tv Varney Company FOX Business April 28, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
9:00 am
>> i didn't name names. maria: that will do it for us. great show today. see you tomorrow, everybody. dagen, georgette, michael jones. "varney & company" coming up, stuart, take it away. stuart: i'll take it. bad news on the economy and bad news for hillary, but what a great day for facebook stock holders. good morning, everyone. almost a dead stop, that's the state of the economy. see the graphic. the obama economy is on a down turn that may point to recession. that's not good for hillary clinton, she's tied to the failed policies. at facebook wild success. huge profit, 200 million new users and a stock price that's going straight up. how different for microsoft, google, twitter.
9:01 am
notes from the campaign trail, senator cruz picked up a vice-president early, carly fiorina. and donald trump says it will make no difference. look at bernie sanders, the socialist, he's laying off hundreds of workers. mass layoffs from a socialist. just saying. the dow is going to fall 100 points. the target boycott petition nears a million seeners and we will show you again, the moment of life when it begins. "varney & company," you're looking at it now. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ ♪ baby you're a rich man ♪ >> the music, ladies and gentlemen, good call. rich man indeed. mark zuckerberg, i would says'
9:02 am
fabulously rich right now and his wealth will grow a half hour from now. and his stake? in facebook will rise to more than $55 billion when the market opens and it will open at a record high. if it opens at 118 it will open more like 120, 121. jo ling kent is here. jo: are you ready for what happened last night? it was big. stuart: it was huge. jo: it was huge, 1.65 billion people now using facebook on a monthly basis and what i want to tell you is 1.09 billion people log on every single day. and so is where the money is being made. the average person spending 50 minutes, 5-0 on instagram, messenger and facebook. stuart: one million people use facebook every single day. jo: more and monthly access users are more than china, the biggest in the world. stuart: it's that number that the money flows from, they have
9:03 am
revenues from all over. >> exactly, the ad revenue, the reason you care about that because it's mobile. 82% of all ad revenue is now happening on this mobile device and that's a record for facebook. unlike other tech companies, you see the serious growth on multiple platforms, instagram, what'sup. >> and those are built into the revenue number and it's going well. >> we have an analyst later today that says it's going to $200 a share and opens at 120. i'm sure the stock holders will tack about th-- will talk about. >> and the word recession, look at that, the annualized growth rate, .5%. even though we've had trillions
9:04 am
of of dollars of stimulus and taxing. that's all you've got. julie is here and i say that with a smile on my face because you are a democrat. >> i am. stuart: a hillary supporter. >> i am. stuart: and hillary is tied into obama's economy which produced after a percent a year. >> how can you say we're in recession when you're having growth. stuart: we're not in recession, we're headed toward it. 1% in the winter and now .5 that's a down trend. >> we're not-- >> how is she going to reverse course. >> we've had 73 consecutive months of job growth. almost 15 million private sector jobs. people can trace sta tis. is the economy doing as well as, even her husband. stuart: what policy does she
9:05 am
have to turn it around and give us growth? >> something you tremendously hate. stuart: what's that? >> probably more of the same. stuart: why would you do more of the same, when it doesn't work. >> stuart, i cited some statistics. what is she going to do to get us out of the down-- >> first of all, i'm not speaking for the hillary clinton campaign. stuart: the problem that hillary has in getting out of this. >> stuart, you can't beat somebody with nobody. if it's donald trump, the vast majority of america doesn't trust him with the economy. stuart: i'm asking the question again and again and again answer, tell me what part of her policy will get us out of this down trend and give us growth. >> stuart, when this president came to office, we were in a deep, deep, deep recession and now you're telling me that you're giving him no credit for
9:06 am
getting us out of it. we're not in recession, giving him no credit for the job growth or putting people back to work. stuart: answer my question. >> i am answering my question, a lot probably more of the same. stuart: more government, higher taxes and ignore the debt. and she's going to do the same. >> what did i say to you. if you're talking about the fact that he did all the things i pointed out to, that's not good you're not profoundly disagreeing, but i tell you that she'll probably do something that you don't like and i suspect more americans will agree with you than donald trump. stuart: i just wanted to see you on the defensive. >> i'm not on the defensive. stuart: and the problem is the bank of japan, overnight they failed to print a whole lot more money. the market was expecting a lot more money printing. didn't get it. down goes the japanese market and we're how down to 100
9:07 am
points plus. how about priceline, the ceo is stepping down for ethical reason. >> possible sex scandal at priceline, he ran since january 2014. improper relationships with an employee not under his direct supervision, so he is now added to the line of ceo sex scandal that include mark hurd, and one at best buy. this company went to a successful company under her stewardship. this is a stock that should be splitting it's so successful. >> to politics, indiana votes in five days. ted cruz must win or he's done. he picked vp carly fiorina, he grabbed the headlines and air time with that pick.
9:08 am
and then there's donald trump. he has his own vote getter in indiana. here is the great coach why he's backing trump. >> because i think, you know, i'm not a republican and i'm not a democrat, but i've always voted, but i've always voted for the person that i thought was the best for the job. there's no question in my mind that the man standing between the two of us is far and away the best person to lead america back. stuart: byron york is here. who is the best voter -- vote getter, or bobby knight? before you go, i know who bobby knight is. go. >> i think in indiana, bobby knight. the big deal for ted cruz. the way his mood was
9:09 am
interpreting choosing carly fiorina to be his vice-president. and hail carly because his back is against the wall it is. and it got that coverage and all of a sudden trump produces bobby knight, in indiana that's huge. if you look at the first page of the indianapolis star this morning you'll see a picture of both of them. carly fiorina and ted cruz on one side and bobby knight on the other. i think that ted cruz was hoping there will be a single photo with himself and carly fiorina. stuart: they had makes a move and in comes donald trump with bobby knight, and bingo the headlines change. the dead cruz--
9:10 am
ted cruz must win indiana. >> the last couple of weeks when we saw donald trump win new york with the vote and sweeps all five eastern states, pennsylvania, maryland, connecticut, rhode island, delaware, he sweeps those and ted cruz says don't look at that, look at indiana, look at indiana. indiana is now here and i think a lot of people are suggesting if trump wins indiana, his path to 1237 which looked dicey for a while looks much, much better and cruz's chances of keeping trump below 1237, he's not looking to win, he's trying to keep trump below 1237, his responses of doing that go down a lot. stuart: byron, see you soon. >> thank you. amazing video capturing a flash
9:11 am
of light at the moment of conception. that raises questions, when exactly does the life begin? . a frequent "varney & company" and goest say the only thing you could negotiate with a jihadi is how they would kill you. more after the break. ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪ ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪ ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪
9:14 am
>> all right. everybody, here is how we're going to open. down about 100 points. this is because of the bank of japan which overnight did not print a whole lot more money. that apparently is disappointing. how about apple? a drop yesterday is going to be down just a tad more today. holding around $97 a share, remember, an analyst on the program yesterday said doesn't care about what's happening yesterday, it's going to $120 per share, that's what he said. comcast, nbc universal paying dreamworks $41 a share taulted
9:15 am
for trading, but it's official. the cable operator buying content. an isis suicide bombers blown up by syrian kurds. it looked like it was patched together or from a mad max movie. we thought we'd show you. and any guests, the only thing he said to negotiate with a jihadi is how you will be killed. you can be decapitated burned alive or crucified. i think jo us now is rob o'neill the man who shot and killed usama bin laden. do you agree with that? you can't negotiate with them. >> good morning, first of all, stuart, great to be here. he was absolutely right. i businelooked at the part when
9:16 am
negotiating with the nazi, all you could negotiate is the line. some are looking at ideology, they've got to be killed and the state has to come in and educations. they have schools teaching kids how to decapitate people and four-year-old bombing a car. and the kids that are four and five, they're not going to be normal when they're 18. the glamourous life, beating us. stuart: it's kept underwraps, i think that america is doing what you're doing.
9:17 am
>> doing some of it. stuart: we've got guys out there knocking them off. >> they're fighting them, yes, but having a problem with the rules of engagement. stuart: don't we have special teams, your teams that are secret. >> not going to get into witch units, they're there fighting alongside some of our allies and come back and tell me about problems with air support. when we're talking serious, like face-to-face combat they thought they'd be overrun by air support. it takes almost a pilot i might go to prison over this, i'm helping my guys on the ground. it's happening right now, even though we don't talk about it. stuart: sunday, five years ago. >> five years ago. stuart: you shot usama bin laden. >> i was with i considered the best team assembled. we were there, and knowing we were on a one way mission. >> you dream about it, it's in your head?
9:18 am
>> anytime i want, i can picture his bedroom and usama bin laden standing on two pete, and when he was dead, saw his last breath. >> saw him in his sights? >> don't need a sight a clip. stuart: i'm not familiar with this combat. >> he was as close as you are right now. turned the corner, standing in the bedroom and it took half a second to realize. two things i was thinking, he's not surrendering and that's his nose, that's him. other things i was surprised how skinny he was. how long before you shot him. >> would be less than a second. we knew he was going to be a suicide bomber. and i know, i'm tired of worried about being blown up, let's get this over. it wasn't bravery it was just-- >> you put it on autopilot?
9:19 am
>> yeah, i realized, i might live now. stuart: this is how people reacted to that killing, i think that's times square, that was, america came out in force and cheered you on. >> they did. geraldo was reporting in d.c. and we were shocked to see the overwhelming response. we were in our gear and watching fox news and i was amazed. i had friends that ran from the white house just to chill with everybody. i saw that guy climbing on a light pole here in times square, i'm assuming he was in a public. stuart: it's great to have you back on the show. >> great to be here. stuart: come back anytime you like. >> thanks. i'm going to talk about target. nearly a million people have signed that petition to boycott target over its transgender bathroom policy. no effect on the stock at this point. congressman gohmert, he's on
9:20 am
the show. and donald trump says that hillary clinton is playing the women card, i think he put it. the left calls that sexist. is it? innovative sonicare technology with up to 27% more brush movements versus oral b. get healthier gums in 2 weeks guaranteed. innovation and you. philips sonicare. save when you buy the most loved rechargeable toothbrush brand in america.
9:21 am
) i'm definitely able to see savings through using the car buying on usaa. i mean, amazing savings. i was like, wow. if i can save this much, then i could actually maybe upgrade a little bit. (announcer) save on your next car with usaa car buying service, that's why i run on quickbooks. details. i use the payments app to accept credit cards... ...and everything autosyncs. those sales prove my sustainable designs are better for the environment and my bottom line. that's how i own it.
9:22 am
9:23 am
would cut you some slack, right? >>no. your insurance rates go through the roof. your perfect record doesn't get you anything. >>anything. perfect! for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. and if you do have an accident, our claim centers are available to assist you 24/7. for a free quote, call liberty mutual at switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> breaking news, vice-president joe biden just arrived in iraq. it's a surprise visit. he is there apparently to try
9:24 am
to stop the political infighting in baghdad. he wants the political leadership to go after isis instead. if we get the video you will see is momentarily. donald trump continues to attack hillary, accusing her of relying on gender politics. watch this. >> i think the only card she has is the woman's card. she's got nothing else going and frankly, if hillary clinton were a man, i don't think she'd get 5% of the vote. stuart: julie is here. that statement because he referred to the gender of his opponent has wildly sexist. referring to her gender, is that sexist? >> referring to her gender, no. but saying she would have no support if she wasn't a chick. stuart: sexist or not sexist. >> i would say pretty sexist.
9:25 am
pretty darn sexist. and i don't play that card a lot. sexism is i won't give you a job because you're a woman. i think you're stupid because you're a woman. >> are you explaining to me. stuart: yeah, what i thought it was. not mentioning the name of your-- the gender of of your opponent, if she's man she'd get 5%. that's not sexism, that's not pejorative. >> you've obviously never been a victim of sexist, and you don't know what it's like no one is supporting you if you weren't a chick. >> a chick, i never would say that. >> if i asked you questions about makeup around his eyes. would that be sexist. >> apparently not--
9:26 am
>> we'll have a triple digit drop at the opening bell. ignore that, look at facebook, that stock is going straight up. i confidently predict it will be a new all-time high. watch it go up after this. ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet? ...one of many pieces in my i havlife.hma... so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece
9:27 am
in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled .. to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com.
9:30 am
stuart: two things about the opening bell about to ring. number one, the stock market coming-out industrials down 100 points. facebook is going to go straight up. bad news, good news. it is three seconds to go. now it is 9:30 in trading has begun. we are going to go down 18 points to start out. 12 points now. we are going to go down, believe me, almost 100 points. i shouldn't make predictions. down 31. thank you. we have to start with facebook and look where it's opened up. 109 team 51 up $10, almost 10% higher. we've got a lot to discuss. come on in, listening donald, jo ling kent and david dietz. you do own face the good i know that.
9:31 am
you think it's going up from here? >> the user growth is 50% year-over-year. revenue skyrocketing. there's a giant town from other advertising into the mobile advertising of facebook and particularly the video at advertising. you've got to go with the trend. stuart: do you think it's going up some more? i've got viewers who want to know, should i buy this thing up 120? >> our client bought it at half the price. any pullback you have to get in there. >> one of four people and the planet are on facebook. stuart: on a monthly basis? >> 15 minutes per day. they continues to go up according to ceo mark zuckerberg. the ceo of cnet video uploads iraq by three times in the last
9:32 am
year. won 19 of facebook, at $10 a share. how about apple. that's% down. the stock this morning still below 100. about 9750. would you buy a mistake? >> i don't think investors are appreciated in the type of revenue after the bout porter that they can get the knife was then. there's an upgrade cycle they can take advantage. when you strip out the cast is a cheap stock. stuart: apple had its day as stop. facebook may be starting its day is a straight up stop. would you go without? >> i would. end quote -- is no zuckerberg. >> the stock is up 40% in the last year. nine dollars now pay what am i looking for this afternoon on amazon? >> retail sales growth, but also
9:33 am
looking at the cloud, storage, server, how much of amazon has made him a friend and how much jeff bates says has invested other parts of the company. stuart: how much of the car business, the google has taken off it. >> absolutely. the competition very much fierce right now if everyone getting into the game. expect in pretty serious profit. stuart: we are down 95-point. let's move from individual stocks. it appears to me that we are sliding towards a recession. limit back bad. 2% growth, 1% growth into winter common point i% growth now. that implies a down trend towards recession. >> 70% of the economy is consumer spending. they talked about the 14.5 million net new jobs. half of the low-wage service jobs not good.
9:34 am
they've got the energy effect are lurching around in a hospital gown. they tend to pay higher that would drive the u.s. economy grow faster. stuart: scott shellady, this question of recession in the slide towards economy may be later this year. what is your take on recession? >> before today's number about a 40% chance inching towards 50% after the gdp number. we should absolutely be shocked at the gdp number. eight years of 0% interest rate and this is what we get the first quarter of 20 extent. why isn't there a more alarm bells going off. retail sales going down, saving rates going out. consumer confidence not doing what it used to do. where is that going to come from and were not going to get it anytime soon because were lost in the election cycle.
9:35 am
we're not going to change the course of the pattern at all anytime soon. stuart: it's not the possibility of the recession this morning. it's the fact the bank of japan didn't plant a whole lot more money. that's the problem. >> about this. the bank of japan and negative funds. i have to pay back more money than i borrowed. i take a loan out that i don't have to pay back as much as i borrowed. our market is going to take a look at this. we are going to see the stock markets drift higher. stuart: wait a second. i did think of this. if i take out a loan, i don't have to pay it all back. >> they are paying you to borrow the money.
9:36 am
but it's gone from helicopter money to negative laws. that's ridiculous. where are the alarm bells? >> you're the only one at the moment. that is the fact, scott shellady. individual stocks start up with renewable energy rip large. they are down 6% for solar retreating. how about paypal. the profit surged with more transactions, more users. the >> the ceo saying is the best quarter ever. check share price of ford motor company. truck sales track record profits. comcast is official. cable operator buying content. the deal is worth $3.8 billion. it's a done deal that's going to happen. there you have the stocks. back to the breaking news. we do have pictures of vice
9:37 am
president joe biden arriving in iraq. it is a surprise visit. he was to urge baghdad's politicians away from fighting each other. he's tough and go fight isis. we look at our video later. it is stepping down. >> it's an investigation and the improper relationship rate to you. they had acted contrary to company's code of conduct and had engaged in a vividly inconsistent with the board that dictation for executive combat which he acknowledged an express regard. effective this morning he resigned the new interim ceo, jeffrey boyd at the company for 16 years. not the first time a site get up in some improper relationship. price on the stock year-to-date is up 6%.
9:38 am
the >> down half of a percent. elon musk, a successful guy planning an unmanned mission to mars by the year 2018. tommy what's going on with this one. >> eisai and one of these practices is designed to land anywhere in the other system. you fan of some twitter yesterday. their mission would be the first text fight unmanaged. stuart: why are you laughing? transfer may be the celebrity is threatening to move to canada can jump on the sprocket. stuart: at elon musk, space company, the first contract it's got. jo: lots of government contracts. we see the push towards mars specifically. 38 big move. he said before you want to take private enterprise to the planet. we will see you. transfer beats the headset.
9:39 am
jo: a lot of people assume it's on the private side of things. stuart: here's the story. uber testing a two minute wait time. you can keep them waiting two minutes. beyond that, they start charging you. stuart: the headline of this to be five minutes another testing two minutes because they want people to come downstairs and in the car and get going. liz: this is so bad. this is the dumbest thing they could've done right now. their car rides are so expensive. they've got other companies competing with them.jo: f. you e showing to do, it's more money. if you go past the two-minute mark, they start charging us if you are in the uber. >> drivers are a couple minutes late picking up the passenger, that would be a nice competitive push back.
9:40 am
stuart: you knew i was going to come to you about uber. why do you feel about uber is waiting time? >> it now, i am a very avid uber customer and i have been signed in the past. all i do is look at it like this, it's made the cost go up by $2. stuart: you're a good man, shellady and that's a fact. check out big word. we are coming back a little tighter, but not much. 89-point 17952. the nfl draft tonight in chicago. instant millionaires will be made. it's a big night for football fans. former nfl star coming up next in the next hour i should say. he says if you can do it all over again, you would've chosen baseball is dead. nearly a million people sign a pledge to boycott target over his bathroom policy. up next, he says he might stop shopping there, too.
9:41 am
9:42 am
9:44 am
stuart: ted cruz and carly fiorina grab the headlines with their big vp announcement yesterday. we have one of ted cruz and a supporter the program right now. he thinks we are going to talk about ted cruz but were not. louis go marge and i are going to talk about the target boycott. the petition is closing in on the million signatures.
9:45 am
this is all about targus bathroom policy. a million people 962,000 to be precise opposed it. louis coburn is with us. you thought we were going to talk ted cruz and carly cruz and privacy arena. but we are talking bathrooms at target. you're not going to shop there. >> i've been a prosecutor, judge, doj statistics several years ago said 18% of women reported being raped. at least 20% have reported these sexually abused by men. the last numbers i saw were around three times 1% claim to be. in fairness, i'm sure that number will go up when predators find out all they have to do a save if you like a woman today and they get to go to the women's restroom. but for target to be politically correct at the expense of sexual abuse pic guns -- of victims
9:46 am
who've been abused by men come away party scene stories of women who freaked out on the name and come in. the last thing that he sexually abused woman from my helping them in that missing people in hearing from victims, the last thing they want is some guy walking in in a very private matter by going to the restroom. it is really political correct ms. run amok. stuart: it seems to me for the first time i can remember there is a strong pushback against this politically correct move. for example, 962,000 people signed the petition. as i understand it, we've got nine states which are considering bathroom loss just like they have in north carolina. one of those states as minnesota were target is headquartered. it seems to me the pushback in
9:47 am
your part of the pushback. >> sewer, i don't know whether it will work or not, that is the only way to register a protest. this has just common sense. or having faith, it is political correctness run amok. we have gone so far off the course to try to appease people who don't manifest physically what they claim is true in their minds. and i mean, you know, stuart, when you look at the effectiveness, even bill o'reilly is mr. culture war, we've got to stop this war, on his show he turns to the lawyers in that they don't want them to go into women's restroom basically. who are they trying to protect? bill o'reilly to ask that question. holy cow. hard to believe. anyway, we need to protect women
9:48 am
who have been sexually abused despite target metrics to help maybe three times for 1%. in one shot to the obama administration. i don't do this often but they are really creating a new jobs program in the latter industry. as you know, they said you build a higher fence, people build bigger letters and they've announced that they will bill the white house fence five feet taller. obviously it's a jobs bill and isolate the white house for their latter jobs bill. stuart: we've got about 45 seconds left and i do want to talk about cruz and carly fiorina. it's been widely seen as desperation. that's what the media is saying. you think this will work to win him indiana? >> well, i think it is again how transparent database. he tells you exactly what his thinking.
9:49 am
he tells you what is going to do. he doesn't need a bunch of so-called experts to come in and put an agenda together. i think it is fantastic and has been my mind up and to do with her being a woman that makes it fantastic. it is she has been so pointed and exactly go away not critical issues and doing better jobs than most about that. i think you got to truth tellers there. it'll be terrific. i love it. stuart: has. stuart: as always, thank you for joining us. coming back a little bit, down 83 points. 17958 as we speak. the drugmaker after lapses by medical device maker saint jude medical pictures of saint jude of the best performers in the s&p 500. 25%. lower sales at gnc. the company says its turnaround
9:50 am
plan taking longer than expected. look what happens. 26% down. liberal hollywood taking shots at president reagan's good comedian will ferrell will star comedian will ferrell will star in a comedy about the president's alleged dementia. i find it disgraceful, but we'll hear about that in this story. mobility is very important to me. that's why i use e*trade mobile. it's on all my mobile devices, so it suits my mobile lifestyle. and it keeps my investments fully mobile... even when i'm on the move... ahhh.
9:52 am
and it keeps my investments fully mobile... you premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™, you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light.
9:54 am
>> at yours are not supposed to be politicians had maybe reagan. you're an entertainer. >> i'm just grateful they lead actors though. since we each have it though, that's all we have. stuart: i don't know whether you caught it yesterday but that was george hamilton and treat williams. they run the show. they said members of hollywood should stay out of politics. joining us now is lisa booth, republican strategist. i find it difficult. will ferrell is going to star in a comedy playing president reagan and his second term battle and his alleged dementia. they are going to make fun of president reagan. i'm disgusted by this. did you think hollywood would
9:55 am
make a funny movie movie about ted kennedy's alleged alcoholism or about bill clinton and monica lewinsky. the answers that they would not. >> you'd see an you'd see in our bridges that have been stuart: average from who? >> from the left and the media. this is incredibly disrespectful . someone who turned the economy around, someone who stood up to communism, stood up to the soviet union and a prayer for cover, one that we desperately need right now. and i find the hypocrisy on the left, and hypocrisy in the entertainment industry just appalling. folks like leonardo dicaprio who take the private debt to the world economic forum where he railed again the climate change and agreed in the energy
9:56 am
industry, takes the private jet leaving a massive carbon footprint and doing so. stuart: i think this has something to do with the election. there's an upcoming article in "the new york times" sunday magazine, an interview with president obama. the last line president obama says he wants to lay to rest the myths about the reagan economy. i'm not suggesting that potter can variously, but i think there is a movement to third to undermine the whole idea of tax cuts in growth and i think it the left is doing it. >> the left has long tried to try to do harm to the legacy left behind. they've done this continuously. they don't want to admit the fact that this economy and this country so great economic growth under president reagan. they want to do everything to take the legacy of way but it's not going to work because american golden and high regard.
9:57 am
he showed the leadership that we desperately need right now in america. stuart: i'm sorry i took up most of the interview time with my own rant. i apologize for that. come again and see israel sent. >> will do. thank you. stuart: iconic figure of legendary coach bobby knight. throws the chair. i think he was fired for that. his diatribe supporter. a very good man to have on your side in indiana. plus antoine mandell played a decade in the nfl. he's going to be here. she's talking about the phone call you get on draft i do makes you an instant millionaire. he's been there. he will tell us all about it. second hour of "varney & company" two minutes away.
10:00 am
10:01 am
>> this is a combustible issue. the federal government has to approve the use of a state health exchange to cover illegal immigrant children. we're seeing it at the state level, but states are doing it separately. when you have -- excuse me, a state health exchange doing it, it would set a national precedent. so you either have the hospitals having to deal with illegals in the emergency rooms, or you're going to have to have taxpayers in california funding health coverage for illegal immigrants. some say that helps keep costs down if you do it. that's the debate in california raging right now. stuart: californians are just getting out of bed -- >> 143 million watch in california. [laughter]
10:02 am
stuart: that's a nice thing to say. >> coming your way. stuart: all right. indiana, big vote five days from now. do or die for ted cruz. but you have to think that bobby knight's endorsement for donald trump seals the deal for trump. political pundit and sports host tamara holder is here. our audience doesn't know you as a sports person, they think of you as a politico. >> i know. i'm a sports person through and through. i was born and raised in colorado, my dad played -- stuart: which sport? >> on the football team. i bragged about it once, and he said, yeah, i collect ared balls. [laughter] stuart: i think donald trump has a real vote-getter here in bobby knight. >> yes. stuart: who is the greater vote-getter in indiana? carlycarly fiorina as the veep e with ted cruz or bobby knight enforcing donald trump? >> one is a loser and has a record of losing, and another is
10:03 am
a winner and has a record of winning, and that's not carly if fiorina. so you can figure out who that person is. stuart: is bobby knight that big? >> oh, yes, he's huge. sure, because he's a legend. he is the most winningest coach in d i history -- stuart: he's chucking a chair across. he was fired for that, i believe. >> he's very definal, he's known for his outbursts, as you can tell right there. that's probably one of his most famous ones. he doesn't hold anything back. and he also said in this quote he only votes for the person who he thinks is best for the job which makes him more credible than being a right-winger kind of guy. stuart: you surprise me. i offered you the chance to bash trump on the grounds that he's a bully -- i'm careful using that word, that's what they're saying, but you didn't say that. >> see, i'm not as -- stuart: predictable? >> yes. [laughter]
10:04 am
stuart: bernie sanders is laying off hundreds of campaign staffers. he is a socialist. he is laying people off. you are a democrat. what's going on when a socialist lays off hundreds of people? >> well, because you have to have money to pay people, and he doesn't have government money to pay his workers. that's why he's laying them off. stuart: seems strange to me. i mean, mr. socialism laying people off? i trust that they will get government retraining programs, they'll have compensation, they'll be given -- maybe filing a lawsuit for wrongful dismissal. i'm sure we're going to see that, aren't we? >> i don't think there's wrongful dismissal. he will help his staffers move on because, obviously, his campaign is strug, and it's better to keep them, to let them go than to keep them. why are you laughing at me? this isn't fair. stuart: you're struggling to justify a socialist laying hundreds of people off. >> if heed had your money, stuart, then he wouldn't lay them off. [laughter] he doesn't have that.
10:05 am
stuart: you're trying to get to me, aren't you? [laughter] you know you're defensive. you know you are. socialists are not supposed to lay people off. >> socialists who have public money, then they don't lay them off. he doesn't have that right now. stuart: new pictures -- i'm sorry, tamara. new pictures, vice president joe biden, he has just arrived in iraq. it is a surprise visit. he wants baghdad's government to stop the in-fighting. he says, come on, get together and fight isis. surprise visit. >> yeah, that's going to happen. they're really going to listen to him. stuart: oh, i offered you another opportunity here to support the administration. you just knocked it away. >> not predictable. stuart: that's very true. thanks, tamara. next case, very serious story for you. look at this. airstrikes directly hitting a hospital in rebel-held aleppo in syria. a local human rights agency says at least 27 people killed including three children. and, by the way, the city's last remaining pediatrician also
10:06 am
killed in that attack. airstrikes on rebel-held areas in that city have killed 91 people in the past six days, allegedly. it is it is the assad regime that's doing it. frequent guest on this program is sebastian volcker, chair of the threat knowledge group. recently told the heritage foundation this, and i'm quoting: the only thing you can negotiate with a jihadi is how you will be killed. will you be decapitated, burned alive or crucified? sebastian gosher, author of "defeating jihad," is with us now. that's pretty strong stuff. you're, basically, what you're saying in that book and in that speech yesterday, you can't negotiate, you kill 'em. that's what you're saying. >> well, you have to kill the worst of the worst, absolutely. but on the long run -- and this is why i wrote "defeating jihad," stuart -- you have to undermine and delegitimize their
10:07 am
ideology just the same way we did with communism during the cold war. you have to make that brand fail. so the kinetic part of this war, that's part of it, but on the long term this is a totalitarian ideology just like communism, and we have to take down their ideology. stuart: now, in donald trump's speech on foreign policy yesterday, it was very scripted. one of the things that he said was we are going to defeat isis, we are going to destroy them. he may well want a pullback of american power in some areas but not in that area. you with trump on this? >> look, the fbc has disclosed that i add viewed trump last year -- advised trump last year, my wife is on senator cruz's national security team. the speech was much better than usual, but he read it off a teleprompter. that's not hard to do. he was very vociferous about defeating isis, but a lot of the speech was contradictory. his attitude to nuclear weapons,
10:08 am
to freeloaders, to israel, to our treaties, it's an improvement, but it really is late in the game, and it has to still deal with lots of internal contra ductions. stuart: so you don't approve of america's retreat from the international scene? >> no, i'm not a neo-con, so i'm not -- i agree with mr. trump, we're not in nation-building business. but when we go to war with an existential threat, we need to go to war, not this death of a thousand cuts, the obama administration is doing. i mean, 200 special forces guys to syria? we have the best of the best. but isis has 80,000 fighters and six million people living on its territory. so, yeah, we -- if you go to were, go big or go home, and i can agree with that when it comes to the speech yesterday. stuart: do you think there is the sentiment in america today to go big and put people, our troops, on the ground to defeat -- is there the sentiment in america to get out there and kill 'em?
10:09 am
>> not at all because of the last 15 years' catastrophic policies whether it's the bush administration or today. but america can do this, and you can convince the taxpayers, but you have to say why you're doing it and what the stakes are. you have to connect the events in aleppo to san bernardino. if you don't make that connection, the average citizen is going to say, no, sorry. afghanistan wuss a -- was a catastrophe, iraq is even worse, i'm not paying for this. it has to have the leadership from the white house explain why we have to do what needs to be done. stuart: let me come back at you a little bit here, because it seems isis territory is shrinking, we have destroyed, i believe, $800 million of their cash, their paying -- they're paying their fighters half price, etc., etc. you could say incrementally we are making gains against isis, and the prime minister, president obama's policy, to some degree, is working. you could say that. >> you could. but as we put out in our report recently, threat knowledge org,
10:10 am
2015 saw the most incidents of jihadi plots on u.s. soil since september 11th. does that sound like we're winning? san bernardino, they legioned allegiance to al-baghdadi, and that's the biggest attack on u.s. soil since september 11th. even if their territory's shrinking, the brand internationally is growing. look at brussels, look at paris. stuart: we hear you. thank you very much. yes, sir. check that market. we are coming back, way off the session lows. we were down, what, about 110 i think at that point? >> yeah, that's right. stuart: now we're down 54. facebook is holding its big gain, up $10 a share, $119 on facebook as we speak. the nfl draft starts on the. this is -- tonight. this is a very big deal. dozens of 20-somethings turned
10:11 am
into instant millionaires. up next, a former nfl star will tell us what it's like to get that life-changing call. would he do it again? >> if i had an opportunity to go back and do it again, i think i would have chose the less violent sport, if you will, in terms of playing baseball. everhas a number.olicy but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families that have supported them, we offer our best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote
10:14 am
stuart: all right. check the big board, we're down 52 points, i'd call that a very moderate loss. oh, look at facebook. i'd say that's a very strong gain. >> it sure is. stuart: thank you, liz. chiming in nicely. [laughter] do you own facebook or something? >> no, i don't think so. stuart: get that smile off your face. comcast, yeah, they are going to buy dreamworks, they're up 23%. there's a pop. new this morning we're hearing that the secret service is trying to raise the white house fence by 5 feel. what's this all about?
10:15 am
>> well, we should have a snark buzzer because the internet is saying, oh, the white house does like a wall. [laughter] here's what's going on. an increase in fence jumpers. so they are raising the fence by about 5 feet to about 11 feet high. it's been too easy to jump in the past. it is a security issue for the white house. stuart: fair point. thanks very much. >> sure. stuart: the obama economy -- i'm saying it's on a down trend. dare i say that we're heading towards a recession? it kind of looks like it. tamara holder, glutton for punishment, remains on the set in our new york studio, and she's with me now, aren't you? >> i'm here. stuart: this is a problem for hillary -- >> no. stuart: yes, it is. we had 2% growth in the fall of last year, 1% in the winter, now it's a half percent. that's a down trend. now, hillary is locked into president obama's policies which have created this down trend, created this near recession. she's got a political problem.
10:16 am
>> you're telling me right now that obama created this mess? stuart: he's had eight years -- >> obama created the -- right, and we're finally getting out of, digging out of this hole. stuart: all these regulations -- >> that george bush created. stuart: we're not digging out of a hole. how could we be digging out of a hole if we're heading toward a recession? >> well, unemployment has gone up -- i mean, gone down. hasn't it? stuart: because 93 million people who are eligible to work are not in the work force. >> okay. well, look at the people who support president obama. he's at his highest approval rating, he's at 53%, the highest he's been since 2014, since the midterm elections. so i don't think that obama is hurting hillary unless you live in this bubble of bashing obama and bashing hillary. outside of that, obama is maybe not as liked as he should be or as liked as he wants to be, but i don't think that he's hurting her or that he's creating serious trouble for her. additionally -- stuart: hillary clinton has the
10:17 am
same economic policy as president obama. what will she do to turn the economy around? >> she will make it better. stuart: how? >> she is trying to build on it. stuart: how? >> by preventing jobs from leaving the united states. by making sure that people have health care, the people who don't have health care -- stuart: that is going to turn -- what happened to obamacare? >> well, obamacare has not been the best that it should have been. stuart: but she's locked into that policy. >> she's not locked into it. stuart: so to change things around, to get us some growth, she's going to stop jobs from leaving in america -- we don't know how she's going to do that -- she's going to provide more health care, what else is she going to do? invest -- oh, i know, she's not just going to spend on education, she's going to invest -- right. stuart: and how long do we have to wait for that pave? >> well, let's see, it depends on how long the republicans want to obstruct in congress, which
10:18 am
is something they're very good at. stuart how long will it take before green energy policies finally produce a real burst of growth in the job market? >> well, i'm not a big fan of clean energy. i think that nuclear energy is the way to go. however, the more jobs they create, the more windmills they create, the more solar panel, the more jobs they have. right now we're outsourcing all of that to japan and china. bring that back to the united states, to california -- [laughter] why are you laughing? this is serious. stuart: you know perfectly well this is not going to work. >> well, it's not going to work with the republicans in congress -- stuart: it's all their fault. >> their proud of being obstructionist. stuart: it's all reagan's fault -- >> no, it's bush's fault. and it is. stuart: o.k. >> we wouldn't have wars, and we wouldn't have people that couldn't pay their mortgages if it wasn't for that awesome president. stuart: you know, the audience loves you. >> i know they do. [laughter] stuart: thank you, tamara holder.
10:19 am
the nfl draft kicks off tonight in chicago. next, a former nfl player that says if he could do it all over again, guess what? he'd choose baseball. more "varney" in a moment. poor mouth breather. allergies? stuffy nose? can't sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right.
10:21 am
perfect driving record. >>perfect. no tickets. no accidents... >>that is until one of you clips a food truck, ruining your perfect record. >>yup... now, you would think your insurance company would cut you some slack, right? >>no. your insurance rates go through the roof. your perfect record doesn't get you anything. >>anything. perfect! for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. and if you do have an accident, our claim centers are available to assist you 24/7. for a free quote, call liberty mutual at
10:22 am
switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. stuart: first round of the nfl draft begins tonight. this is a really big deal. 3221-year-olds --32 31-year-olds will become millionaires overnight. antwaan randle el, back in 2002 you were drafted. it was the second round, pittsburgh steelers. you got the call, do you remember what it was like? >> i do. i almost passed out. [laughter] it's a very exciting time. you've got your family around you, it's something you've worked for just about all your life when it comes to putting
10:23 am
the work in and getting to the nnl. so it's -- nfl. so it's a joyous to time, but it can do be tough anticipating and waiting, but it was great. the experience, you always remember. i remember where i was, i was standing in my parents' bathroom, and we were talking, my agent called, and they walked up and announced my name. and, again, just about passed out from there. stuart: i think i made a mistake, i think it's 31 tonight. i made a mistake. let's get that right, it's 31. now, you said that if you could do it all over again, you actually would have chosen baseball. what's with thatsome. >> well, that was, that was me saying that because that's the way i've been dealing with some different pains or whatever, and i've always enjoyed baseball and had the opportunity just knowing what i've experienced with my body, some different head injuries and knees and injuries that i have from that standpoint. obviously, we can't change the past. i don't regret anything when it comes to playing in the national football league, but having a chance to still be playing
10:24 am
baseball right now -- stuart: yeah. >> -- it does sound pretty good. stuart: yeah. you've got a longer career in baseball, that's for sure. >> there you go. stuart: now, i looked you up. i googled you. you played basketball at the university of indiana. you were coached by bobby knight, i believe. >> yes, i was. stuart: now, i don't want to get into politics, but i do have to tell you, you know this, that bobby knight has endorsed donald trump. there he is last night greeting donald trump. what do you make of all of this? >> well, that's his choice. [laughter] playing for coach knight was awesome. i'm sure they probably have some history from that standpoint. but that's a choice of coach knight. i love him regardless of his decision of who he's choosing when it comes to president. good coach, i love him. he taught me a lot of great things, and certainly anybody who came through there and was taught and coached by him has learned a lot. he's always tried to help out whoever he could. stuart: again, i'm not trying to get you into politics, now,
10:25 am
would i do something like that with a guy like you? i wouldn't dream of it. [laughter] look, a lot of people are saying that bobby knight is still big guy in indiana. is he? >> is he still the guy? stuart: no, not the coach, but is he still a man who can move votes, a man who is looked up to in the state of indiana? is he king of indiana still? >> coach knight is indiana. i mean, he's everything. i mean, what he brought to the state of indiana, to the university of indiana, was enormous. i mean, it was great to be able to win in the way that he won and to be able to win with sticking to what he believed worked. and it worked for so many years. he's still king. i mean, he's done a whole lot, like i said, for the state of indiana, and i'm sure there's a lot of fans who still love coach knight. coach knight is loved in indiana. stuart: if you could go back to 2002 standing in your parents' bathroom all over again and get that call, i bet you would. you'd take it. you'd take the call, and you'd take the money, wouldn't you? >> oh, you wouldn't turn it down.
10:26 am
obviously, if i had a chance when i was 18 to make that decision to play baseball, but you don't turn down that opportunity when it's standing in front of you like that. it's always, how do you explain it, it's a life-changing opportunity, it's one you don't get all the time. so when it comes to that and you're put in that position, you've got to jump and run with it. stuart: so you've played basketball, you've played baseball, and you played football. >> right. stuart: you ever played real football? you know, soccer? >> i tried that, and i felt like sometimes i was standing around, and i didn't have the ball with me enough. [laughter]you've got to stay in your lane, and i didn't like that. stuart: thanks so much for joining us. thanks very much. >> thanks for having me. stuart: facebook's mark zuckerberg, he's a $55 billion man. next, one tock picker who -- stock picker who says facebook's stock is going to go to 200 which would make zuckerberg a whole lot richer.
10:30 am
stuart: still down about 50 points, 17,983. we still have facebook close to all-time highs. it went straight up this morning, $10 higher. look at gnc for a moment. you see those stores absolutely everywhere. here's the problem for the company, it says its turn-around plan is taking longer than expected. it's down 26% on that statement. how about that? and, again, facebook -- in a few moments we've got a money guy on the show. he thinks that stock is going to $200 per share. wait for it, he's coming up later. how about politics? karl rove is with us. all right, karl, i know we're
10:31 am
supposed to talk about ted cruz and carly fiorina. i want to talk about the nominee and who it's going to be. can i just put my point of view to you for a second? >> sure. stuart: do you mind if i do that? >> not at all. it's your show, varney, it's your show. stuart: i know you don't want trump, i got that. but i put it to you, at this stage in the game, it's not likely to be anybody else but trump. and if you do get somebody else other than trump, i think that person loses. what do you make of that? >> well, i don't think it's, i don't think it's settled, you know? we had, trump had a great night in the primary, but remember this: nate silver, who is the 538.com forecaster or, indicated that if trump got 94 delegates, that would put him on a past to 1155, and if he got 103 delegates the other night, that would put him on the path to 1237.
10:32 am
he got 109, however, that shows how narrow a path either side has to its outcome. so if in indiana this raises the stakes on indiana. in indiana cruz has to win it, take all 27 statewide delegates, plus he needs to win five of six of the congressional districts so that, in essence, in indiana he then reduces the number that trump was expected to get, somewhere between 9-22, he needs to reduce that below the trend line in order to keep this race going. if he loses in indiana, the contest is over. the contest becomes too difficult for anybody to bend that curve back down sufficiently. so the contest is not yet over, and we shouldn't expect it to be. stuart: okay, fair point. do you think the republican party can be unified behind a trump candidacy? i know that's a tough question. i don't think it can be, but you tell me what you think. >> well, i think, look, i think -- it's going to be very
10:33 am
hard. i wrote my column about it this morning in "the wall street journal", because it really -- unity is a critical element here. the number of people in the exit polls in the primary who said they would not vote for the republicans if their candidate didn't get nominated is jaw-droppingly high. it's twice and three times in some instances what the party can have in the way of defections. and then if you take a look at the national polling on this, there was a poll out this week and, again, once again, democrats and republicans both have a problem, but the republican problem is bigger than the democratic problem. so i don't know. it depends upon the candidate. the problem for trump is he has none of the normal moral capital that most candidates come out of the convention with. he's not a lifelong republican who's toiled in the vineyards loyally. he's given money, lavished it on democrats. he voted for john kerry in 2004 and has suggested he might not have voted for mitt romney in 2012 and give four checks to
10:34 am
hillary clinton in 2008. stuart: karl, he's growing the republican vote. look at the turnout in republican primaries. it's, what, 60%? that is donald trump. >> no, it's not. stuart: he's not the guy, all those people -- >> varney? stuart: rove? [laughter] >> if it were all donald trump, he'd be getting higher than the it,centage of the vote because that -- there's been a big jump in the turnout in the republican primary. but if he only got the votes from the new people that voted, he'd be getting about 42, 43% of the vote before the primary, and he was getting 37. my point is, is that he's brought new people in, but so have the other contenders mainly because people desperately want to sort of end the reign of obama. my point is that, look, this is going to be a mess no matter who is the nominee. if he's the nominee, he's got real challenges in unifying the republican party that he has conducted a scorched earth campaign on.
10:35 am
if it's not him, there's going to be a real problem for whoever that is and conciliating the trump supporters who say if it's not my guy, it's the highway. it ain't going to be a pretty picture when we end in cleveland. stuart: we'll see. we've been running a graphic all week, celebrities who are threatening to leave the country if donald trump is elected. i have to ask you, would you leave the country if donald trump is elected? >> now, varney, i know you're from great britain originally, and you're a proud american now, but you're not familiar with our traditions. do you know where i live? stuart: no. >> i live in austin, texas. i live in the great state of texas. you think i would surrender the state of texas for any other place in the world? you've got to learn a little bit more about us texans. come down and spend a little bit of time in our state. stuart: i do know that austin, texas, is a liberal outpost. i would have thought maybe you wanted to get out. >> i'm involved in combat every day, but i live in a great state. we have had so many economic refugees from the policy of barack obama, i would have
10:36 am
thought you would have known what a fantastic place this is with wonderful people. yeah, i live in the little moscow on the colorado river. [laughter] austin, texas. but, by god, i enjoy gauging in ideological warfare every single day. come on down to texas, maybe we can get you to make the transition are from the snobby east coast down to the real america which is south of the red river and west of the sabine. stuart: i'll think about it. [laughter] karl rove, you're all right. thank you for joining us. >> absolutely. stuart: let's get back to facebook. look at this. still at $119 a share. now, we've got a guest, he says facebook is the ultimate growth stock. market watcher jason rotman is with us. all right, jason, you say that facebook goes to $200 a share. when and why? [laughter] >> well, stu, first of all, it's good to be on again. secondly, i was calling facebook to be $100 by the end of last
10:37 am
year when it was in the 50s and 60s. 200, even though it seems outlandish to some, it's really not a big deal, okay? as far as when, i wish i had a crystal ball, but i would say in the next 24 months. as far as why, that's the more fun part to talk about. facebook is utterly dominating this new mobile digital economy like no other company in the world, first of all. second of all, facebook has three of the most trafficked, you know, mobile applications on planet earth, instagram, what's app and facebook messenger. there you go. that's a gold mine for facebook, these advertisers are rushing to advertise on their mobile platforms. where else are advertisers going to get the return on capital on the mobile phones? only facebook. number three, almost like berkshire hathaway, facebook is becoming the real conglomerate of this mobile economy. they're getting into virtual reality, they're getting into, again, mobile chat platforms like what's app. they haven't even started to tap
10:38 am
that for revenue. mark zuckerberg is a smart guy, there is no need to short him. stuart: i remember the days when amazon would go up $30, $40, $50 a share. microsoft would gain a 5, 6, 7% in a day. okay, that's a long time ago, but i remember nose days when they -- remember those days when prime technology companies went straight up. facebook has just not had that zoom straight up, and you're telling me it may well have those days when it gets 10, 15% up in the future? >> well, that's exactly what i'm saying really is that as you were speaking, the thought in my mind was we're really just getting started. i mean, even though facebook has quadrupled in the past, whatever, 18 months, we're really just getting started. this is a company -- the keyword is this, they're diversified. they're far from a one-trick pony at this point when zuckerberg started this little communications platform from his dorm room.
10:39 am
they have evolved by leaps and bounds to say the least. they have massive, massive user base around the world, and even more than that -- because this is a stock market -- they know how to make money from it unlike other companies. stuart: well said. jason rotman, thank you very much for joining us, you've glad ped the hearts of a lot of our viewers. thank you very much. target's transgender bathroom policy, nearly a million people signing a boycott of target stores. the people behind that push are next. i know what i can expect from usaa the usaa car buying app was really helpful. all the information was laid out right there. it makes your life so much easier when you have to purchase a car, so i've been telling everybody. save on your next car with usaa car buying service, powered by truecar.
10:40 am
parnell pharmaceuticals, spotparn on nasdaq. parnell is focused on delivering innovative solutions to unmetanimal health needs in the 70 billion dollar pet market. we have core competences in drug discovery and development, regulatory filings, we have our own fda approved manufacturing facility and we have a significant commercial presence in 14 countries. zydax is our lead compound that we've been marketing in australia zydax affectively regenerates cartilage and can literally save lives. we had one of our sales executives tell us a story of seeing a dog in a clinic that just four weeks earlier had been brought in to be euthanized. the pet parents had to carry the dog in, it couldn't even walk. after just four injections of zydax the dog was bouncing around in the clinic. we will soon launch that drug in the united states and also europe. parnell pharmaceuticals, parn on nasdaq. for the full interview go online.
10:43 am
10:44 am
this is good news for donald trump. congressmen coming out and publicly endorsing him. jeff miller from florida. there are now 16 gop congressmen that support donald trump. california, usually an afterthought. the state votes june 7. lots and lots of delegates at stake. connell mcshane is there. i am very, very sorry. i know that you are in san francisco. what are you going to tell me about donald trump in san francisco. >> across the state of california, trump is looking pretty good here. no matter how much you talk about this race. we have been talking about it all morning long. california, no matter how you do the math, is how you decide this
10:45 am
thing. let's do a couple of things. let's first look at the maps. for our purposes, look how many districts there are here. john k said: stu do well. some of the wealthy areas here. ted cruz's supposedly well organized in the l.a. area. we go to our child board. you have 53 districts in the state of california. if you win one, they will give you three delegates. thirteen more for the statewide winner. depending on how trump does next week in indiana, that will tell you how many delegates he needs to win here in california. he is winning in the polls. the mac a late check on this petition. against target stores. because of their bathroom
10:46 am
policy. 958,835 people that signed the online pledge to boycott target because of that bathroom policy. it looks like they are heading for a million. joining me now, the american family association. this is the group behind the boycott. you, sir, launch the whole thing. yes. got wind of targets that their policy. hodges bathrooms, bathrooms and fitting rooms. leading men have access to fitting rooms with women and girls. we find that to be troubling. because of the danger. not the transgender community, but there are sexual predators, real predators in america that will take advantage of that.
10:47 am
stuart: i think that you may have started the push back against this politically correct move that target is doing with bathrooms. you have close to 1 million people. i have nine states which are considering laws, rules, similar to south and north carolina. your opposition is really spreading. those states include minnesota, where target is headquartered. i think that you started something. >> absolutely. american people recognize something. there are more registered sex offenders and america and there are transgendered individuals. this is resonating with the american people. they have signed a petition to communicate with target. you may have a genuine intention, however, it is a
10:48 am
misguided policy. we do not want them put at risk for this attempt to force upon american people that we just do not want to go along with. >> the opposition to you is very simple. they say that you are a biggest. how do you respond? >> very simple. instead of pursuing this misguided policy, simply provide a third bathroom that is gender neutral. sole occupant. everyone can be serviced without this risk. target's refusal to embrace this commonsense solution communicates that they are really willing to sacrifice women and children and girls in an effort.
10:49 am
>> stopping the idea that you have a men's room and a women's room. leftist culture. leftist politics. >> it seems to be where we are going. >> it is unfortunate. it is chilling to me to see this left lurching perse -- pursue. the predators will stop at nothing. they will stop at nothing to create new victims. are we willing to pursue this politically correct agenda at the expense of women and children? is that where we are in society? we are asking more people to sign the petition. use the hash tag boycott target so we can continue to communicate to target and other businesses. we are not willing to risk our
10:50 am
most vulnerable. think about this. restrooms and sitting rooms. stuart: thank you very much, indeed. we appreciate it. up next, the man who killed osama bin laden. he tells us how we can defeat isis. ♪ the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen.
10:52 am
big plans. so when i found out medicare doesn't pay all my medical expenses, i looked at my options. then i got a medicare supplement insurance plan. [ male announcer ] if you're eligible for medicare, you may know it only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. call now and find out about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, it helps pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. to me, relationships matter. i've been with my doctor for 12 years. now i know i'll be able to stick with him. [ male announcer ] with these types of plans, you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. plus, there are no networks, and virtually no referrals needed. so don't wait. call now and request
10:53 am
this free decision guide to help you better understand medicare... and which aarp medicare supplement plan might be best for you. there's a wide range to choose from. we love to travel - and there's so much more to see. 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.
10:54 am
stuart: joining us now is rob o'neill. the man that killed osama bin laden. trying to negotiate with the nazis. >> i totally agree with it. >> a very hard line. >> the military age. this brand of ideology. need to be killed along with the capital of the islamic state. teaching kids how to decapitate people. they give these guys manuals on
10:55 am
how to handle your slaves. especially your sex slaves. everything from the glamorous lifestyle that they think they're getting. social media. stuart: sunday, this week. five years ago, five years ago, you shot osama bin laden. >> i did. we were in afghanistan. knowing we were going on a mission. stuart: you still dream about it. >> i see it every single day. i can picture what he looked like when he was dead. i saw his last breath. it is just a point and clip. stuart: i am sorry. i am not familiar. >> he is as close to me as you
10:56 am
are right now. stuart: you knew who he was. >> i knew in half a second. the two things i remember thinking was he is not surrendering. he is a threat. that is his nose. that is him. i was surprised how tall he was. how skinny he was. stuart: how long did it take? >> less than a second. we knew that he was going to be a suicide bomber. i was tired of being blown up. this was it. stuart: kind of on autopilot. >> then you realize, i may live now. five years ago. time flies. i think that that is times square. america came out in force and cheered you on. >> a did. we were shocked to see the overwhelming response. we were still in our gear.
10:57 am
i have friends that actually ran from the pubs down to the white house to cheer with everyone. i saw that guy climbing on a light pole here in times square. i am assuming he was at a pub. stuart: great to have you back. thank you very much. >> the amazing video of the moment, the very second that human life begins. sparking a political debate. that is minutes away. ♪
11:00 am
11:01 am
edward snowden. some say the movie depicts him as a hero. how about that. judge napolitano joins that debate this hour. we will show you that amazing video once again. the moment that life begins. it will give political. it will also get spiritual. the head of life. how about that big word. way off the lows of the day. now we are only down 28 points. facebook. lifetime high earlier. 121. 119 now. let's get to politics. ted cruz announcing carly fiorina as his running mate. monica, you first. desperation? will it work? >> if he had created this alliance month ago, maybe it
11:02 am
would have been helpful. this late date, it does look like a hail mary pass. would have been a great ticket. they would be a great governing team. that is not what this is about. it is also about trying to regain control with the new cycle. stuart: a quick sidebar question before we go to liz. quick sidebar. who was the better poke it or in indiana. bobby knight or carly fiorina? >> bobby knight in indiana, forget it. stuart: this is a long-term story here. donald trump being accused of sexism. this time for saying this about hillary clinton. watch it. >> the car that she has is a women's card. she has nothing else going. if hillary clinton were a man, i
11:03 am
do not think she would get 5% of the vote. >> that is a brilliant political line. it is a line that will stick. there is a ring of truth to that. if she were a man, she probably would have been out of this race. sexism, that is crap. he is neutralizing her argument. now at this early date. i think that it will be very effective. >> hillary has played this card. neutralizing it. he will plaster on clinton's sex scandal. >> got it. now i understand. the first national news program to show you the video. they have really turned violent, as you can see. the city was voting on a measure to condemn donald trump. ultimately, that measure was tabled.
11:04 am
pepper spray was used on the crowd. did they arrest anybody? >> nobody was arrested yet. a taser was used in the melee. very upset about donald trump. the mayor denounced the measure saying that is not our taxpayer dollars. we should be using it to fix things like sidewalks. stuart: i would have thought that there may be some arrests. you can tell who is doing what. >> knower press right now. stuart: why is the city, in the first place, debating a measure about condemning donald trump? >> this is california. need i say more? i am sure you will get more measures like this if donald trump becomes the nominee. the two pepper spray. how about that. ;-) bill clinton and his team to the fbi investigation.
11:05 am
>> washington times. a couple weeks ago, i raised the initial question about whether bill clinton may be in the fbi's crosshairs. the server in question belonged to bill clinton. he paid for it. he paid for the maintenance of it. it was housed on his property. whether it opens him up to some legal exposure. today's column talks about justin cooper. bill clinton's right-hand man. mr. cooper was the one that registered but didn't e-mail.com domain name. as well as the domain name that was used by the foundation. overlap communication and work going on. that is what the fbi is looking at. possible violations of public corruption laws. if that, in fact, is true,
11:06 am
remember mr. cooper is a tough political operative. maintaining the domain name. you could have the former president of the united states that is part of this investigation as well. deeper and deeper. stuart: nothing ever happens. >> yet. this investigation is not over yet, mr. varney. >> nikki haley testifying on capitol hill. the possible transfer of gitmo detainees. here she is just a few minutes ago. listen to this. >> i think that all the governors know what this means. put it in north carolina. put it in kansas. this is not my backyard. this is the united states of america. and area that we're trying to keep safe and bring terrorists from a place where they cannot harm anyone to an area that has populations within their states
11:07 am
that they can't harm. topher bid one ever happened. one. none of that wants that on us. none of us. we cannot afford that. and for what? why are we having this conversation? what is the urgency to move these detainees? i have yet to hear a logical explanation. >> governor haley is not wrong about this. she is right about this. she also is not a loan. whether the president has the power to matriculate these powers back to the united states and put them on u.s. soil. if he is intent on doing that, you may be looking at a constitutional crisis. stuart: you made your mark yet again. the end of our rapidfire section. back to hillary clinton. proving she is not running as an
11:08 am
obama democrat. now, she is running as a centrist clinton democrat much like her husband. dan henninger says this. welcome back. good to be with you. today we have news that the economy is on the verge of recession. hillary is locked into this whole idea of how do you get the economy moving. obama's economy. she has two separate herself out. >> she has to find a way. that economy is a huge stone around the candidacy of hillary clinton. there is no question about it. the third term of barack obama. that she is putting behind her now. she did it in her victory speech. suddenly, talking about a weak economy. people struggling. wait a minute.
11:09 am
wasn't barack obama president the last seven and a half eight years. bill clinton. then invoking franklin roosevelt. what we are saying here, seeing here, hillary mutating into a combination of fdr. the economy is a mess. bill clinton's successful economic policies in the 1990s. bye-bye, barack obama. she has begun the great clinton privet. no question about it. this bad economy created donald trump. it is his reason for being. she has to privet somehow into trump's space. >> that is a political privet. she will not change policies. she cannot do that. >> at the end of that victory speech, talking about all of these goals like climate change and things like that.
11:10 am
she is in a very difficult spot. bernie sanders supporters, standing out there leaning over her shoulder making sure she stays. >> exactly. how can she shift policies. you have bernie sanders still pushing, keep on going left. >> if this economy continues, it could win elections for the republicans. some of these race like ohio. that is .5 growth rate. hillary, nothing that she can do about that. she will not propose reducing the capital gains rate from 28% to 20%. she is wanting to wall street. donald trump is the nominee. a candidate or oppositional
11:11 am
candidate. it is now struggling to turn into an economic populist like donald trump. stuart: is she in enough trouble? >> i think she is. she has created an opening here. this has got to be donald trump's best day when he saw that figure for the first quarter. >> we are waiting for a response from him. >> it is a disaster. she is the deer to what is not working. >> i expect a tweet among those lines. momentarily. thank you very much, indeed. here is something new this hour. and trouble with nuns in los angeles. we cover everything on varney and company. including that. that fascinating video.
11:12 am
we show it to you frequently. the moment when life begins. spiritual debate, too. the head of the catholic league is next. ♪ hey dad. hey sweetie, how was your first week? long. it'll get better. i'm at the edward jones office, like sue suggested. thanks for doing this, dad. so i thought it might be time to talk about a financial strategy. (laughing) you mean pay him back? knowing your future is about more than just you. so let's start talking about your long-term goals... multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors. it's a big deal. and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing.
11:15 am
>> the singer, katy perry and trouble with los angeles dons. smoothing over her purchase of a contested convent. >> we have five nuns. a person had given them this property. they are saying we own the property. we want to sell it for 10 million to a local entrepreneur. katy perry wants to buy it. the nuns are saying, wait a second. you are misreading the vatican. we have yet to hear whether or
11:16 am
not katy perry can move into this 224,000 square foot mansion. >> there you go. not quite that simple. look at this video. finding the bright light marks the moment of conception. i think that it is amazing. let me back up a second. i think that the use of modern sonograms, where you can see the child in the womb moving, looking, glancing, i think that made an enormous difference to the abortion debate geared you can see the child. you see the moment of conception. the moment human life begins. i think it may have a somewhat similar effect on the abortion debate. >> one of the founders.
11:17 am
he actually performed tens of thousands of abortions. he gave up this practice. why did he change? i saw the sonogram. i found out what i was doing. i could not live with myself any longer. on life issues, they are. it is the pictures. it is the sonograms. they do not lie. now you have this moment. it is not magic. something very special happened there. stuart: i want to run it again. it is not a particularly bright but in spot of light. did not quite work. you can see at. i think that that makes a difference. that is the moment when human
11:18 am
life begins. >> certain things begin to happen. stuart: nicely put. what will the proportions people say? stuart: they will say that that is just a chemical reaction. i think that it does signify something that will touch young people in particular. i am so happy that so many of them are pro-life. these pictures do not live. stuart: you are going to use these pictures? >> clearly we will use these pictures. it is incredible. science tells you what you can do. it does not tell you what you ought to do. now you need a more religiously informed conscience.
11:19 am
the brighter the explosion here, the fireworks, the healthier the egg. what does that mean? i want an olympic healthy baby. what happens if you do not find out that that is the case. what are we going to do? a little bit of this designer and engineering here. stuart: i think that i will say it is a chemical reaction. i think that that is what they will say. that bright moment of life. it is light. i think that that is very important. >> i think that it is undeniably true. stuart: we appreciate you being here. stayed there. i have more for you. the target bathroom boycott petition. nearly 1 million signatures. yesterday 850,000.
11:20 am
we will have more of that in a moment. outside our studios today. a couple fancy refurbished 1954 shots. $400,000. [laughter] ♪ poor mouth breather. allergies? stuffy nose? can't sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right. top gun graduate, aide to two u.s. presidents,
11:21 am
commanding officer and harvard national security fellow. i'd say buying a car, uh, can make you as nervous as landing on an aircraft carrier. but usaa car buying service mitigates those fears. uh, they make it a very easy experience for you. find the right car, save money. it's that easy. usaa car buying service, powered by truecar. exclusively for usaa members.
11:23 am
perfect driving record. >>perfect. no tickets. no accidents... >>that is until one of you clips a food truck, ruining your perfect record. >>yup... now, you would think your insurance company would cut you some slack, right? >>no. your insurance rates go through the roof. your perfect record doesn't get you anything. >>anything. perfect! for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. and if you do have an accident, our claim centers are available to assist you 24/7. for a free quote, call liberty mutual at switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance.
11:24 am
the two target stores facing controversy. allowing customers to use the bathroom of their gender identity as opposed to the gender of their birth. 969,000 signatures. bill donohue is still here. my opinion up front. i say that this is pushback. the first real pushback that i can remember. >> that is true. shame on target for trespassing on people's privacy rights. they have an expectation of privacy. understanding roles.
11:25 am
if bruce jenner says he is a woman and he never finished the job ought atomically, the man can never be a woman. a woman can never be a man. you are what you are at birth. you can pretend to play these games. dealing with this for decades. these people have a problem. they need to be treated. reengineering our society. the woman, in particular, being victimized on this. there are men, by sex, coming into their bathrooms. this is crazy. stuart: transgender say they are sensitive to this difficult choice that they have to make. we must change for that sensitivity. do you discount that argument? >> they have to lose their bright 2.1 that need to be treated here at it is a form of
11:26 am
insanity beyond political correctness. i am not interested in punishing anybody. they have to be treated with equal dignity. when it comes to social policy and private institutions such as target, asking us to reconfigure our lifestyle. this has gone too far. i hope that it continues. stuart: the first trailer for the new movie based on the life of edward snowden has been released. some say that this movie treats him as a hero. judge napolitano on that coming up next. >> two things. how is this not possible? >> a google search. also looking at everything they don't. e-mails. chats. whatever. ♪
11:30 am
. stuart: i got breaking news for you. wait for it. it's on the campaign trail. john boehner with strong words, and i mean strong words for ted cruz. what did he say? liz: he called ted cruz lucifer in the flesh. the news breaking moments ago, speaking at stanford, university. the former house speaker also had this to say.
11:31 am
he said i get along with a lot of people in my life, but i've never worked with a more miserable son of a blank in my life. so remember he resigned under pressure last fall from the conservative wing of the house led by ted cruz. stuart: i wonder if it has any impact on indiana. liz: we'll be following that and keeping of track of it. stuart: he's from ohio; right? liz: that's right. stuart: strong words. indiana does vote next tuesday. donald trump, ted cruz both there campaigning as of now. jeff flock live in evansville, indiana where trump will appear shortly. it looks like a big crowd already, jeff. >> well, it is a big crowd. although this is a smaller venue than some other ones. we were just talking about those boehner comments. is that an indication that perhaps the republican establishment is falling in line behind donald trump as opposed to ted cruz. i guess that remains to be seen. we'll see if mr. trump has nothing nig to say. i do want to show you this venue. this is a more presidential venue than anything we've seen thus far.
11:32 am
yesterday we had bobby knight, the big basketball arena. this looks like a president is about to walk out on stage. i don't know if that's by design or what. but it's a big crowd. i don't know if everybody is going to get in here. that's the only problem. a big crowd outside. i don't know if they'll be able to accommodate everyone. stuart: politically, it looks good if you've got a line out the door. so many people they can't all get inside, that looks good. that's a plus for any candidate, isn't it? >> under promise and overdeliver is always the best way to go. and business or in politics maybe. stuart: back to you later, jeff, thanks very much indeed. the first trailer for the new movie, which is loosely based on the life of edward snowdin. all rise jungle napolitano joins us now. this movie makes him look like some hero, should be treated as a hero. you know had i point of view here. i think the man is a traitor. what do you say? >> well, there's two arguments
11:33 am
here. one is -- and, by the way, good morning, stuart. it's nice to be with you even though there's this difference between us. and even if you have some irresistible chip on your shoulder. anyway. one of the arguments is he exposed what the government knows about those who are trying to kill us. and how the government knows it. and violated his oath and violated federal law in order to be prosecuted. i think that's probably a fair summary of your view. the other view is in a free society, one based on natural human rights, protected by the constitution, the government can't break the law and get away with it. and if it's the duty of a patriot to save people from the accesses of their government. and he took two oaths. one to keep secrets and one to preserves, protect, and defend the constitution. and if those conflict, he should owe obey the higher two of the. it's no surprise that oliver stone is going to make him look good and in this one instance i agree with ol'ler.
11:34 am
stuart: he broke the secrets. whether that's legitimate or not. he broke the law, gave away our secrets and people have died because of this. >> i don't know that there's any instance documented in which people have died as a result of this. but i do know that the government has been spying on americans since 1990. on the congress, on the supreme court, on the pentagon, it's own spies are spying on each other. shouldn't we know about that? . stuart: to get rid of that you expose everything to china? and now lives in russia? you can't fix this problem by becoming a whistle-blower or going to the authorities inside america exposing what's going on? no, you have to skip town. you've got to go to china, get them everything. and then you've got to go to russia, give them everything, and you call yourself a hero? get out of here. >> well, he's certainly not going to go to brought britain where they rip you off the floor if you say something they don't want to hear.
11:35 am
stuart: you're digressing, and you know where i'm coming from. he broke the oath and the man is a traitor. >> he had two oaths, and they conflicted. one was to preserve, protect, and defend the constitution, the same oath i took when i became a judge. the other was to not break secrets. equity do both. violating the constitution. stuart: i'm having a hard time smiling this morning, judge, when you come on like this. but nonetheless we accept your presentation. we accept you being on the show, and we may see you on monday. [laughter] >> i love you, stuart,. stuart: good luck tonight on special report. we'll be watching. >> thank you. all the best. stuart: sure thing. donald trump sounding -- sounding more presidential during his major foreign policy speech yesterday. the big points included this. yeah, support israel. america comes first. he also said destroy and kill isis. wally farris is with us. one of trump's foreign policy advisors.
11:36 am
that isis comment came from you, didn't it? >> well, it came from me, it came from everybody. but officially actually in reality came from mr. trump who our a presidential candidate and hopefully will be the next president. and that's a very serious matter, stuart, because isis rose in 2014. we are in 2016. it's not just isis that is still around but many crisis around the world. stuart: sure. i picked it out because the rest of the speech was not -- it wasn't isolationist, but it was retreat from exercising brute force around the world. i mean that -- that's the way i read it. and yet the isis comment was the soul area where it gets outer and say we'll kill them. that was the soul area where he was in that mode. >> actually if you look at the whole speech, at the map of the speech, it is basically an integrated speech, meaning there are things we cannot do unless you do other things. for example, in the case of isis, go kill it alone is not what mr. trump has meant.
11:37 am
he needs to fix things a little bit with the russians to take part of syria. he needs to make sure we have an arab coalition, he needs to put pressure on the iranians and push back on ideology. see all of these parts of the speech need to come together, and it's something that does administration the last two years and the previous one did not do. stuart: if you take the speech and its entirety, would you agree -- with a lot of people are saying this morning, that it is a real departure for america's foreign policy. from what we've seen in the last 30 years. you agree with that? >> i would agree that it is now an alternative to the policies that we've seen certainly over the past seven years. but also over the past 20 years. because these administrations passing one after the other republican and democrat had been relying on the expertise -- and he mentioned that in his speech. on the expertise of the elites and the experts that were not very interested in making sure that america comes first number one. and that it would defeat these specific enemies. stuart: one last one. he said that america had become too predictable.
11:38 am
and that he would make america unpredictable. you want to explain that? >> yes. that is a good question request many in the international arena have been answering calls for media worldwide about this. what does he mean? well, two levels. unpredictable, it's really for the -- for the tactical level. you don't announce that you're sending 250 marines or soldiers to do a fight in that particular location. that is a mistake and many mistakes have been made. but you do announce general principles. i want to have america's interest first, i want to try to fix alliances, i would be against isis -- these are principles have to be clear. but the tactical statements, they don't have to be given to the adversaries every time. stuart: okay. always a pleasure. thank you for joining us again, sir. appreciate it. >> thank you for having me again, stuart,. stuart: happening right now ted cruz in indiana. carly fiorina with him. cruz said, i'm quoting
11:39 am
directly now. the response to his -- to the announcement of carly as vice president has been so positive and overwhelming. he then has a rally in fort wane, indiana. and the way of indiana cause of votes in five days time. so that's the campaign trail from indiana. moments ago we brought you evanston, i think it was. i think we were there in evanston. liz: yeah,. stuart: where donald trump will be speaking in what looks like a presidential format. that's coming up in an hour. liz: also house speaker john boehner says he will support donald trump. stuart: that's john babier? liz: that's right. calling ted cruz lucifer in the flesh and a miserable son of a blank. stuart: right so boehner is now onboard saying he's with trump. liz: correct. stuart: wow it's happening thick and fast, isn't it? liz: yeah,. stuart: next we have classy, refurbished classic 1960s
11:41 am
11:42 am
happens after the quarter reading, which is somewhat disappointing. you can see the dow industrials right now down 12 points. some of the losers on the dow include ibm, microsoft, and verizon down anywhere from half to 1.2%. now, one of the winners today. ford is doing really well right now. profit gain at 2.5 billion year over year in the last quarter a year ago it was only 1. # billion. they doubled their profits in asia. another winner today, first order although that stock is down at this moment. but their earnings were better than expected. more varney after this
11:44 am
. stuart: another problem. for hillary clinton. the economy. the obama economy to be precise. she's tied to it. she was on the obama team. her campaign has followed the obama line. hillary and the president are lumped together. but today we learn the economy -- sorry the obama economy is not doing well. and because hillary is so closely linked, she has a big problem. her campaign has kept her economic policy firmly in line with obama's policy. tax the rich, spend more government money, ignore the debt, and tell everyone it's about fairness. that's been a recipe for economic which is trending this time just for the like a. her problem is separation. how does she get away from
11:45 am
policy failure? and how does she do it when bernie sanders is still in the game pulling her closer to the disaster known as socialism? truth is, she can't reverse course. she can't switch policies. if she suddenly caught a less government, she would be going against her own supporters, who want more of it. if the clinton team suddenly discovered the virtue of private enterprise, the left would call her a traitor and leave her campaign in droves. now, she may try to put some distance between herself and the president. she may try a pivot. she's already tried to go back to the good ol' '90s when bill was in charge. but it's superficial. it is a political gesture. not a real policy change. hillary clinton is stuck. tied to a president whose economic policies have failed the middle class and put the whole country into massive debt. the obama clinton economy is now a big clinton problem.
11:46 am
and we haven't even mentioned an indictment. snarky laugh there, was it? joining me now democratic strategist hill. i think we should tell our audience that you so oppose hillary you will vote for donald trump. i think you should tell them that. >> yeah. full disclaimer. and i don't want to make it sound like that. i actually fully support him. it's not that hillary clinton is such a bad choice that i have to support donald trump, i am now actively supporting trump. i've seen so much commonalty between bernie sanders and donald trump the issues that they're talking about, i think that he's the right president. stuart: wait a minute. you were a bernie sanders supporter. >> right. stuart: you realized here not going to win. >> yeah. stuart: so you said i'm going for trump. >> truly i was holding my nose to support sanders. stuart: what on earth is there similarity. >> they're talking about the same problems. from campaign finance reform to trade. and i see more in common with donald trump than sanders personally. stuart: okay. good.
11:47 am
we're very glad to hear that. >> yeah. stuart: and you must have lost a ton of business because of your switch. >> it's killing me. but it's all right. stuart: but if trump's the president. >> i'm not going to compromise my beliefs for some money. i can make it some other way. stuart: now, what yose there the economy is sliding down, that this is a problem for hillary because she is associated with obama economics, which produced this slide. what do you make of this? >> i think you're absolutely right. absolutely right. the word i kept hearing this morning is we had lackluster results. when i go home to south carolina, it is disastrous. it is so bad. and it's been like this for going on eight years. so it's clear the bureaucrats that comes with big government and big government solutions to these problems, they don't work. they don't work. stuart: how could you ever have been a bernie sanders supporter? >> i supported barack obama too. i'm on the wrong side of history. stuart: you've seen the light, haven't you? >> i have. as long as -- as long as we're going to talk about social
11:48 am
issues, i think i'm more of a republican. i'm more conservative. but when it comes to social issues and people's personal liberties, i wish we're not talking about abortion and transgenders in bathrooms and stuff. it's a distraction. let's talk about jobs, the economy, and isis. stuart: and my tax rate. >> mine too. yeah. stuart: there you go. >> right. stuart: do you think that hillary can -- dna was on the show, said she started to pivot away from obama. >> i don't know how she does. been pulled so far to the left from bernie sanders that she sees we're taxed in the middle dramatically and put some space between her and barack obama, i think the progressive wing of the party is just going to be up in arms. this is exactly what they feared she would do. so she really does it in earnest, she's got some problems. stuart: are there many people like you, democrat people who are for trump? >> i must get 100 e-mails a week, maybe more -- stuart: hold on a second. i think we can listen in for a second. we've got ted cruz talking
11:49 am
about john boehner who just half an hour ago called cruz lucifer. let's listen in for a second. >> you know, boehner's comments, he said something like he's the worst sob i've ever worked with. something like that. >> lucifer in the flesh. stuart: well, there was that too. the interesting fortunately is he said i've ever worked with. i've never worked with john boehner. truth of the matter is i don't know the man. i've met john boehner two or three times in my life. if i have said 50 words in my life to john boehner, i would be surprised. and every one of them has consisted of good to see you, mr. speaker. i've never had any substantive conversation with john boehner in any respect. and indeed this is something that's not publicly known. stuart: that's ted cruz there responding to john boehner's comments earlier today where he called ted cruz a nasty --
11:50 am
liz: lucifer in the flesh and miserable son of a blank. stuart: miserable son of a blank. ted cruz said he has barrel said 50 words to boehner in his life. okay. he's dealt with that. i'm sorry i'm out of change and got to shortchange you, but i've got to go indeed. thank you very much indeed. those porsches that i promised you, i'm going to get inside one of them in a moment and you're going to watch
11:53 am
you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™, you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call
11:54 am
to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ . stuart: i know that music. you don't think i know that music, but i do. that's janice jublin. what was it again with mercedes? what's the first line? what was it? oh, lord won't you buy me a mercedes-benz, my friends all drive porsches, i must make amens.
11:55 am
this man rob refurbishes old porsches and makes a ton of money doing it, haven't you? >> this is a lifelong passion, i've been doing it for 25 years building and racing porsches. stuart: and you make money, don't you? >> i do. stuart: this is a financial program. >> i absolutely love what you do and create a living. stuart: let's go. this is a blue porsche. it's a 1953. >> yeah. 195-3356 coop. this is the first car i built a little over 20 years ago. and it was the catalyst for my business. this is the car that started it all for me. stuart: when you say you built it, what does that mean? was it junk when you got it? >> it was. it needed full restoration. so rather than building it stock configuration, i wanted to build a car that i could go out and enjoy and use and race. so i restored it back in the condition that i could go out and compete and race in it. stuart: now, this is a very, very old car. >> it is. stuart: a 1953 porsche a classic of some sort? >> really all the 356 models have become classics.
11:56 am
they've built the cars from 1949 to 1965 and collectors all over the world are seeking these cars out not only to join their collection but to drive. stuart: how many have them have you refurbished and sold. >> just over 150 cars. stuart: 150? in how many years. >> 25 years. stuart: so that would be five a year, six a year. and you make $100,000 on each refurbished one? >> we can but it's really about how we build these cars and create something special for our client. stuart: hold on a second. we've got a black one. black porsche. i used to have a porsche, and it was a 9-1-1, and it was black, and it went like a rocket. but i got so old, i couldn't handle the speed, so i had to sell it. >> well, you know, what we do with these cars is we make it look like a classic 356 porsche but like you said 9-1-1 had so much speed, we put some of that speed components in it. and it has the performance of
11:57 am
a volkswagen now, the 911 and packaged in that 356 look. stuart: is everything new? i see lovely nice seats in there. i see an interior that looks brand-new. how about the engine? >> everything in it has been restored. and is good or better than it was originally. normally this car had 60 on hour or so power. now it has 200-horsepower. stuart: 200? >> yeah. it had drum breaks originally and now disk breaks. so this car is really designed for a driver. somebody that wants to enjoy and drive it. stuart: was it a wreck when you got it? >> the car was typical rust. every one of these cars that you find today have rust issues and places they've smacked into other cars. so they all take work. stuart: how much would you sell that to me now? >> i would sell you this car for $300,000 but it's for not sale. stuart: $250,000 for everyone else; right? >> that's right. this car we range from 250 to $450,000 depending on what the components are. stuart: all right. i like your products.
11:58 am
11:59 am
the usaa car buying app was really helpful. all the information was laid out right there. it makes your life so much easier when you have to purchase a car, so i've been telling everybody. save on your next car with usaa car buying service, powered by truecar. i'm in charge of it all. business expenses, so i've been snapping photos of my receipts and keeping track of them in quickbooks. now i'm on top of my expenses, and my bees. best 68,000 employees ever. that's how we own it.
12:00 pm
. stuart: hey, cavuto, this is a real car. you like it? all yours, sir. >> but i also know something about you. you're too darn cheap to buy it. stuart: very true. good luck. neil: well, good luck. there's a prius just down the street, though. all right. buddy, thank you very much. great show as always. we've been following this on the campaign trail. but, man, i don't think -- did john boehner know he had an open mic nearby? here's what he just said about ted cruz. lucifer in the flesh. i am democrat friends and republican friends. i get look with almost anyone, but i have negative worked with a more miserable son-of-a-bitch in my life. now, ted cruz is responding to those comments.
156 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on