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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  April 13, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT

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i think that's an amazing story and something to watch. maria: and the demand is up going into the summer. sandra: absolutely, and our corn prices are under $4 a bushel. how long i reported on commodities. maria: have a great day, you guys, thanks so much. that will do it for us, and "varney & company" starts now and stuart over to you. >> thank you very much indeed. well, how about in? that stock market keeps going up, okay, we'll take it. good morning, everyone, and think about it, the price of gas keeps going up, there is a bankruptcy in the energy business, the profit reporting season gets off to a pretty bad start, but the dow will open way up again today. we will figure it out and we will tell you how much you are making. facebook's mark zuckerberg has jumped right into the election. the $50 billion man does not like trump, hates the wall and wants more migrants coming here. hillary's campaign just can't get out of the hole of its own making.
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the unfunny weekend racial joke is still on page one. she visits al sharp top today and an anniversary video is mysteriously dropped. then there's this, politics british style, this is the one thing i miss. >> i didn't receive a proper answer then. maybe dodgy dave will answer it n now. order, order! order, order! [laughter] >> order! . ashley: called the prime minister dodgy? >> you can. >> and there's much more to come. "varney & company" is about to
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week earned, got that. and the markets are rallying. the dow is up about 80 points. check the price of oil. let's start there. it hit its high for the year yesterday, and $42 a barrel. we're going to find out how much oil we've got in storage in the next hour and this morning, there is confusion over that weekend meeting of oil producers. the saudies say they will not even talk about production cuts, the price of oil is down 40 cents this morning. how about gasoline, look at, oh, i read this and i wince, jumping more than 2 cents overnight, the national average is $2.08 a gallon. ashley webster is here and so, too, is liz peak, and you're fiscal times, and what is fueling the rise in the stock market yesterday and today? >> it's a great combination, we have a dovish fed, janet yellen clearly feels embarrassed having hiked rates so everything we're hearing from the fed is sort of calm down, nothing is going to happen very soon and oil markets are recovering. they may not go directly back
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to $100 a barrel, that would be pretty shocking, but i think there's a sense that we've hit the lows, it's not going to-- whenever there's a trend on wall street, everyone extrap lates a trend so when it goes for 130, then it goes to 10. it hasn't gone to 10 and now it's an equilibrium short-term price and the upcoming meeting, they're not going to cut prices so i don't think it's a surprise the saudies said they wouldn't. excuse me, production. but they may stabilize at least some of the big producers and domestic production is falling. stuart: i go away for a couple of days and still janet yellen and still the-- >> you could be away longer. ashley: the same old story. >> exactly. stuart: well, i'm back. how about peabodies coal produc producer bankrupt. we've seen it happen. is this a case that the obama team beating up on it.
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ashley: said it was going to happen, and look at that. stuart: we don't show charts. ashley: a straight down ski slope. chapter 11 a trying to organize, in this industry, good luck. >> they're not alone many companies in the industry have gone bankrupt. stuart: the coal industry. an energy company you can call it that. no impact on the market at all. let me show you live pictures of the verizon workers who are on strike. the land line and cable-- this is philadelphia. land line and cable workers walked off the job at 6:00 a.m. eastern time. here is my question, if i'm a customer can i still watch tv and still get my cable repaired? >> the ser rvice is there, if yu have a problem, it might be slow. verizon has hired workers, nonunion, upset the strikers,
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to fill in. 40,000 people in massachusetts to virginia, they've been without a contract and they say verizon a making massive profits and cutting, blah, blah, blah, i'm sure there will be some disruption to service, but-- >> as happens frequently, pension benefits are an issue. the they say the company is trying to cut or reduce their pension benefits and the verizon workers say we've got to keep them no matter how generous they are. ashley: exactly. stuart: bottom line there. we're looking at a gain of 90 points for the dow industrials 20 minutes from now. i want to get to the election, six days until the new york primary, we're joined by the honorary co-chair for the trump campaign in new york, that would be carl palladino. all right, carl, here is the rub on donald trump, your guy, if he is the republican nominee, he cannot beat hillary clinton. that's the rub on trump.
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and you say what? >> i think the press should get over it. i think that donald is going to wipe the floor with hillary clinton. there's no doubt about it in my mind. stuart: there isn't a single poll that says that and i've not met anybody who says that trump runs away with the election if it's against hillary, nobody is saying that, carl. >> i know donald well and i know when he gets out there on the trail and starts illustrating his platform over hillary's that we're going to win over the woshgrking in the democratic party and win over the trades people and the cwa, the auto workers and teamsters, they're going to come to donald trump, he speaks truth and they know that he's created jobs in the past and he is going to create jobs in the future. stuart: hold on a second, carl. i've got a couple of clips to play for you. the first is donald trump where he's suggesting that the system within the republican party is rigged.
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now, this comes after he lost all the delegates in colorado. roll that tape. >> a republican system is absolutely rigged. it's a phony deal. this was a dirty trick. these are dirty tricksters, this is a dirty trick and i'll tell you why, the rnc, the republican national committee, they should be ashamed of themselves for allowing this kind of crap to happen. i can tell you that. they should be ashamed of themselves. >> okay, now, that did not go unanswered. rnc's response, the rules why set last year, nothing mysterious, nothing new. the rules have not changed. the rules are the same. nothing different. all right, carl, come back in again. donald trump does not have much of an organization and he's complaining about it. he didn't even show up in colorado. what's with that? >> in colorado, the games that
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were played were respond the trump campaign's ability to deal with it. it was wrong, the way they went about it. they should have given people a better opportunity to vote. stuart: those are the rules. >> trump was popular in-- as reese priebus said, those rules have been in place for a long time. he knew the rules. >> of course. and that's why he entered the race and proceed down the road and follow the rules, ethically and morally. i was with him before the speech when he talked about the rigging, he sincerely feels there will be a attempt at cleveland to broker out a convention and denight the people, okay, the people of the republican party and deny them their voice on who their leader is to be and that's the game that's played. the republicans over the years have skewered their rules to allow such a thing.
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we fully expect that that rules committee is going to change those rules before the convention. stuart: okay. >> and we're dealing with that right now. stuart: you've got to deal with it. carl, appreciate you being with us, thank you very much indeed. >> thanks, stuart. stuart: i want to move on to hillary clinton, her campaign created a video to celebrate the one year anniversary of her presidential bid. they didn't want you to see it, they dropped the whole video, but we've got it and y going to see it now. >> one, hey, today is the one year anniversary of our campaign. i am so excited with everything we've done this year and i am greatful for your help in every single way. today, april 12th, is also equal pay day so we've got a lot of work to do there and i am so optimistic and confident we're going to get this and so much else done together e as we said, they dropped that video. liz peek, why did they drop that video? >> there's some view that this
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head bobbing thing is something that didn't work for hillary and tried to get her to stop doing it. but it's looking backward over the past year, so much of hillary clinton's campaign is focused backward. let's talk about bill clinton in the 1990's, hillary being a senator in new york. the truth is bernie sanders look forward and that's why they're excited about that. and i think they were right to drop it. ashley: that's not very good. stuart: this is television. ashley: she looks maniacally wide-e wide-eyeed. stuart: careful. ashley: if anybody did that i'd say what's that? head bobbing, eyes wide open. >> and she was supposed to waltz through this campaign about $100 billion or whatever, 100 million in the super pac like jeb bush, it didn't happen the way it was supposed to.
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stuart: just you wait until we get to britain's parliamentary questions. a lot to come. >> i can't way. stuart: and more on this one, look at this, you're looking at, you're about to see, a giant sinkhole in the middle of the road near fresno, california. it's sinking as you watch the video, the hole gets bigger and bigger. we're used to sink holes in florida, this one is in california. that hole about 20 feet deep, 15 feet wide and they caught it happening on camera. we thought we would show you. meanwhile, bono, rock star, setting-- getting very political. he says policy is to blame for isis. how about that? and china, going back on its promise to president obama. they said they would not militarize the south china sea. now fighter jets parked on the islands that they made in the south china sea. more varney in a moment. ♪
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>> ai >> aid can no longer be seen as charity. one thing i'd like you to take away from this testimony. aid in 2016 is not charity, it's national security and when it's structured properly with a hard focus on fighting corruption and improving governance to qualify for that aid, it could be the best work we have against violent extremism that's gaining traction. stuart: aid, give them a job, that's how you fight isis. that was, of course, bono on capitol hill talking about isis and the migrant crisis. as i said, he suggests that poverty is the cause for the rise of isis. let's see what kt mcfar land thinks about that. she's going to smile this mork. what do you think of that.
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>> i think musicians should not be giving national security advice, they should stick to singing. look. stuart: we agree on that one. >> the president of iraq, he told me that isis was born in the prisons of baghdad when it was a the religious fanatics in jail, coupled with and hooked up with the general of iraq, saddam's iraqi army. they had the military where withdrawal and organizational ability and that's isis. stuart: would it know the also be true to say that many of the terrorists we've seen in europe and the 9/11 hijackers, they came from wealthy families, did they not, they've got money. >> you know, that's a key point that most people overlook, they think it's poor people, strap on the suicide vests. it's the wealthy islamic extremists who get the guys to strap on the suicide vests.
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they are the ring leaders, and many members are upper class backgrounds. stuart: i didn't get what he was saying about the migrant crisis, he says it threatens the existence of europe. >> i agree, that's absolutely right. stuart: and he says we've got to open up here and let them come here, that i don't get. >> really, again, i'm not going to say taking national security advice from rock stars and not going to get my music from politicians e well said. why is it essentially that we have a musician, a singer, a talented guy. what's he doing passing judgment on our aid policy to the middle east? >> he's been very involved in the aid policies himself. he made one point i thought was actually worth thinking about. he said let's send comics to isis, amy schumer and funny people to isis and that may sound crazy, but i think it gets to a bigger point which is information work here.
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we tried to deal with radical islam militarily for too long. i think we need a different policy that includes military policy and information warfare and ideological warfare, the same we defeated the communists in the cold war. >> they don't react well to cartoons? >> no, but there's an also a poll that came out this week, of young muslims, mostly in the sunni world, young muslims, particularly men, and they're waning on their enthusiasm for the islamic state. that's an opportunity for us to reach that group and use propaganda and talk to them how bad that, you know, isis is and how there is another way. stuart: propaganda. >> i like propaganda, good at it and get back in that business. stuart: kt, you'll be back later in the show. >> thank you. stuart: thank you. how about this one, mark
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zuckerberg talks politics and takes some not so veiled jabs at donald trump and free speech. he's put himself right in the middle of the election and we'll deal with that next. and of course we remember this. on the treadmill, research to buy your money. coming up, we have brand new examples of government waste. spending your money on stuff like the exercising shrimp. love it. ♪ at mfs investment management, we believe in the power of active management. by debating our research to find the best investments. by looking at global and local insights to benefit from different points of view. and by consistently breaking apart risk to focus on long-term value. we actively manage with expertise and conviction.
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> and then there is mark zuckerberg, facebook chief. he's getting right into politics, injecting himself into the election. and listen to him take a jab at donald trump. >> i hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as others. for blocking free expression, for slowing immigration, reducing trade. stuart: well, he also talked about what he's going to do with facebook as a technology company, but he did include that large section on politics. why do you think he's doing that, liz? >> well, first of all, i think he's actually put his money where his mouth is. he's actually started a super pac that's in favor of immigration reform. he's not a hard leftist or anything of that sort.
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he actually has given more money to republican politicians than democrats, but i think he feels the need, as so many people do right now, to speak out against kind of long-term sentiments and policies that he thinks are injurious to the united states. stuart: anti-trump-- >> there's a history between them because trump has spoken out and taken shots and hiring more people from overseas. >> there's always that side of it. stuart: so we pick up on the politics into the election and ignoring what he's doing with facebook and that's important and facebook stock will probably go up this morning because of what he said about facebook yesterday. ashley: probably. stuart: the market's going to ignore his politics and focus, as they should, we found is interesting. >> but i think these tech companies are in a weird place because they definitely are wanting more visas and the anti-immigration thing here is hurting them right now. stuart: a tricky position if
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you're a truly global technology company. ashley: globally connected business. stuart: certainly it. and moving along looking at the markets, you're going to see green arrows today. you're going to like this, we're closing in and i've said this many times before, closing in on 18,000, but consider the back drop to this up market. gas way up, weak earnings so far, and major coal company goes bankrupt and harry dent, a guest on this show saying we're in a devastating bubble. the market is apparently dealing with all of that and you'll watch it live in a moment. this just got interesting. why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph,
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stuart: we've got about a minute to go before we start trading session that's what the morning. we are likely to see the dow industrials go out. is that right? >> you're going to look at me go glassy eyed. because -- here we are. up 11.5% in march. a global, maybe china's economy is finally gaining some traction. the belief that the one nothing because of the new year holiday, business was up in february. this is a blip on the radar. don't get carried away. china's economy is not taking up here and stuart: not to mention the dollar strength helps china.
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their stuff is cheaper here. the other day china has a $366 billion surplus with america? the bell is ringing. it is 9:30. the dow jones just over the business and we are up to the early going. they will go 1100 points. look who is here. ashley webster of course. and cheryl casone is back by popular demand. didn't message in chicago and we will call it the permit bear. i don't know whether he still lives. you know the back drop to what is going on here. corporate profits generally we. not good for alcoa last night. gas is up to $2.8. peabody coal co. bankrupt as of this morning. the markets are rallying out 60 points in the early going.
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you've admitted you were wrong. i'm not going to force out of you again. why is the market up so much today? >> it seems oil prices are up in the stabilizing and continue to be buoyant. all the things that are bringing the market down or not william. i think they are floating on now. we still have a ways to go. >> last time i was here i was looking for 18,000. stuart: very short message. is it a moan from his same old. accommodating federal reserve and the ability nor the price of the bull market rally. is that it? >> the biggest thing has to be the accommodative fed policy. shaw had mentioned something that helped the market out now. what about the economic data with retail sales that came in weaker than it. inflation was not low. economic data just isn't enough. we made you near the 18,000
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level. can we break through a given the economic situation we have right now? i don't think so. stuart: you don't think so. i say we could do -- cheryl come here trying to get into this. cheryl: all of this optimism that it could all turn on a dime. i don't see a lot of markets out there right now. you've got oil heading higher. i think this election has come a free-for-all. god knows where president will be or what the next administration will look like. stuart: as of right now we are two and half minutes into the trading session in 28 of them are out. only two of them are unchanged or down. i can't work it out. >> the focus is on the big picture. it's on fed policy, oil price, commodity price. not earnings. stuart: by the way come 2016
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adult industrials are up 107 points. i want to get to oil because that apparently is helping today. forty-two dollars bail yesterday. 41.9 today. what is going on? are we stabilizing? >> we are definitely stabilizing, but another reason is on the hope of the freeze agreement. we know how agreements have done in the past. even the best of times, somebody at opec is cheating. don't think i will not happen again this time. stuart: there's a meeting this weekend. the saudi say this morning forget it appeared we aren't even going to talk about a production. >> the saudi oil minister was asked. don't even talk to me about this topic. it's not even on the agenda. iran's oil minister is anyone going to show up. it doesn't seem like we'll get some sort of coordinated freeze
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coming out. stuart: the dow industrial at 111.3 feet. we will play that music. organ music deathwatch for peabody energy. nicole, why are we doing this? explain to our viewers a monthly. >> first of all, people will start thinking and the grim reaper. i should just start wearing the whole outfit. this one is nothing to laugh at because cole's dog overall has been under pressure and many have filed for bankruptcy. you can see this unchanged right now. not opening, filed for bankruptcy, joined so many others. arch coal, also natural, walter energy, all of which filed for bankruptcy. this is because of a few things. the china slowdown. the obama administration regulations and nonsense they focus on climate change. in the meantime, the stock gets pummeled and now filing for bankruptcy.
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stuart: if you look at the chart, that is a tenured chair. physician 2012 when president obama was elected for a second term. that the point where it's a long, long slow slide over the next four, five years. >> that is how they all look. stuart: okay. we will not rest with the grim reaper, but occasionally we will come to you with organ music. all right, nicole. look at facebook, please. it wants to be and i'm paraphrasing this, wants to be a bigger part of your daily life. is also going after his nap chat as a way to do that. you've got to explain. cheryl: do you use facebook messenger? it is where you can chat with your friends on facebook. now they want to make chat bot communicate with you. this is not people to chat with you transactions. you're out there shopping and have a question on your
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purchase, they want you to use method or to talk to a computer to help you with your issue. take the person out of it. stuart: that is fascinating to me. the use of artificial intelligence to some degree. eating jesus? >> i frankly still like to talk to an actual person. how many jobs is going to kill? stuart: the companion -- an electronic companion. >> there is more to it also. it gives you the ability to bypass codes. a huge example is one a hundred flowers. you won't have to go to have to go through any messaging. one have to press any buttons. it'll know where you're coming from, which are credit card is. snapshot is so much more popular than it's a program. they are grabbing at straws. they are coming up with some
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name. >> first thing in the morning you turn this thing on which feeds you everything. or you just go here on facebook. we are at the high of the day up 100 dirty five -- 136 points. it is a hive for a year that would be 2016. think about those negatives off to the races. jpmorgan, that stock is higher. it reported a profit of $5.5 billion which it made in three up two bucks. however, among the five banks and regulators say doesn't have a credible plan for winding down in a crisis without a lot of taxpayer money. this is the so-called -- give me
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two sentences. cheryl: if a bank is out of business, the living will made the bank is somewhat in peace survive. it's just a phrase. the government once again saying how can we attack the banks? how can we penalize and get money out of them? stuart: that works for me. check the big word again. up 135 points like this. the government collects record high taxes in the first half of the fiscal year. record high amount of money. how much. ashley: 1.48 trillion. almost half of that is from individual income taxes which is quite shocking. this is the highest it's ever been come in inflation adjusted for the first six months of the fiscal year. 1998 when i first started tracking this kind of thing. sadly we are still running a deficit of 461 billion. spending 1.9 trillion operating in a record amount of tax
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revenue. stuart: somebody told taylor clinton and bernie sanders we are collecting a record amount of money in income taxes but they want more. >> i agree with what you said. it's ridiculous they want to spend. they announced plans for creating revenue. stuart: you have redeemed yourself. we have a market issue today. we are after all a financial program. we are not entirely politics. listen to a terminal bear. yesterday on this program. roll tape. >> i'm sorry i've studied opals more than anyone else i know a nurse. they are always right that. when they crash, they are devastating. the stock market in the u.s. went down 45% in the first two in a half months just like china did months ago. stuart: that was charles payne sitting in for me yesterday having to go and harry dent and his eternal bearishness.
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you used to be a bear. >> i'm up there with the market requires you to be a bear. i followed the market. i don't predict where it's going to go. right now it's sitting higher. i don't know that harry is right. at some point maybe in the future he will be right. it wouldn't surprise me to see a crash. they respect you. look at this. you better explain. >> the restoration of relations has led to an influx and they've been drinking. turns out now they are running dry in cuba. running so low that a local brewer may end up having to open up a new plant in each demands.
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check the big word, please. up 133 points. not a bad way to kick things off on a wednesday morning. 17853. riddance prime minister david cameron still facing a backlash over private money in an offshore account. a lawmaker in parliament calls him dodgy dave. you will see it happen. hillary clinton -- can i say in panic mode? she takes part of in a racially charged joke with built the blog see how. it wasn't her idea she says. we will be back. ♪ i know you're my financial advisor, but are you gonna bring up that stock again? well you need to think about selling some of it. my dad gave me those shares, you know. he ran that company. i get it. but you know i think you own too much.
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tree now, we've been waiting to show you this all morning. i hope you like it. more fallout from britain's prime minister david cameron and
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his involvement with the panama papers. he was asked a rather tough question in parliament. we will show you the whole of it. roll tape. >> i didn't receive a proper reactor. maybe dodgy dave will answer it now. >> order, order, order, order. stuart: mistral outward and think of another. >> this man has done more than anybody else. i still refer to him as dodgy dave. [laughter] train to the honorable member thrown out of the chamber. as you heard from the laugh, judge, that is it. that is free speech.
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>> what is democracy in action. kicking this guy out because he doesn't like the word dodgy. >> you have to have some discord in the house of commons. >> they actually cite the role. the rule is a relatively modern origin because winston churchill's head far her shirt a about his adversaries on the floor of the house of commons including the famous boneless wonder speech which did get them in trouble but did not get him kicked out. i love the interplay and the house of commons. stuart: wouldn't you like to see it here? here we have a separation of powers. in great britain, your farmer country parliament is supreme. they can determine the outcome of a judicial proceeding. it can change the executive. they can write the laws. it has to restrain. here we have a separation of powers. the president enforces the laws and the courts and parliament is
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all one thing. i don't think it would work here. no greater repartition anywhere on the planet in the floor of the house of commons when it's time to question the pm. stuart: how do you think an american politician of whatever's at shu, congressman, presidenpresiden t, how would they stand up to that kind of questioning? >> not well. even though i probably don't agree with you run anything, i love him. check good about the courage. i love repeating of the offense of word. stuart: what i really like is speaker of the house. i've forgotten his name. order, order. john birkenau. that is the guy. >> it's interesting he has the power to ask bell and not power is not appealable. stuart: you are such a lawyer. >> paul ryan, speaker of the house of representatives expelled him that he, that
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person's party would demand a vote. but the speaker in great britain has absolute power to expel. stuart: i missed it. the one thing -- prime minister question time. i used to take dave to watch the prime minister's question time. ashley: you are a cheap one, aren't you. stuart: i was indeed. are you done? thank you very much. stuart: let's get back to american politics. after heavy criticism heller clinton is now blaming new york mayor bill deblasio at a campaign event over the weekend. whether she now saying? ashley: this is what she says when asked about this because it is cringingly awkward. it was mayor deblasio clerk drifted and i will defer to
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visit companies are talked about. in other words, you are under the bus, bill deblasio. it does bring up her judgment. if she knew about this ahead of this day, by which even even want to be associated. >> she absolutely knew about it. it was a script they had prepared. is there anyone she won't throw under the bus? richie byrne has been under the bus? stuart: just wait later. more campus lunacy. we'll call you why i campus 52 canceled because of pro-trump graffiti. tensions growing as chinese jets have been spotted not contested islands in the south china sea. what are they up to? that in a moment. you both have a
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on the contested man-made island in the south china sea. key to mcfarlane, national security adviser. what are they up to? >> they are trying to incrementally claim the entire south china sea. but they've done is they are building islands, they'll connect these islands. they are putting naval ports, military airstrips commit aircraft and then what they are going to do and this is down the road. they don't want to provoke a reaction. down the road they will say this is an internal chinese. if you want to sail through your unique permission. if you want to fly over here coming to identify yourself. stuart: the president stood next to the president of the united states and said we are not going to militarize those islands. they've got fighter jets on them good >> and we are going to relate get duped. you will see more and more of
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the chinese taken advantage. russians taken advantage. even the north koreans taken advantage. they built those from scratch. >> they were rocks and then they filled them in. here's why they are doing now. the chinese, all their foreign policy is economic policy. ensure their row materials, access to trade and commerce. one of the most powerful, potent, busiest sea lanes of commerce is the straits of malacca which go right to the south china sea. stuart: is in this one of the most aggressive moves in a foreign power? this is really aggressive stuff. >> they do it very incrementally. they will do a little bit. before you know it, they got it. stuart: one more for you on the aggression drive. two russian warplanes that does the u.s. navy destroyer in the baltic sea. stuart: this happened off the coast of poland. two russian warplanes at a high speed and low altitude kept
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buzzing the uss donald kirk. they were repeatedly turning over the radio, get out of here. eventually they left. one pentagon official said i've seen a photo and it is very close. stuart: what are they up to? >> they are looking for moment of opportunity. and what to break nato. he shows it is not unified. if he does something, if it makes some of the balkans to what he did in eastern ukraine. ukraine is not a nato member. the other side. if he does something that's russian tanks, clean up the sides of a mouse tanks, cleanup decides that it no say russia. russian troops are not really russian uniform. what it does in most countries as hook up with a local ethnic russian population and destabilize countries. and then he charges nato. nation is in a position to respond. article v is an armed attack but if it's not an armed attack, if
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it is an ambiguous attack of the europe doesn't want to take on russia. we don't want to take on russia. maybe russia has an opening. stuart: i have a feeling it's going to be a rough seven/. thank you very much for joining us. we appreciate it. more campus lunacy at ohio university. pro-trump messages resulting greek week events being canceled. what happened to free speech? we will try to sort it out. do hope for women who are struggling to get pregnant. doctors using 3-d printing technology to build artificial will tell you how it works. second hour "varney & company" two minutes away.
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... >> 10 a.m., almost. on the east coast. less than one week before voters head to the polls in new york state. we're on it. hillary clinton on a blitz to secure the african-american vote in new york. she's meeting with al sharpton today.
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plus, a video celebrating the one year anniversary of her campaign pulled from her website. it's the video clinton doesn't want you to see, but we are going to show it to you, of course. more liberal lunacy on college campuses avapro trump messages appeared on what was supposed to be a free speech wall. remember this video? you've seen it before and you'll see it again, the slim on a treadmill. and egregious government waste coming up for you. hour two starts now. ♪ >> well, looky here, are we not happy to see this on a wednesday morning? the dow industrials closing in, dare we say it, on 18,000 despite all kinds of economic ill headwinds. 17,846 as we speak.
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the price of oil, $41 a barrel. the latest read on how much oil we've got stock piled in america, that comes up at 10:30 eastern. gasoline, going up, it jumped more than two cents just overnight. 2.08 is your national average now. why is that not a negative for the stock market? 'cause it's not. take a look at facebook. the stock right now is up today, up a buck 84, a news gain there. mark zuckerberg is trying to compete with snapchat. ashley: he is. stuart: explain. ashley: it's bests integration all in one spot. people hang on facebook all day even at work. they want to bring in businesses, one stop shot, they've added ticketmaster and buying things, live streaming is another big thing that facebook is getting into now.
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concerts, you can people's live streams around the world as long as you're a friend. and once you get to facebook, no reason to leave. stuart: what he wants you to do, pick this i think up first thing in the morning, you go straight to facebook and that's all you need, everything comes through that. ashley: and uber and lyft. once you go there, it's like the hotel california. >> in real life. ashley: exactly. stuart: that's why the stock is up so much today, best part of a $2 gain, he's a $50 billion guy. less than a week to the new york primaries and we have new polls for you from sienna college. it's interesting, the latest numbers that we can have a look at the sienna college. that is donald trump, 50%. john kasich at 27%. this is pretty much in line with the other polls.
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wall street journal, nbc this week, ted cruz bringing up the rear at 17%. trump almost doubling his near est competitor, cruz even though he's been around the bronx and you make a joke about new york values and that's what you get. stuart: and virtually all polls show trump with a 30 point heed and third behind kasich. still there with that. ashley: yes. stuart: hillary clinton attending an event today and al sharpton's national action network. angela mcglowan is with us today. welcome back to the program. good to see you. >> thank you for having me. stuart: she can't put the race issue behind her, can she? am i completely wrong? >> race is in politics. but the cp joke or the colored people time joke didn't go over well in the black community and
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the black community champion is divided. stuart: i'm not surprised. >> why are you not surprised? >> well, you used the >> i'm surprised you're not surprised. stuart: when you use the expression colored people's time, that's what it's about, why would you do such a thing, in the extreme. >> the democrats always have taken our vote for granted, and the clintons, even if she could do that joke, people say her husband is the first black president and we accepted that, she thought she could do the joke and get away with it. stuart: and he hasn't thrown off the controversy over black lives matter and that's well over a week ago, we're still hearing about that now. >> i liked the first reaction that clinton gave to the protest. i respected him in giving the point of view and to walk it back shows they're desperate and do anything for the vote. stuart: the african-american vote in new york state is going to hillary clinton. >> yes. stuart: overwhelmingly show, isn't that correct?
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>> in new york state. however, with the former head of the naacp, with harry belafonte and tavis smiley saying we're not going to take the crumbs off the table, candidates are going to have to earn our vote. even al sharpton said, candidates are going to have to earn our vote. i'm not saying the republicans are going to get the black vote, but they might vote in protest by staying home. >> have you had any idea what might be said today, lunchtime today in new york city, hillary goes to al sharpton's national action network event. now, i know it's purely speculative, but speculate, what happened? >> in a behind closed door meeting or in public, okay, in public, she's going to talk about the republicans and how they're gracious and how blacks are still behind and equal pay and she's going to say what she's going to do as president clinton, her husband, did. stuart: what happens behind
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closed doors? >> a deal could be cut. stuart: a deal? >> a deal. stuart: where sharpton offered some support for hillary if hillary-- >> a quid pro quo, that's all i'm going to say, use your imagination. stuart: i can't, i don't have imagination. >> quid pro quo, you've heard of walk around money? >>, you have he heard of that. stuart: yes, i have. >> sometimes in in-- >> cash handed out on the street the day of the election. >> not cash handed out on the day of the election, maybe months before. stuart: if that were to get out that hillary clinton-- >> wait a minute, you're taking your surmisability, a premise and-- >> i'm not building a premise. >> and taking bribes? [laughter] >> are you priced? >> he's the leading civil
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rights figure in the country today. get over it. you may hate him, but that's what it is. >> no, i don't hate him, that didn't come out of my mouth. i really, i respect al sharpton from the standpoint of getting away with what he's gotten away with. having said that, i don't know what's in al sharpton's heart. that politicians do give walk around money-- >> how about the farthest fetched thing possible that he's concerned about the needs of the african-american community and talking to this candidate about the plans for the community. >> i didn't say he was-- . you can't put a malignant term on-- >> i didn't say he wasn't concerned about the african-american community. i can say this, self-preservation is the first law of the universe and al sharpton comes first. >> and you weren't make that surmise in another politician and a--
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>> you know what, rivera, every time you're here-- angela has the last word. >> i don't know why-- i'm saying that-- >> are you using euphemism or conservative? >> i'm saying that because it's al sharpton and you may not like al sharpton, you let your imagination be fevered and say things that are borderline slander about a person who has had-- >> it's not slander when you-- >> hold on, hold on. you have the last word and you've gotten seconds. >> go. >> geraldo, i've worked a very long time in politics and i'm not going to judge a person by what other people say. if i say something and make it personal that means i have personal experience with it and i don't like the fact that you said that i'd say something different about a white politician. stuart: okay, all right. done, done. we will wait to see what happens when al sharpton meets hillary clinton later on, we'll leave it that. we appreciate it.
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we'll get to you in a second. grabbing my show. another example of liberal lunacy on the college campus. here is where geraldo gets to, a 0 university canceled events because some sorority ar fraternity put on build the wall. and here is the statement, this is hurtful to many, and to the hispanic and latina o,/a community and makes them feel marginalized. >> it seems that free speech is seriously under attack on the campuses? >> mostly by the forces,
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liberal students, ultra liberal students who don't allow other views to flourish. out of my alma mater university of arizona, i insisted as i was endowing the park, my wife erica and i, they write everyone is welcome here. why? because the greeks have had a terrible time with exclusion, with hazing, with various abuses in fraternity houses and sorority houses. for them to put this particular-- on the free speech wall. free speech doesn't protect you from saying something derogatory with a certain racial or eliot -- or group. and i think this was truly offensive. >> build the wall, or support trump. >> if you're a latino student in ohio university, a well regarded liberal arts oriented university. stuart: and you can't take a political sign, say support
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trump. >> support trump is fine. build a wall is something that affects latino and hispanic students directly. build the wall, what are you saying? >> i'm telling you what i'm saying, this is a university where you go to exchange ideas with your fellow students and if you can't stand-- >> aussies are awful. or new zealand, kiwis, whatever it is. stuart: you should have seen what they put on walls in my day, are you kidding me? >> if i was seeing you painting it, i'd say hey, dude, you're not painting that in our neighborhood. stuart: that's the difference between-- >> this is not like the halloween costume flap at yale and so forth, this is a step beyond. this is something very offensive and you know, what they do as a result of it? they made them paint it over and cancel the dodgeball tournament, big deal. stuart: you know what happens when you're on the show? the ratings go up. [laughter] >> i don't know what's going on here. gerald other rivera, you're all right. >> all right, thank you, stuart.
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stuart: this is fascinating, really fascinating, new hope for women who are unable to get pregnant. doctors now using 3-d printing technology to build artificial ovaries? got a fascinating story for you. and a warning from the c.d.c., the zika virus is spreading and is worse than anyone thought. we'll deal with all of that after the break. >> we absolutely need to be ready, you know, as the doctor was saying, everything we look at with this virus seems to be scarier than we initially thought.
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>> an announcement from spanish police, they have arrested a frenchman involved in the par ris supermarket shooting that was january of last year. >> yeah, he was arrested in southern spain, 27-year-old, and authorities believe he was the man who supplied the guns to the gunman who kelled-- killed four jewish people
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inside a supermarket. they believe there's a connection with serbia or serbs where the guns were coming through and the middle man passed guns on to the people who carried out the attacks. stuart: because they got him? >> they got him. stuart: a nice rally on a wednesday morning, we're up 130 points, 17, 850. that's where we are. how about j.p. morgan? that stock is up. it made $5 1/2 billion profit in 13 weeks, it's the leading dow stock, it's up 3%, 61 on j.p. morgan and now this, a warning from the c.d.c. claiming that the zika virus may hit america harder than originally thought. come on in, dr. manny alvarez. fox news medical a-team. we've got the warning and we understand this coming is going to hurt. how do i take precaution against that? >> a couple of things, two things we've learned, the mosquitos are now in 30 states in the u.s., so it's not only the southern states anymore, it's everywhere. and number two, that we have
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learned over the last month or so that the zika virus itself is just not the microself any that is affecting pregnant women, it also has an adult neurological component. so we're looking at diseases like an ms-like disease and gilliam barre and they're worried not about the spread, but effects to not only pregnant women, but adults. we're late to the game one more time. you know, this epidemic, if you will, or endemick that happens this brazil. all of that data was held back by the brazilians and not shared on time so now we're playing catchup. of course, congress is saying let's put $1.9 billion dollars in order to kind of, you know, get vaccines going and infection control platforms. we're dumping money.
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had we started a year and a half ago i think we would have been in a better place. stuart: dr. manny. thank you. hold on one more for you. to me this is fascinating. scientists at northwestern university say they've developed functional ovaries that be produced by 3-d printing, that's a huge break through for people having trouble, women-- >> this is an animal study. 3-d print something used in different aspects of medicine. they're using 3-d printing technology and create a matrix, like a gelatin matrix and doctors are putting the eggs in that matrix and the cells that make hormones and implanting in animals and seeing that the 3-d ovaries are indeed working and they have created some off springs of the animals. so the science and the technology are working very nicely together. hopefully this will be a technology that a few years from now is going to be
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available to women with no ovarian function. stuart: it would help women with-- >> people who get cancer treatments, their ovaries are destroyed and things that happen that make the ovary prematurely age. so now you can take this technology and complete something in the future. it's a big part of the health care industry. stuart: it's fascinating. who would have thought. >> good stuff. stuart: good stuff, indeed, sir. now this, a major endorsement for senator bernie sappeders less than a week before the new york primaries. ashley is back. ashley: we saw the polls cutting into the lead of hillary clinton and getting the endorsement of the new york city trans sit workers union. so they're making that announcement. stuart: that's important because that's a union, a very important and powerful union with a large membership, i don't know exactly how many members. ashley: but that goes for bernie not to hillary. i thought she'd got the
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organized labor vote sewn up, i think we all did. fascinating developments. stuart: just in. back to the market, we're close to the high of the day, we're up 132 points. the nasdaq up to the tune of 58 points, s&p up 13. three major indicators, indexes, i should say highs for this calendar year in. and the pink book, the worst examples of government waste. will anything beat the infamous video of that shrimp on a treadmill? roll it. [laughter] >> ♪ you're late for work.
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>> you know, this market has been just about unchanged for at least a half hour. up 128-130 points, that's where it's been for about a half hour. we'll take it will we not? 17, 849. we'll take that, listen to this, the annual pig one, the worst examples of government waste. our gerri willis picked out just one of the worst examples of waste. >> that's right, wasting your taxpayer dollars on the m-1 tank, the abrams tank, $40 million of your money, my friend. the department of defense doesn't want it. there are 2000 of these sitting idle in the california desert doing nothing at all and yet, they continue to manufacture this. they're made in lima, ohio and
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they have parts from all over the country an and there are congressmen from around the country who support this despite the fact that the government doesn't want in 36-year-old-- >> a lot of jobs in building the tanks, what is it $40 million a pop? >> no, that's how much they're spending. that's how much the earmark is for. remember, congress says we're not doing earmarks, that's all over. big stinky lie. stuart: there's a difference between this tank and a shrimp on the treadmill. there's a qualitative different. >> drones $20 on eastbound and abrams tanks, much more. and the department of defense doesn't want it. i don't want moi money wasted, that's the thing. stuart: i see the point, but surely some friendly foreign governments would like a few m-1 abrams tanks. ashley: put them on eastbound.
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>> put them on eastbound for $2,000. this is not where we want to be. stuart: far be it from me with government waste. i think that slim on the barbie-- shrimp is different from a tank. are you coming back at the 11:00 hour with you. >> i love arguing with you. stuart: a much worse example at the 11:00. >> 43 million, maybe you're happy to part with it. i've got to go because i've got to be in the break at a certain time to bring oil inventories to our viewers in a moment. the price of oil is now 41.65. in a moment you're going to get the amount of oil that's in storage, in other words, how much in supply. those numbers could affect the price that you're looking at right now. we'll see and you'll certainly get the numbers in a moment. and this one, too, a message celebrating the one-year anniversary of hillary
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clinton's campaign pulled from her website. it's the video hillary's campaign doesn't want you to see. we're going to show it to you anyway. back in a moment.
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jeff: i am jeff flock, big news on oil in the stories -- inventories, weekly crude inventories expected to build by 2 million. what was the actual number? 6.6 million. api yesterday said it would be 6 million but it was for a much longer number. it is up more than we thought. gasoline a bigger draw than normal. that will mean higher gasoline as we go forward. look at what oil is doing,
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reasonably unchanged trading in a narrow range down $.40 or $.50, recovered a little bit but not at all, that is a huge build in oil inventories. not good for prices. stuart: we got that, jeff flock with numbers coming from chicago. i want to bring in kevin who knows a thing or two about the oil markets. what do you think about an increase in the supply chain of 6 million barrels of oil? >> a big bill as big as we expected after yesterday's reports in line with that with a drawdown in gasoline will add more supply to the number, we see a big high yesterday on a rumor that russia and the saudi's were getting together to make a freeze deal, that is disputed so that may be off the table. we see much lower prices going
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forward. stuart: i want to talk about gasoline. there was a drawdown. we used extra gasoline. what do you make of that? >> we are not seeing refiners, we are into summer and we will see increased driving, memorial day will be the kickoff and we are seeing prices spike and last time we talked a month or so ago we saw prices really ratcheting up and we will see it move even faster after today's report, we will see those continue to crime -- climb as food prices fall with gasoline and crude. stuart: we are likely to see oil prices fall, to see gasoline prices continue to rise. that is good stuff and thank you for being with us. any impact on the stock market? no. the range of the tao being up numb 125 points.
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coal company peabody energy joining us today, "risk and reward" host deirdre bolton and harlan hill plus ashley webster. can i say that peabody is a direct victim of president obama's war on call? >> you can make it that simple because you remember going back to august. even the supreme court got involved and blocked the carbon emissions rule that was the cornerstone of obama's ideas, more than 2,000 state of said wait a minute, you can't do this. the supreme court at least for the moment says we are going to take a pause on this. the fifth call company in the us, obama is part of it but falling energy prices going higher but they are down 70%. stuart: in emissions powerplants
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coal has been replaced largely by natural gas. demand for coal is down regardless of what president obama -- >> it has gone -- americans get half their power from coal, it is at a third and it will be the first year natural gas superseded only by a percentage point or two but if you line up dogs on the racetrack natural gas is edging ahead. stuart: bernie sanders facing an attack on fracking, oil and natural gas deep in the ground. all of this as he is campaigning in new york state. you are a democrat, you don't care for hillary clinton very much, but this seems like lunacy. >> a recipe for disaster on the heels of what you are talking about with coal. i believe hillary when she says there will be call miners and coal companies out of business if she is elected and if you combine that with what democrats are trying to do around
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fracking, it is a recipe for disaster. energy independence is a natural security issue and i recognize that is a democrat. i don't know what is happening to my party. stuart: terrible for poor people. cheap natural gas, bernie sanders says no fracking, can't have that. >> green energy is not ready. stuart: why are you a democrat? >> they are pushing me out of the party. i am not changing, they are. stuart: hillary clinton releasing a video for her one year anniversary of the announcement of candidacy for the presidency. roll the tape. >> today is the one year anniversary of the campaign. i am so excited that everything we have done this year, i am grateful for your help every single day. today, april 12th is equal pay
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day. a lot of work to do and i am so optimistic and confident we will get this and so much else done together. stuart: they released that video but soon after it was deleted from the website. what are they doing? >> it look like a hostage tape. hillary, you are in trouble, blink three times. it is awful. i have never seen anything like it. >> there are a lot of internet bubblehead means. it is hard for her to be natural. look at that skit with bill diblasio. it is awful. on a basic level she is one of the most unfunny people. stuart: you got to be good on television if you want to do well in a presidential election. that wasn't real good. moving on, some call it a tense moment in britain's parliament of the member of parliament
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insulted the prime minister regarding the panama papers. >> i didn't receive a proper answer. maybe you will answer it now. >> order! order! order! all he has to do is withdraw that word and think of another. he nailed the word beginning with d and ending in why. this man has done more than anybody else, look after his own profits. i still refer to it as dodgy dave. stuart: can i explain something? in the house of commons you are not allowed to personally insult any other member. that calling someone dodgy dave is an insult whereupon a speaker, the guy who says order chucked him out of the chamber. >> it is like congress with a
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two drink minimum. stuart: can you see an american politician standing up to that kind of question and answer once a week every week? >> it is a great tradition. john mccain said he would introduce something like that if he were elected. the president should be held accountable. the press conference doesn't do it. stuart: don't think it was very tense. >> everyone was having a laugh. >> that is the only thing. used to take dates, it is free. hillary clinton scheduled to speak at our sharpton's network meeting in manhattan today. this is a key speech, less then a week to the new york primary. >> bernie sanders from brooklyn versus hillary clinton, reelected senator, this is where
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campaign headquarters, she is trying everything to hold on to part of the population is a supporter has had success with african-americans. stuart: she can't put that behind her, the gaffe about what she said over the weekend, can't get beyond it. >> they wrote the skit, i just participated. ashley: shows lack of judgment, with what is appropriate and what is not. ashley: bernie sanders got the endorsement of the transit workers. you don't like hillary in the first place. do you like bernie? >> i like bernie. i am supporting him in the primary. you know how i feel. he is a fraud candidate. she referred to young african-americans as
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superpredators, gaffe after gaffe. >> if it was hillary versus trump who would you vote for? >> are you trying to torpedo my career? i vote for trump. i think a lot of people in labor would. stuart: we do here you. fit bit is up big today. the new york stock exchange, why is it up? nicole: i like this, torpedoed my career. the stock is up 7%, morgan stanley saying when they come out with quarterly reports they think fit bit will beat the street. retailers are having to reorder the fit bit watches and the other came after. it is gaining in popularity down 50% for morgan stanley and they
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double the price target, they think it is 32 where they think it is going. stuart: that will do it every time. thank you. facebook held their development conference announcing a lot of features, hoping to go after snapchat and even amazon. stock is nicely higher and mark secretary jumped right into the election taking a veiled shot at donald trump. more on that after this break. ♪ these little guys? they represent blood cells. and if you have afib - an irregular heartbeat that may put you at five times greater risk of stroke - they can pool together in the heart, forming a clot that can break free, and travel upstream to the brain where it can block blood flow and cause a stroke. but if you have afib that's not caused by a heart valve problem, pradaxa can help stop clots from forming. pradaxa was even proven superior to warfarin at reducing the risk of stroke, in a clinical trial - without the need for regular blood tests. and, in the rare event of an emergency,
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ashley: if you don't tune in every day you are going to miss great stuff like this one with judge andrew napolitano. >> he has the power to expel and that power is not appealable. if paul ryan, if paul ryan, speaker of the house of representatives in the united states expelled somebody, that person's party would demand a vote. the speaker in great britain has power to expel. prime minister question time. i used to watch prime minister's question time. at the gallery. we will see. it's more than a network and the cloud. it's reliable uptime. and multi-layered security.
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it's how you stay connected to each other and to your customers. with centurylink you get advanced technology solutions, including an industry leading broadband network, and cloud and hosting services - all with dedicated, responsive support. with centurylink as your trusted technology partner, you're free to focus on growing your business. centurylink. your link to what's next.
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stuart: we have come back a little bit. we were up numb 130. nasdaq had a high for 2016, all those indexes you see on your screen at a high of this
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calendar year. facebook, seven -- several new ventures including a plan to test disappearing messages by rival snapchat but jo ling kent has more about this, two items of news on what facebook is doing and they are both big. >> you referenced facebook wide in this video, not only broadcast from your smartphone but also open to developers to create new products, think original content from drones, television camera, directly feeding a new video hub to feature live video because they believe live video was the future on facebook, this is happening and they are getting hundreds of thousands of viewers. stuart: you maintain the second piece of news is more important. >> more interesting because it
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is happening. it sounds a little confusing but it is artificial intelligence that acts like human beings inside facebook messenger and you can send a message to numone-800-flowers and order your significant other flowers or office supplies from staples all in messenger inside this apps. 900 million monthly active users and want to keep them inside t apps to make money, generate revenue and keep you from using amazon, apple or google products. stuart: artificial intelligence, a companion. >> so you can search instead of staples instead of buying three rings of paper staples will get back to you and help you place the order without leaving messenger. stuart: it won't talk to be, just texts me. it is moving stock up 2% today
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and moving yesterday going back to clearly like it. stuart: what a stock, what a company, what a concept. facebook's chief mark lederberg.into politics, he called out donald trump at the annual conference yesterday. role the tape. >> i hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as others, blocking free expression, slowing immigration, reducing trade. stuart: he is getting into politics right there. this was at the same meeting where he discussed new items coming on facebook and its technology. on politics come on in, the weekly standard, zuckerberg's comments, seems to have gone into the middle of the election. >> absolutely right but in fairness this was started by donald trump six months ago when donald trump released his immigration plan, he went after mark secretary and tied him to
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marco rubio calling him facebook's personal senator saying he wants all these visas, suppressing his own appointment of minorities, what donald trump's immigration plan accused facebook of doing. you can see on a personal level mark lederberg might push back a little bit. you can see how the fight got started. stuart: i take the point, this was a man who founded and runs one of the world's great global technology companies and he jumped into the election strongly against donald trump. i am a little surprised a man in his position would take such an over position in a contested election in the first place. >> it is showing how business leaders are viewing the republican nominee and you will see a lot more of this. there have been reports
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republican national committee having trouble with corporations who don't want to be tied to the convention in the summer but there is weariness around donald trump as the republican nominee and some business leaders on a personal level he probably sees it as a moral issue, pushed immigration reform, he is anti-donald trump, it is not a business decision. it is a personal decision pushing him to speak against donald trump but the truth is if donald trump loses, if he is not the president, it looks like a long-term business decision, obviously it will affect business and how they go about and interact with this government. stuart: marks has a global audience and i suspect he is talking to that global audience. stuart: thank you for joining us, appreciate it.
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6 months after the election just over and hillary's campaign is running into some serious trouble. my take on that after this break. before i had the shooting, burning, pins-and-needles of diabetic nerve pain, these feet played shortstop in high school, learned the horn from my dad and played gigs from new york to miami. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda approved to treat this pain, from moderate to even severe diabetic nerve pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and these feet would like to keep the beat going.
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so we found a plan that can travel with us. anywhere in the country. [ 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. stuart: not looking good for the clintons, hillary or bill, six
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months to the election and the drive for another term at the white house running into serious trouble. and unstoppable coronation train it is not. it is wednesday and the story of hillary's unfunny racial joke is on page 1. saturday she appeared with bill diblasio and tried to inject racial humor into a comedy skit. four days later the story drags on. now she is blaming the mayor. it was bill diblasio's skit, that is what she is saying now. what is it about her campaign that letter make such mistakes and spend four days trying to get out of it and all that time, her campaign message got across? it did not. she has thrown bill diblasio already a lukewarm supporter under the bus. and bill, it has been a week since she had a run-in with black lives matter and has not gotten past it. the issue comes back, and al sharpton's conference in new york city. bill has become one of hillary's liabilities, not the campaign or
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he used to be at the negatives keep on coming. a new document dump shows connections between the clintons and donald trump. hillary's video of the 1-year anniversary of her campaign mysteriously dropped and worst of all bernie is closing the gap in next week's primary. sure, the republican split is getting maximum publicity, trump hogs the headlines but who would have thought the clinton camp flush with cash with gigantic staff having organized for years should be incapable of getting the message out or hillary herself would be so uninspiring. it is one more huge surprise in this election. they, hillary and bill, are in trouble and we haven't even mentioned an indictment.
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but not when it comes to the new york city transit workers. stuart: six days away from the primary. a big union in new york city. ashley: he's getting closer and closer to hillary. stuart: what you mean by that? >> there is a new poll out. he is to be ahead 65 to 35. now it is a 10-point they get anything can happen in six days. also the young people. if the young people come but it could lead it to bernie sanders or make it much more ) ashley: you are bright, gretchen. stuart: latino fun. i want to get to the hillary clinton video that her campaign did not want you to see. we've got it. you're going to see appeared roll it. >> today is the one-year anniversary of our campaign.
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i am so excited that everything we have done this year and i'm rightful for your help in every single way. today, april 12th is also equal payday. so we've got a lot of work to do there and i'm so optimistic and confident we're going to get this and so much else done together. great to gretchen, they withdrew the video. they deleted it from the website. >> i think they are trying to have her come off as authentic and real and this is the way in which people communicate through social media. they pop up and do a quick video. look at me in my office and i'm casual. i think that would be attempt behind this. maybe they don't want to publicize that she's actually had a campaign for a year because the fact of the matter is she should feel it a long time ago. the more you're meant he really year has gone by, it's a problem. >> she's authentically bizarre in that video.
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her eyes light up in. >> maybe not. i think they're trying to make it look like a fallacy. she needs to attract the young people. you two are chuckling and we are talking politics. stuart: blink three times if you want help. [laughter] you just put the kibosh on that one. >> that may give my final point. she's trying to appeal with this video, albeit linking to let you know if you need help. 71% of the people like bernie sanders. she's a candidate, are all those people going to move over and vote for her? >> i'm moving to republicans right now. the rnc member, randy evans,
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says trump can win the nomination with 1100 delegates. that assured of the 1237. he said you can win with 1100 delegates. >> he said this on morning joe this morning. that number he believes is the threshold but doesn't reach the 1237 that it is enough for him to ultimately win the nomination. he just sat in his opinion that would be enough to put him over the edge. stuart: that is a lower threshold. >> maybe it has something to do with the unbound delegates. every journalist has been doing a deep dive into who was on god, what happens after the first vote, et cetera. for somebody officially to say you don't have to reach 1237 is mind-boggling. that's the only thing that has remained constant in the discussion so far. stuart: how about facebook's
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mark zuckerberg. he got political going right after donald trump. watch this. >> i hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as others. for blocking free expression, slowing immigration, reducing trade. stuart: not so much what he said. it is that team pulled himself from a man in his position directly in an election for the president. ashley: he's been a big immigration advocate, donald trump has criticized mark zuckerberg so tech companies can hire more people overseas. there's history between these two and clearly it was in a failed thing. >> why do you have a problem with someone in a good position like that? >> he's the leader of a global technology company. i think he is talking not to american voters. he is talking to foreign people who he's got hooked.
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>> ever knows he's voting for a democrat. not some surprise he is -- stuart: even insured himself into the president day. i was surprised. the guys with $50 billion that is a top position to be going straight into the election. my only point. >> a lot of people have done that. we can't get enough of this video. a british member of the house of commons kicked out of the chamber after colin prime minister david cameron dodgy dave. here it is again. >> we didn't receive a proper answer. maybe dodgy dave will answer it now. >> order, order, order, order. >> all he has to do is withdraw that word and think of another.
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>> this man has done more than anybody else. i still refers to him as dodgy dave. stuart: you are not allowed on the house of commons to label another member of parliament. dodgy dave does not make it. the guy was kicked out of the chamber. gretchen, can you imagine any american politician having to face that kind of questioning. >> i wish they would. this is your homeland. stuart: now, america is my homeland. >> recently appeared you pass the test. that's a reality tv show happening there. people this time around in america want that to happen. they want to have real arguments and discussion. >> that is what they've got.
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enter donald trump into these debates. that's exactly what you've got. >> americans are fed up with politicians standing up there and doing the same talking points and looking so official and so gosh darn boring. ashley: god includes a rapidfire brown. happening next hour. an hour from now hillary clinton will speak at al sharpton national action network convention here in new york city. david webb is here. okay, it doesn't seem to me that hillary clinton can get beyond the race issue and some of the gas she and bill clinton have made. >> this is the typical unbranded need to al sharpton, the first but president and now hillary clinton needs to go kiss the ring so that she can get the black establishment though, the
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congressional black caucus or as i like to call them behind her. by the way, i wish i could do the first three subjects. but this is the typical play. here is al sharpton who went to ferguson and gave a press conference at 11:00 a.m. and left ferguson to burn. al sharpton provides no solution but yet he carries this head of the black community which is ridiculous. black people who go on bended me to democrats and leftist progressives like al sharpton deserve the outcome they support. stuart: is it not reality that people like al sharpton do have influence in the black community on how about those? >> let me ask the black community. where is the solution? where is the result? what is al sharpton help you do in camden, new jersey, detroit.
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what did he do in east l.a.? what does al sharpton actually achieve? stuart: what will you be able to get from hillary clinton in return for his support in the primary? >> now that his tv show has gone, maybe he will go out and start being an advocate again. what he gets out of this is political power. al sharpton scam weather was sony poor or others as he goes and gathers political power or influence and it goes on and spends his own benefit. he doesn't pay taxes. he doesn't take care of dad. he plays the power game. i always say can number the name -- we always play the name three things that hillary clinton has done. can you tell me three al sharpton? stuart: the wrong person to ask. >> anybody tell me the achievement? string to one senator, dianne feinstein had to google when
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asked her credentials. >> it tells you something that is a farce to a gretchen said earlier about what we get from the politicians and political class are in this case i'll sharpton apart at the political class in a way. they get up there and give us this projected image. we have to dig us americans behind the image and see what they are doing for us to matter what party they are rid. stuart: we will see if al sharpton supporter of hillary turns other voters from supporting. >> either way, going to the burning rally later today. stuart: thank you very much indeed. yet another story of liberal lunacy on college campuses. it is about donald trump. we bring you the latest addition from ohio university next.
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stuart: this is harley-davidson stock up nicely. the investment firm expects higher sales when we're apart march numbers. 3% higher. the hedge fund manager did on wall street week on fox business. he says they could face a recession this year. roll tape. >> asia has a giant credit bubble they've been building for the last 10 years or longer that is kind of reached its atrophy level and it is going to happen over the next two were three gears. whether that causes the u.s. to have a brief minor recession, i think it is 40, 50% chance in the next year. stuart: precession maybe this year. what else did he say? >> who at the financial industry as a whole, his answer? hillary clinton. he said i think she is the most famous actor of them all. stuart: i agree with
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either way, don't miss that show. wall street week is friday on the fox business network. more college lunacy. i call a liberal lunacy on campus if you like. a free-speech war at ohio university. some students pro-trump graffiti on it. other students complained it was offensive. they wiped the wall claim. joining us now is john shields, author of passing on the right, conservative professors in the progressive university. i have to ask you, what is really going on at our universities? the denial of free speech, if the denial of intellectual give-and-take which i always thought was the function of the university. >> i think that is right. i think these students don't seem to understand that a good education is offensive. a good education is offensive because it pits competing conceptions of the good,
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competing justice against one another. being offended is the price we pay for a good education and a surprise to pay for diversity. stuart: i thought going into this year the present dividend college campuses would have peaked. people are so exasperated that he would start to tail off in decline. the exact opposite is happening. it's getting worse. more and more denials of free speech and free expression. do you think we can expect an end to this anytime soon? >> i think it to million-dollar question it's hard to say. we need to see more leadership from faculty in and as traitors and then because if they don't push back in a constructive way, this could go on for quite a while. these administrators are the baby boomers who are encouraging this kind of anti-free speech movement, right? >> they have an interest in it.
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it helps expand their domain because these movements often required more administrators, more programming. so what is in their interest i think to encourage these movements. stuart: didn't you go and check out conservative assessors and how they get a log that progressive universities? what were the results? >> i did. there certainly political bias against conservatives. no question about that. it is harder to get work published that reflects conservative points of views. it is harder to get hired. some of this bias is driven by misinformed prejudices, so lots of liberal professors think that conservatives are too closed minded to be professors. some of the bias and intellectual orientation. that is our politics inclines us to find questions more
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interesting than others and some explanations more plausible than others. in no way it's not that there's more political bias, but there's not more of it. the political biases are too one-sided and we need to see a broader spectrum of views. stuart: i would like to see a broad inspector? i suspect you'll say no. not a prayer. >> well, i think it will take some time. i think the good news is that conservatives can succeed in higher education and that it's not an intolerant places to sometimes. is that a more welcoming place that we sometimes think it is. i think it is a place that conservatives can succeed and then i think we need more conservatives in higher education. stuart: well fed. we liked the book, by the way,
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passing on the right. i read part of it and we appreciate it. great to see you on the show. >> thanks for having me. stuart: good book. not bad at all. shrimp on a treadmill. another example of the egregious government waste coming your way next. we always run this video. ♪ when you booked this trip, you didn't know we had hundreds of thousands of places to stay all over the world. or that we searched billions of flights to get you here. a few weeks ago, you didn't even know where here was. now the only thing you don't know,
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i did not see that coming. don't deal with disruptions. get better internet installed on your schedule. comcast business. built for business. stuart: the annual book telling the worst examples of government waste just came out this morning. jury willis has gone through. she has another example of egregious ways. >> you challenged me. he didn't want a boring one. here's what i came up with. a million dollars for embryo adoption awareness program. i'm not against nature of fertilization, but apparently there is a lot of embryos wasted. the government is in the business of telling you about that so you might use them. stuart: i think it is a good service to have people understand and know they are there. i don't think it should be the
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governments business. >> i thought that was interesting. a million dollars. so it's not big, but i thought it was odd the government was doing it. that's the thing i think is interesting. the department of defense getting $20 million to investigate alternative energy. who else is doing that? the department of energy spending millions of dollars. that's a favorite form of ways. the last one last 20 seconds. >> $5.9 million to create better relations with asian nation and it has been objected to by the state department for years. they do not want it and you and i keep paying for it every single year. trade to pick up another -- what's the word? [cheers and applause] >> a lot of it going underground. they are hating it.
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stuart: thank you very much. we like it. china's fighter jets to the contested islands in the south china sea despite promises to president obama that they would not militarize those islands at what is going on here? more "varney" in a moment. ♪ ♪ in new york state, we believe tomorrow starts today. all across the state, the economy is growing, with creative new business incentives, and the lowest taxes in decades, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. like in buffalo, where the largest solar gigafactory in the western hemisphere will soon energize the world. and in syracuse, where imagination is in production. let us help grow your company's tomorrow -
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stuart: let's start with the markets because we are at the hyatt today on the dow industrials certainly very close. all three of the big into his director by this calendar year 2016. this is the rally. the chinese military had supplied fighter jet to the island in the south china sea. they built the island themselves. if it on a vital trade route. joining us now, ambassador john bolton at the american enterprise institute. we saw the pictures of fighter jets on the island near this exactly contradicts the promise they made to president obama. >> what a shock. the chinese have been pursuing a strategy for quite some time. they are determined to take control of the south china sea. the party declared it to be a province of china. they've got what is called the
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nine line, a provincial capital. they have been building islands on rocks and raised on a good day about three inches above water. now they put air and naval assets on the islands they are building to vietnam, philippines, taiwan. stuart: that is militarily provocative. >> exactly. we are doing precious little to watch them. john kerry said there was a cycle of activity between vietnam and china. one problem in the south china sea is china. of course vietnam and the philippines don't want to lose control of island they think are theirs. oil and gas and other minerals under the ocean. the real fact is china is using military force to gain more control over more territory that puts its hands around the necks of the economies of japan, taiwan and south korea because
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all the oil that comes from the middle east to those countries goes through the south china sea. stuart: after world war ii, the pacific was total control by the american navy. is there not room to get up a little bit of control to the expanding power of china? can i make a legitimate case for the portion of the lake. >> what they are doing is try to deny others access to it. they have believed in keeping freedom of navigation to the open seas. this is a direct challenge at a time when our navy is weaker than that of time when barack obama has a few months left in office. they will take advantage of this. they don't know will be elected in november, but they know their man in the white house now won't do a thing about this. stuart: russian jet buzzed an american warship in the balkans the earlier today. it seems like our rivals may be
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hostile powers are getting while the getting is good because the president has a mere seven months in office. >> and he simply will not sin against them. there's every likelihood to take russia as an example that given the weakness of our response in the european lack of response to ukraine that putin will challenge somewhere and estonia, latvia or lithuania to see how far you can press the nato alliance itself. it is a real problem. stuart: this is not going away. >> you will get worse before january 2017 in the next president will inherit obama's legacy. stuart: john bolton, thanks for joining us. pure street politics. al sharpton's network meeting in new york city. adam shapiro as they are. hillary is about to speak. i got out. the news is about bernie sanders this hour. an endorsement. what's he got? >> let's talk about the
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endorsement right now. the local 100 represent 34,000 men and women in new york city. listed that people might remember the strike that made so many people in new york so angry. they've endorsed bernie democra. they did that about 30 minutes ago. here's what mr. sanders had to say about that. >> as soon as we leave you, we are going over to a picket line with the cwa. against the greed of verizon wants to take away ealth care benefits, wants to outsource jobs after making billions of profit. that's the kind of corporate greed will take on. thank you so much for your support. >> okay, so sanders is on the other picket line in washington square park later today. heather clinton will be speaking here at the national election network annual convention.
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you hear reverend sharpton behind me right now will arrive at noon and speak from 12:00 to 12:30. the latest poll show her stealing the late, but bernie sanders has cut her leg by 50%. she's got a 52% versus sanders 42%. back to you, stuart. stuart: we will hear more later when we hear what hillary clinton has to say. if you heard my take in the last hour, i think hillary clinton is having trouble getting the message out on the campaign trail. some would call this the unstoppable coronation that it is absolutely not bad. joining us now is sasha burns, strategist for democrats. welcome to the program. i hope you just heard bernie sanders got a major endorsement from a big new york city union. i was surprised because the unions were solidly behind hillary clinton. i don't know whose side you are and come or bernie. but admit that if a hitch for
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hillary in a big plus for bernie. >> i think anytime you get endorsement of that kind it is certainly a plus. at the end of the day, it's day, it still wasn't going to matter in terms of who wins. she still wins new york by a huge margin. stuart: yes, she does. wait, wait. hold on a second. she was up 40 or 50 points maybe a year ago. now she's up only 10 points. that gap is narrowing. her camp must be worried. >> i think word is excessive but not liking it is absolutely true. unlike where everyone underestimated charm, in terms of bernie sanders, the big surprise has been he wasn't really running for president. he was running to turn the platform to push it to the left. then he started doing better and better. we know that. suddenly became i'm going to
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clinch the nomination. i think that is what the different lives. no one took him seriously. >> what happens within the democrat camp is bernie keeps on winning, keeps on doing very well. hillary is so not the superdelegates. almost certain to be the nominee following an indictment of course. you're laughing. if bernie keeps on doing well, she's not looking good. >> i would totally disagree with that. an indictment is even a remote possibility. we've got to discuss this. you don't think it is that all possibility? >> 100% not. everyone involved in terms of washington and doj don't know that. it's just a fun talking point. stuart: i don't know how many hundred fbi agents are looking at this. the director himself and they are not concerned at all? interviewed by lawyers under
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oath. she's going to be interviewed like that? this is of no concern whatsoever. stuart: >> trust me, it's not great for the campaign. when i talk about in terms of indictment is you have to show that it was willfully trying to spread classified information. if you look at the pass situations, general petraeus for example it's a very different scenario of land given to classified information. >> i welcome you explain that to democrats for the possibility of an indictment and under a testimony from hillary clinton as the democratic nominee. i suspect they're a little worried. stuart: i am no -- >> i know romney. stuart: we had a democrat strategist, harlan hill. i sinned and come a democrat big time. he said given a choice hillary r. trump. he goes for trump. just watch this.
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>> if it was hillary versus trump, who would you vote for? >> are you trying to torpedo my career? i vote for trump. i think there's a lot of people in labor and unions. stuart: a lot of people in labor unions who would cross the floor. 10 seconds to straight me out. >> not all democrats are smart. a lot of republicans are going to vote for hillary. we will do a trade. stuart: be careful, sascha burns. don't call people. >> i didn't use that word. stuart: it was a pleasure. take back any time. looper working with the feds on passengers and drivers pick up and drop off locations. that? we will ask you. microsoft cloud,ith the we can enable a banker to travel to the most remote locations
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>> i'm nicole petallides with their fox business brief. 17,077. the s&p up 17 points. and the nasdaq with an up arrow as well 1.3%. look at the s&p 500, seen financial consumer technology. here's a look at the best within upgrade and more conservative of over 7%.
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copper and gold, aluminum getting an upgrade. those have been winners as well. taking a look at verizon after 40,000 workers. we have our own adam schapiro there. to the downside, 5112. watching that contract negotiation. under armour bouncing back after the jordan speith mishap. with new car replacement, we'll replace the full value of your car plus depreciation. liberty mutual insurance.
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stuart: the fbi with the fbi with the the fbi without the paid professional hackers is able to crack the san bernardino terrorist iphone. all rights, judge andrew napolitano is back. do you have any problem with this? i know you didn't want the fbi to force apple to break into its own iphone. if the third-party does it it, are you okay? >> the fbi had a search warrant to use all reasonable means to get into the phone. using an outside party is a reasonable means. here is the problem and it won't happen in this case because the people that committed the crime are dead yet although the next her neighbor, the conspirator is alive and incarcerated and will be tried in the sea pleads guilty. if there is a trial and if any evidence from the phone is used at trial, the fbi will have to reveal how would acquire that
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information. director call me indicated just two days ago this might be very troubling for the fbi. it didn't go beyond that. why might it be traveling? the type of person that hacks into a phone successfully against the wishes of the government, against the law and the wishes of the manufacture of the found as a person who does this for a living, and maybe this might have airy well been a criminal defendant doing a favor for his prosecutors. the fbi does not want to ask you this to a jury. stuart: i want to move on to one other thing. bluebird did the feds information on 12 million riders and drivers last year. that included pickup and drop-off information. credit card fraud was involved as well. you have a problem with a private company giving enormous amount to the government? >> it depends on the relationship the company has with customers. i don't know if uber users are
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promised privacy. apple promises everybody privacy. if your records are subpoenaed, you know what apple does? tells you. you had the opportunity to move the subpoena unless it is a subpoena from the fisa court or unless it is a subpoena issued by an fbi agent under the patriot act. in this case apple to tell the subject of the existence of the search warrant. uber will not challenge anything. they just blindly comply with every order that comes over. stuart: in other words, judge napolitano is about to represent all 12 million people who is breached. >> look and say do you want
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goober giving your information including credit card information to the government without telling you. stuart: think how much money you could win for 12 million people. you would take 30% of the taking of hourly billing for $3000 an hour. >> but i'd never be on the show again. stuart: you wouldn't need to be. >> is excessive, frivolous litigation. do you use uber? you might be caught up in that. whistling a different tune. stuart: judge napolitano. 11 minutes left in your added here. >> i'm going to find david skinner. the parliamentarian for speech. stuart: if you're just joining us, we've been running the dodgy dave video all morning and it was good. mike piazza is on the jersey is
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going up for auction and not without controversy. tell it to a private collector or put in the ground zero memorial. >> the 9/11 memorial is included in there and we can help bridge the gap. something you and i can put together.
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>> i proposed an offer that would rotate between city field in the hall of fame. the 9/11 museum was not mentioned in that would've made a big difference. if the 9/11 memorial is included in there and we can help bridge the gap, it is something you and i can put together.at he's talkt hair. what you are seeing their is a mike piazza and 9/11 home in jersey. as you know it was on "varney & company" yesterday. a lot of people think that jersey should stay in new york. even the wall street cohost put a bid on it. >> the gentleman with the actions i was referencing. they couldn't come together. anthony tran allowed that they would welcome the record. this is a quote.
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we also agreed to put it on public display with the hall of fame, and they would've rotated it. see how it all turns out. they were trying to get this as the condition of the commitment. stuart: is such an iconic, artifact. the issue is suited he and the 9/11 memorial or not. here is the 9/11 memorial president. welcome to the program. before we get into should it be here or there, can you give me some idea the significance. >> it's an incredibly significant jersey. almost a member those in new york. those were dark days. it obviously blew our minds.
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so many people were lost that day. there is a concern of how are we going to come back from this. that first mets game 10 days after 9/11 when mike piazza stepped up in the bottom of the eighth inning and hit a two-run home run and ignited that stadium, ignited shea stadium. they came to chant u.s.a., u.s.a. and gave permission for all of us to say we can come back from this. this jersey means so much and its home really should be the 9/11 museum. we document the tragedy of the day, but just as importantly we document how we came back, how total strangers than in on the westside highway should first responders going down to ground hero at like what piazza did our credible peer by one half the artifact, that paul manto, the memorabilia were 3 million people come every 12 months. stuart: you are not on the position to put in a bid. you don't have money to buy that
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kind of thing. that's not what you do. >> we have emotional appeal. whether the donor can be an absolute hero. they can be responsible for making sure that jersey had that been the museum for 3 million people will see it every year. although 9/11 is an international event, it is also a local story. it is a story of new york coming back in the jersey for that so incredibly well. stuart: you want it. you're not sure you'll get it. i want to talk about the success of the memorial itself. i had relatives last year went to see the memorial. they thought it was superb. very, very well done. >> it's been incredible to matter. we have a great chairman and mike bloomberg. we have so many people that dedicated their lives to taking the eight-acre paper the two
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towers stood and making it a place of inspiration and truly transformation and frankly the piazza jersey has a place down there. stuart: you've been president for how many years? >> 10 years. it has been really gratifying. we had the pope come last fall. think how far ground zero has come from a place of paint and now a place of inspiration. it's been terrific. >> i do want to be rude but if you've been director for 10 years, we hired as a teenager? stuart: thank you very much. >> i can't say enough about the chairman of the organization. mike bloomberg doesn't care if you are nine or 90, if he thinks he could do the job will give you a shot. stuart: we have great hopes for the jersey for you. we will have more "varney" for you in just a moment.
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stuart: the high of the day up numb 155 points. i think that has to do with the
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price of oil which is a. ashley: are they going to do anything? probably not but speculation is enough. stuart: three top-performing banks, we will take it. thanks very much. my time is up, neil cavuto, it is yours. neil: we are focusing on a big crisis going on across the country, tens of thousands of workers, not those responsible for your smart phone, striking across the country. it is one thing when they are trying to get your attention, when they get a presidential candidate's attention who sympathizes with their plight it is quite another thing. we are keeping on top of it because he has beaten hillary clinton to their stuff. lauren simonetti on what is happening right now. >> reporter: bernie sanders is

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