with a crime, they've got to be able to prove that the person intended to do it. there's an intent requirement. and i think that's going to be the biggest difficulty for the prosecution here. it's kind of a rock concert atmosphere, and what their going to have to show is that he actually intended to cause her pain and not just move be her or accidentally run into her. and that's going to be difficult for the prosecution. charles: doug, is that true? does a guy -- would i have a right to touch a woman in any kind of manner at a rock concert if she was in my way or if i was trying to get someone's attention? >> no, nicole's right, it's a classic question of intent. in other words, you know, either it's on purpose or it's somewhat accidental, or you're trying to get through, and you end up, you know, touching somebody. classic case of was it done, you know, as an aggression -- charles: so, doug, you've seen the tape. what do you think? you think that there's something to this? >> yeah. well, the tape is, you know, a little bit hard to interpret and fathom, but at the same time when you look at it, it does
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appear that he did on some level shove her. the other point i want to make real quick, charles, is that an arrest is often somewhat preliminary. i just want everybody to be clear, this doesn't mean necessarily he's going to prison and all of that. i've been in these minor misdemeanor assault cases on and off for 20 plus years, okay? and very often, you know, the first day maybe different than the end. but the point is they decided to bring the charge because they felt it was warranted. charles: well, nicole, on that point the police with respect to their role in this, having viewed this tape and having listened, read or listened to the complaint, did they do the right thing by bringing the charge, or are they overreacting? >> you know, ultimately the charging decision is going to be up to the prosecution. so the police -- charles: right. >> -- have an obligation to bring the information that they gather in an investigation. and, ultimately, the prosecutor decides whether or not to follow through. it's an extremely serious decision to charge someone,
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especially in this digital age. these kind of accusations will never go away for this man, and despite the fact it's only a charge and, obviously, they are going to fight it, quite a bit of damage will certainly be done to this man's reputation even if, ultimately, he is found to be not guilty of the charge. so it's very serious to be charged with a crime like this. charles: it really is. and to your point, it will haunt corey for a long time. but if he's exonerated, it's a tough one. we'll see what happens. but it is going to go to court, right? there's no way this will be resolved outside of a courtroom? >> well, no. real quick interjection, it could clearly be resolved. it's technically in court, but i anticipate -- not a crystal ball -- that this thing will be resolved. to nicole's point, oh, it'll haunt him and follow him, there are schemes where things are erased, expunged. that's in new york. i don't want to pontificate about florida. to some extent, the damage can be done in certain resolutions. charles: legally -- >> yeah.
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charles: otherwise public perception is a little different. appreciate it, guys. >> thank you. charles: of course, the big political news of the day -- >> i just fundamentally believe you look at the facts, the numbers, ted cruz is the best positioned by far to both win the nomination of the republican party and to then go on and defeat hillary clinton. charles: well, walker wants cruz. so is ted cruz the establishment's last hope? former virginia governor george allen. he was backing rubio, and now he's sitting on the sidelines kind of watching all this. george, i know you're not the kind of guy that sits on the sideline long. [laughter] did this kind of sway you a little wit? how important was this endorsement for cruzsome. >> i mean, first of all, hail, charles -- [laughter] actually, i was for marco rubio, that's the team i was backing. i now look at this as a giants/eagles playoff game. so that's about the enthusiasm i
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have for it right now. [laughter] charles: and as a dyed in the wool redskins fan, we should let the audience know in case they're not sure. >> right, right. then ultimately get to the super bowl, and i was for the giants against the new england patriots because i liked archie manning's son, eli. but this endorsement by governor walker is big, very big in wisconsin with. he's run so many elections, there's no one there in wisconsin who knows the state better politically than scott walker, and that's going to be very, very helpful to him. and the way i look at it with all the ads that the cruz campaign and cruz pacs and anti-trump pacs are coming, the cheeseheads will be spinning in wisconsin with all the ads. really for a week to go with governor walker's support, this was big and helpful. charles: they say politics makes for strange bedfellows.
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we've got the stop-trump crew, the establishment out there, certainly, they're no friends of ted cruz. everyone knows one of the key issues here has been his likability or lack of amongst folks in washington d.c. but why do you think they've galvanized around him as opposed to a kasich, i guess they were rallying around rubio, although there was pressure for him to get out even before florida. >> oh, you're right, charles. if the so-called establishment had their way, jeb bush would be our nominee. as far as governor kasich, i think he'll probably do fairly well, but i don't think he'll win in wisconsin. he's looking at other states. there's a lot of folks that are motivated mostly right now about who they're against, which is unfortunate. i like to be motivated for positive, constructive ideas, and someone who can win. indeed, if you look at the head to heads, marco rubio or these days the one who's in, john kasich, does best head to head
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and bernie sanders does best amongst the democrats. but that's, obviously, not a priority factor for voters. they want to send a message, or they're sensing anger or frustration or betrayal. charles: right. >> yeah, i do think the establishment is unifying behind cruz, and they're running plenty of negative ads and positive ads and everything they can against donald trump. charles: we'll see -- >> donald trump's waiting for new york. that's where he's going to have his key battle. charles: no doubt about it. we'll see if the establishment's right this time. george, see you real soon, buddy. >> all right. take care, charles. adios. charles: now to the left and the latest on the clinton e-mail saga. reports there are 147 fbi agents involved in this one particular probe, but while critics say the probe is justified, actress barbara streisand says it suggests sexism is involved. she writes in the huffington
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post: there's still an outright sexism in much of the commentary on mrs. clinton's campaign. sabrina schafer, sexism? is there any way at all we can argue that especially with respect to the e-mail scandal, that it's all about sexism? >> right. no, i mean, this is absurd. from the very mint hillary clinton announced -- minute hillary clinton announced her campaign, there has been this faulty narrative that she is going to be swimming upstream against the sort of sexist current. the reality is that voters are very open to women. we have lots of women who are running and winning public office, and this is a narrative that has been sort of perpetuated by progressive women's groups on the left and democrats in congress because they'd love to see more women get into government so that they can continue to grow washington, grow government all in the name of protecting women. no, i think barbara streisand should stick to the things she does best on the stage. charles: you know, it's so interesting because we hear a
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lot of women in hollywood and the entertainment industry, you know, complaining about sexism. i think the average person is saying, listen, if you make 20 million or 30 million, it falls on deaf ears. [laughter] >> right. charles: listen, hillary clinton is not doing as well with women as everyone thought she would coming into this thing, and part of it could be overplaying the victim card. >> absolutely. and, look, you know, one thing i would say is, look, running for office as a woman poses unique challenges. there is, perhaps, unfairly or fairly a little more scrutiny on what you wear. you do have -- you know, i have three young children right now, running for office would be nearly impossible for me. so these are things that women maybe think about more than men do, but that doesn't mean the american voter is unwilling to elect a woman. and manager to point out is there -- something to point out is there have been some academic reports recently, and i think it's important to point this out because we don't of academics being on the side of gender bias doesn't exist, but 350 congressional races across the
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country, and the media and voter, you know, for media and voter bias, and they found nothing. gender bias simply is not the problem that progressive women's groups would like you do believe it is. charles: yeah. hillary's problems, there are a lot of problems, but i don't think, yeah, i don't think sexism is one of them. >> right. charles: appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. charles: terror fears are spreading, but the stock market has been unfazed. how long can it stay that way? and, of course, reaction to janet yellen. we were up a lot more. we're pulling back, but janet yellen will make or break markets, and we'll tell you why you should care next. ♪ ♪
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earliest statement as to what happened? that is before she found out the episode was on tape? well, now michelle fields is responding, tweeting: because my story never changed. seriously. just stop lying. well, new developments are still coming out of washington where a man stormed capitol hill visitors center yesterday. he had a weapon. adam shapiro has the latest. >> reporter: that appears to be what most people would refer to as an air pellet gun. a mimic of the bret that .9 mm, but things are back to normal here at the capitol. the man has been identified as 66-year-old larry dawson. he's from antioch, temperature. he's not unknown -- tennessee. he's knot unknown to capitol police. it was last fall where in the gallery of the house of representatives he yelled down, "ill am a prophet from god." he had been charged with assault of a police officer as well as
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incorrect behavior on capitol hill. he never showed up to address those charges, and now, of course, he is in critical but stable condition at an area hospital after he was shot by capitol police. they say he actually pulled that weapon, that air pellet gun, and that's when he was shot. there was a woman who was part of the crowd of visitors who was trying to get in who was slightly injured. she's okay. mr. dawson is in stable but critical condition. finish back to you. charles adam, thank you very much. we have a d.c. shooting scare, today we had the egyptian flight that was hijacked. of course, we can't forget about the bombings in brussels and pakistan last week. yet the stock market not budgeting. in fact, jumping today on news that janet yellen is determined to hold back on these rate hikes. let's go to market watcher michael block on why the market appears to be unfazed. michael, what -- of course, you know, we as a nation are really shaken. i tweeted today @cbpayne, by the
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way, if you ever want to follow me, have the terrorists won? the reaction would have been different if d.c. was a terrorist event, if the hijacking was a terrorist event. even though they both were crimes and scared the pants off us, the market doesn't reflect that. >> well, terrorists are a threat, a danger -- charles: but it feels like they're win anything our everyday lives to a degree. to a degree. >> life has changed a little bit, and yet it hasn't. i'm gong on a family -- going on a family trip to europe in a week and a half. a lot of people criticize president obama for staying in cuba, but he was there on a mission, if you will, he stayed with it. he should have been a little stronger worded about what he said about brussels -- charles: he could have spent more than 51 seconds on it, and he didn't have to do the wave. >> i agree with that, that's fine. life does go on, that's how we win. in my note every day, time to win. and that's true in life and the markets. why aren't the markets fazed?
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frankly, they're not seeing this big change. maybe we've become jaded to it, maybe it's not hitting home as much. did the brussels attacks affect european growth more than, well, the reality of slower growth in europe already has? a, no, it hasn't and, b, as for that slower growth, monetary policy is still being given credit -- charles: you could also argue though, however, after this latest attack in brussels the likelihood of the u.k., of britain leaving the e.u. becomes even more likely. >> okay. charles: that would have devastating economic consequences, i think, on everyone. >> we'll see. we'll see about it but, again, it's like saying, you know, european growth being hampered by the u.k. being alienated from the continent is not news to me. it'll be a hiccup, and people will explain it away. people are giving way too much credit for in my opinion but it's working is the fact that mario draghi is doing more quantitative easing, that is buying of securities, and now it's going to include corporate bonds. what's after that?
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let me answer that question, stocks. and now here we are in the u.s. with janet yellen speaking today, she sounds very doveish as she did a week and a half ago when she gave the fed statement. some of the fed governors have been more hawkish, but now enthusiasm's back, qe4's back on the table, more easing, more -- charles: wait, wait. hold on. you're going completely away from any more rate hikes to, actually, more accommodation? >> me? moi? charles: yeah. >> no, i haven't, janet yellen has. charles: you think she's not raising rates two times this year rather than four, but actually opening up the spigots even more? >> charles, let me read to you from the speech she's giving down the street right now. quote: we could use the approaches that we and other central banks successfully 'em employed in the wake of the financial crisis to put additional downward pressure on rates. cyrens in the size and duration of long-term securities.
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we used them effectively to strengthen recovery and would do so again, if needed. quote. charles: if needed. >> there it is. charles: i don't think qe4, whatever number we're on, is necessarily on the table. you agree there will be rate hike this year? >> no. charles: you don't? >> i've been saying that all along, no. it's unfortunate, but the fed is scared to rock this apple cart. charles: i've got to tell you, the fed probably should be scared. yesterday the atlanta fed went to 0.6% -- >> how about that? charles: unions just won a huge battle at the supreme court. it's a tie, it wouldn't have been that way if justice scalia was alive, and i gotta tell you something, liberals have a lot more victories lined up. should the gop maybe get a new justice on board? we'll find out. [vet] two yearly physicals down.
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alaska airlines are bidding to buy virgin america. the ninth largest airline by traffic, but it's had trouble obtaining more gate access to grow. right now four carriers control more than 80% of the domestic airline market. and fidel castro criticizing president obama's trip to cuba, an op-ed in a communist party newspaper, he said the country did not, quote, need the empire to give us any presents. that's according to a translation by the associated press. obama did not meet with fidel castro but did meet with his brother, president raul castro, several times last week x. are you interested in buying yahoo!? to havety companies including verizon and time are reportedly interested. you see yahoo! popping on that news. and consumer confidence jumping more than expected last month, jumping to the highest level since january.
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the conference board reading came in at 96.2 with consumers bullish on the short term. charles? charles: thank you very much, jo. public employee unions just won a major, major decision in the supreme court over fee collections from nonmembers. fox news' shannon bream on this victory. shannon, how significant is today's decision? >> reporter: well, charles, it is a huge win for public sector unions because after hearing the arguments in january, it looked like they could lose the ability to collect union dues from public sector employees whether or not those employees, like the california public schoolteachers in this case, wanted to support the unions financially. >> this is a dramatic example of what the loss of justice scalia will mean for the supreme court. it was a case that was almost certainly going to be decided by a 5-4 margin against the unions because justice scalia is no longer on the court, it's a 4-4 decision which has the effect of ruling in favor of the unions. >> reporter: eric hines, the head of the california teachers'
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association, reacted in this way, saying: the supreme court rejected a political ploy by the wealthy corporate special interests backing this case to make it harder for working families expect middle class to come together, speak up and get ahead. by the way, the law firm that brought the case on behalf of those teachers says it will petition the court to rehear the case. it is possible they could hold this case over until a ninth justice is confirmed and seated, charles. charles: wow. hey, on that note, what's the latest with the efforts to move the president's nominee, her irk backland? -- merrick garland? are we getting any close or to filling that sweetsome. >> reporter: well, probably not. garland has been meeting with a number of sioux city senators o, but he's meeting with mark kirk today who has a very tough re-election battle ahead of him. he's one of two or three senators who has a said they think they should move on and have hearings, but there are, i believe, 13 or so other gop senators who have said they would meet with merrick garland,
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at least have a courtesy chat with him even if only to tell him why they can't move forward with his nomination. charles? charles: shannon bream, appreciate it. next, bernie sanders is changing his strategy, and though he may not have the -- hillary may not have the super delegate edge after all. that's a bombshell. and i'm going to be back at 6 p.m. to cover it all tonight and every night, weekday night. watch me on "making money," 6 p.m. ♪ ♪ when you think about success, what does it look like? is it becoming a better professor by being a more adventurous student? is it one day giving your daughter the opportunity she deserves? is it finally witnessing all the artistic wonders of the natural world? whatever your definition of success is, helping you pursue it, is ours. t-i-a-a.
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charles: more reaction to cory lewandowski's battery charges. it's a very sad development. this is the consequence of the culture of the trump campaign. the abusive culture where you have a campaign that is built on personal insults, on attacks and now physical violence. that has no place in a political campaign and no place in our democracy. i think it is a really unfortunate development, but i do think it helps clarify for the voters what the trump campaign was all about. charles: we were on the lookout for more fallout. hillary clinton may be dominating superdelegates,
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connell mcshane on how exactly he could do that. >> i'm not quite sure, charles. >> "the l.a. times" wrote a big story about how he's going to convince superdelegates to vote for me, not hillary clinton. for a 69-29 would be quite something to overcome. he said 975. put it all together in 1700 to just over a thousand. this basic argument -- a couple arguments. one is the beats donald trump which is technically true if you look at the real clear politics average. senator simmons by 17, but the point is they both win. they are both a fairly large right now, the fairly large margins of the erie in national polls as a republican front runner with this lewandowski story. wisconsin which is coming next for the democrats as well as
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republicans is quite close. the average polls. one argument is the beats trumped by moore. the others you would essentially lose momentum and get so close to the convention and the superdelegate would have second. everybody says they didn't with obama last time around. it was the leader in pledged delegates where he is trailing by a fair margin. it seems like -- charles: the same argument of the contested convention that somebody is more electable although i'm not sure what a socialist is that he'll be select bonus numbers hold up. also the antiestablishment vote. he is for better or worse the antiestablishment candidate on the democratic side. >> either way she is to figure out how to make that work for her she's the nominee. what is she going to do it
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bernie sanders supporters to bring them into her attempts at escape and if she hasn't convinced young voters as an example to go further in the primaries. how do she commenced than is the more realistic question as to whether senator sanders. the antiestablishment will commence the establishment to come to his side when the establishment candidate hillary clinton is said in a pledged delegate. it's possible, but it just means that some of the options he has left. he's got to put it out there. >> she's still going to do well. and in new york, california and other states. charles: bernie sanders isn't giving up. while accusing the dnc of pushing things forward. the dnc communications director luis miranda says that's just not the case.
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listen, it builds to a certain degree maybe i'm reading it wrong, but i saw a story where they have made demands that she won't debate unless bernie sanders turned it down. how can you dictate those sort of terms ahead of the debate? >> we are the referee said this admits to help facilitate negotiations between the campaign. candidates have agreed to do for more debates including ones they did in new hampshire before the primary and in flint michigan. we are helping facilitate negotiations. going to get a couple of them done? >> ultimately whether this sighting is the extent and primary desktop in terms of engaging voters, keeping people interested in this primary and for the party as a whole, we benefit from the fact that we are having two very good candidate who are both doing a very good job of engaging voters
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as they had to the general election because we also have been added to each and every door they are knocking on, every phone call be made on either side will benefit our eventual nominee. so i think for us it's been actually a good thing to have a healthy primary and it's been respectful. it hasn't been this demonizing demagoguery on the other side. charles: have the same ratings for the other side? it might be time to get some excitement. it feels like one as to the left and one is really to the left. there's not a lot of distinction and enthusiasm gap. is your party concerned about that? >> there isn't an enthusiasm gap. one of our democrats have gotten more votes than the leading republican has gotten. charles: we are talking about two people in a field versus 17. >> you're exactly right. two candidates have gotten almost as many voters as 11 republicans in iowa, five in the
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next contest. we got more turnout in nevada with their two candidates in all the republicans. we feel pretty good about the fact is no enthusiasm that candidates are doing pretty well. more importantly have a better infrastructure. we were hearing reports about the trump campaign does not staff in places like iowa and new hampshire which will be battlegrounds date and we continue to not just have the campaign's operation, but at a party level a lot of infrastructure put in a place that will support whoever comes out on data and communications charles: to a degree type cruz has played in place, he would disown this whole thing up. they breach the young vote is to be a slamdunk for the democrats.
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i'm not so sure that is the case if she's the nominee. >> when we look at democrats, regardless of who comes out on top and that's not what we see in republicans died. we have a huge advantage going on to that. 2008 with a much more heated, much more contested primary in the sense of how tense i got between the candidates. we are not seeing that now. it has been certainly spirited. candidates have shown respect for each other and they been able to campaign on substance that you're trying to portray them as one lasted one more left. these are candidates addressing concerns people have in terms of the economy and how we expand opportunities in education. those are the things people want to hear about. to charles: we know the talking points this is the calm before the storm.
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charles: right now to right now the john case that country an kasich event. he was almost half an hour late to this rally and was box business was blamed for his late arrival. you can see him now. let's take a look. [inaudible] -- and she just kept going and going and going. 25 minutes on the maria show. charles: you can catch that lengthy but compelling interview tomorrow morning at a.m. eastern
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time on fox business. government now opening doors. apples resistant actually backfired on them big time. or did he give them a huge boost. they've got both sides next y mah expertise and conviction. so you can invest with more certainty. mfs. that's the power of active management. being hacked and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to fight cyber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information so we can track down the criminals. when it comes to the cloud, trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloud to make people and organizations safer.
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the usaa car buying app iwas really helpful.aa all the information was laid out right there. it makes your life so much easier when you have to purchase a car, so i've been telling everybody. save on your next car with usaa car buying service, powered by truecar. >> from the floor of the new york stock exchange. your thoughts as this brief. stocks higher thanks to janet
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yellen reassured investors she will continue to be cautious with interest rates virtually reiterating her problems. you can see out three benchmark averages in the great at the moment. our 50 pints. faded a little bit but not too much. s&p have two points of a percent. among the leaders today, safe haven stocks, mccormick leading the way. lifetime high for a lot of these names today. maccormack up about 2% here at the moment 15% so far year-to-date. you've also got general mills, kellogg's, coca-cola, all in excess of 1% with lifetime highs today. oil on the other hand lower stocks down today. those are some of the weakest point. back to "cavuto coast-to-coast."
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charles: the governmen bypassing apple leaving the door open for more hackers are released for hacks. should apple may be just unlocked the iphone in the first place. more of a risk and reward. >> at his lake and voiding the showdown at the ok corral. charles: it is, but if apple actually trying to find out who helped you crack this thing? >> i think apple is. they came out with a statement they made it clear that apple doesn't now.
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an israeli company which many people confirmed by the fbi with the apple. this fight is going to come again, whether it's apple, whether it's another tech company as much if not more. 52 week chart. apple has taken a hit. it is because of this by 15% passed the two weeks. google, microsoft and facebook all up in that same amount of time it of time and these are all companies because these are all companies that have more come out and say we agree with apple ceo, tim cook. this will come again. any new iteration of any software. all that tech companies will make it harder to crack. a lot of experts have told me, why does the congress get involved? he said this is a role for congress.
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apple has in fact given over data 70 times. since 2008, so they've done it. obviously there were murders, terrorism involved. it's becoming a higher stakes game. charles: in the meantime, apple working on some rain so significant that it will never be cracked. a selling point for the iphone have been ready by that time. that makes it a high-stakes game even more of an intense battle down the road. >> that's a great point to bring up. a lot of cynics say apple is doing is for pr, essentially saying our systems are the hardest ones to crack. we don't bundle its customers, but tim cook has said it's not just about business. it's a larger ratio of privacy and security. i actually wrote this down. he called it the equivalent of
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cancer, just saying it makes everybody weaker. charles: this goes back to the origins of apple. i don't think a lot of people remember the super bowl at. it was based on the book 1984. versus the government and big government and others. i get tim cook trying to keep the legacy alive. the stakes are so much higher. >> are many silicon valley to pride themselves on being outsiders. they maybe didn't fit into corporate america. that is why they are there and working on this problem. apple would be countercultural companies that would be the origins. of that. tons of libertarians don't want anything to do with government and think that the fbi is way out of line for asking for this.
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charles: you can catch deirdre bolton at 5:00 p.m. and every week a night. it's a one-two punch because after that is made. and one to three punch because after me, the man himself, lou dobbs. that is the lineup. you don't want to miss it. wisconsin a week away from today, but something about what happened today has probably changed the entire race next-paragraph conservative radio host charlie sykes on how everything has changed. everything has changed. his interview with donald trump yesterday. retirement journey takes you, we can help you reach your goals. call us or your advisor t. rowe price. invest with confidence.
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[ male announcer ] join the millions of people who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations. remember, all medicare supplement insurance plans help cover what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call now to request your free decision guide. and learn more about the kinds of plans that will be here for you now - and down the road. i have a lifetime of experience. so i know how important that is. >> back with a news alert on "cavuto coast-to-coast." the investigation in brussels as authorities searched to looking for the man known now as the guide in the hat on the right
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side of the picture after the deadly brussels attacked. the man seen pushing the car was thought to be identified as a freelance journalist. turns out according to reports the person has since been let go. belgian authorities turned over to the fbi electronic evidence tied to the investigation looking apparently the fbi is alfonse, iphones as they look for information on that. on top of that, this woman from mississippi, a 20-year-old charged with planning to join aces. she's been a student. she and her fiancé mohammed arrested along side her fiancé last august or the two of them had plans to go to syria and join up with basis. there you go. back to you. charles: connell mcshane, thank you very much.
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scott walker on his show today that charlie sykes endorsement may be even more influential. charlie, before because her at it on your endorsement and the radio show with donald trump to make it sure assessment on the campaign manager. >> it plays into the narrative about the implicit endorsement of violence and his attitude towards women. at a time when you have more and more stories that are calling attention to the fact that donald trump is massively unpopular with women, you have this abreast of the campaign manager for assaulting a woman. charles: charlie, yesterday on the radio show you cannot immediately and told donald trump wisconsin had values of civility, decency to go for a conservative principle. do you think that would be the case across the nation.
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what we hear from a lot of folks who support donald trump is that it is a backward thinking these days in the sense that the party should be evolving to a more mixed in a 150 will sort of platform and that donald trump best represents what the gop should look like now. >> yeah, i can't speak to what's going on, but in wisconsin we take conservative principles. for you. we've pretty well honed bs meters. we have a lot of conservative reform, a lot of conservatives it to raise. in wisconsin, one of the differences is not just our culture of stability, but the fact we take these ideas seriously. we know what it takes to accomplish them. donald trump i don't think there is a nuance. he is a bad mix for wisconsin. charles: why is he a bad mix? is it not a conservative? >> no. he's not a conservative.
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he's a narcissist and he is a content a narcissist and authoritarian who is not even taken the trouble to learn about the issues that he's talking about. i think the fact instead of articulating a conservative values these essentially basically created with his record of supporting tax increases in health care abortion on demand. >> in the real clear politics he's leading by two points over ted cruz right now. we will see what happens with the walker endorsement. gop voters are resonating with the things he wants. he is not against trade saying it is not worth it. the vatican neocon position part of the republicans.
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would you make of the fact he's been so successful that conservatives i think you are going to see that over the next week. in southeast wisconsin, a very voter rich area, he's got an approval rating of 25% and a disapproval rating of 60%. when voters begin to pay attention to what he actually represents color it doesn't resonate with voters. i don't think it's been challenged. you will have the wisconsin primary were conservatives find out. charles: i will say this beauty challenged him yesterday you were all the talk on twitter yesterday. congratulations on that. we'll have you back soon. trump arriving in wisconsin and one hour and you can bet he'll
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charles: tonight protests are expected at the trump rally in wisconsin. i will be covering it all the way. "making money with charles payne," 6:00 p.m. eastern tonight and every night. "the intelligence report" starts now. trish regan. it is all yours. trish: thank you very much, charles. breaking this hour, trump campaign manager corey lewandowski charged in florida for battery. it was alleged that a former breitbart reporter that he grabbed her arm and bruised her at a trump news conference. i'm trish regan, this is "the intelligence report. this is the surveillance video from the jupiter police department in florida. this is what they used in the investigation of lewandowski. you see him seemingly grabbing the reporter's arm. she said he assaulted her and. trump
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