tv After the Bell FOX Business June 6, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT
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one thing people looking to pick a stock should focus on? >> where they get their business. u.s. is mediocre. but rest of the world is worse than mediocre sadly. [closing bell rings] liz: bob doll, nuveen asset management. s&p and nasdaq at 2016 highs. david, melissa. take it up here. david: stocks rallying today. the s&p 500 and nasdaq hitting the highest levels of the year today as the dow inches ever so close to 18-k i'm david asman. melissa: i'm melissa francis this is "after the bell." we have you covered on big market movers. here is what else we have for you this hour. hillary clinton on california campaign blitz. she is holding one of four event in the state today, just 24 hours from crucial voting that could decide the future of the democratic race for the white house. it is make or break time. we'll take you live to lynwood. meanwhile donald trump is
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taking heat from both the left and key leaders on the right. he is doubling down instead of backing down. will it hurt him? our panel weighs in. major storm is barreling down on the gulf coast. we are live in the fox weather center with an update. david: before all that, want to get back to the markets. the dow ending near session highs less than 100 points away from 18,000. phil flynn of price futures and fox business contributor is watching action in oil and gold from the cme. ashley webster is on the floor of the new york stock exchange. ashley, first of all, today's biggest movers, who were they? >> yeah, dave, interesting day. we had the fed chairperson talking in middle of it all, janet yellen. but the big winners on dow, boeing, caterpillar up 1.9%. industrials doing well today. you had a stock like nike, up 1.6% and jpmorgan on the financial side up 1.08%. on the other side of the equation the laggard on the dow
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was home depot, down nearly 2%. loews down by the way down by the same amount -- lowe's. interesting reaction what janet yellen had to say today. the general consensus she was slightly more hawkish than was expected but she tried to throw away the may job report and say, you know what there are signs of strength elsewhere in the economy but chances generally believed here of june rate hike, basically nil. perhaps july. more stronger later in the year. we'll see. dave? melissa: ashley, thanks so much. oil following stocks higher ending just below 50 bucks a barrel. what was the big driver today? >> i think it was janet yellen. it was the fed but a lot of concerns about supply. look what happened in nigeria overnight. the nigerian rebels, nigerian avengers attacked oil pipelines reducing production. their very important export terminal could be shut for the entire month of june.
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that could cut into global supplies. we're seeing signs in the u.s. supplies are getting cut as well. we heard from a private forecast that said we would have million barrel draw in cushing, oklahoma, this week. that is the most important delivery point for oil in this country. that is showing tightening supplies. we signs of strong demand with us. rising stock market. that will tighten supplies up today. in gold today they were afraid of janet yellen again. why shouldn't they be? every time janet yellen seems to speak there is concern prices go back down. they shook off janet yellen. pulled back, rally higher in the close. gold back higher in the day. back to you. melissa: phil, thank you so much. david? david: janet yellen sounded kind of positive in the economy despite worst month of hiring in nearly six years. the fed chair stopping short of taking a june rate hike off the table at upcoming fed meeting. joining me now, jason rotman,
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lido i'll advisors and john tamny. john, first to you, some watching janet yellen were wondering why we need the federal reserve. you have written in a book which i hold in my hand, "who needs the fed? ". but question is how do we get rid of it? >> who cares what janet yellen thinks. the channel trying to influence the u.s. economy is the u.s. banking system which accounts for 15% of total lending. opposite of dynamic lending. that number is in free fall. what difference does it make if the fed increases rates which banks lend to each other? it has nothing to do with the real economy anymore. david: jason, what would we lose if we got rid of the fed? >> what would we lose? it would take probably 100 years to figure out how to get a working replacement so that you know, this economy can function even .1 of what it is doing now. there is this idealist utopian vision, then there is practicality of what makes things worth. i'm kind of for the latter.
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the fed may not be perfect but it is working right now. david: let's hear from the utopian over here. john, how -- according to jason it will take 100 years to get rid of the fed even if anybody wanted to? >> if we don't get rid of it the markets will render it irrelevant. david: how, john, how? >> simply because it can't be a lender of last resort. no serious bank would go to it for a loan. it can't -- david: aren't banks doing that already? that's what happened in the financial bailout. the fed opened window to allow financial institutions to get cheap loans? >> the fed should exist to bail out insolvent banks? that is exactly what it was created for. david: jason, hard to argue against that that is precisely why fed was invented, for taxpayers pay taking up bill of high-priced gam brothers. >> what are we going to do, go to clamshells as currency? it doesn't make sense to me.
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david: john what about that? what would we do for currency if we got rid of the fed, quickly? >> what would we do. think without the government to create currency market forces wouldn't come up with currencies. you don't need the fed to have u.s. dollar. furthermore, lots of institutions would happily lend to solvent banks if the fed weren't there. as is solvent institutions as a rule do not go to the fed. it is not needed. david: gentlemen i didn't think it was conceivable to debate the fed in two minutes. thank you very much. melissa? melissa: janet yellen also weighing in on the upcoming referendum that would decide britain's future in the european union. >> one development that could shift investors sentiment to the upcoming referendum in the united kingdom. u.k. vote to exit the european union could have significant economic repercussions. melissa: u.s. fed chair is not in favor of britain leaving the e.u. but polls show u.k. voters are warming up to the idea.
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jason, how worm does that idea make you? >> you know, ultimately, melissa i get the merits of both positions. at the end of the day i think the u.k. should stay. they should not leave. benefits of attracting a free-flowing mixture of people from all e.u. membership nations going to the u.k. for jobs, that is what i'm focused on as the biggest benefit to the u.k. stay something actually the attraction of people working in that country. melissa: john what do you think is the right decision for them? putting aside the rest of the world and what would be good for the whole unit because if they leave it, makes it very hard for the whole group to stay together. but, what would be best for them? >> well i think any chance you get to rid yourself of the bureaucracy in brussels trying to impose, one size fits all regulations on a whole continent that's a good thing. i agree with jason's point. i love the free flow of people. my sense that occurs whether we have the e.u. or not. melissa: jason, you love the
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free flow of people. we're talking about workers, but that's been one of the big problems that made people even more nervous now. the idea of free flow of people, but also free flow of potential terrorists. >> yes, that is true. i mean unfortunately that is the case. this is the world we live in. i think that may be the case either way. i think, you know the counterpoint would be that it is like a country club, right? the world's biggest country club. britain pays so much money to become a member but if they leave i think the drawbacks will be much more drastic. melissa: john, be selfish for us, what difference does it make to the u.s.? >> i don't think it makes much difference at all. let's face it we actively trade with the european countries even though we're not part of the e.u. so will england do. they're not part of the euro as is but there is still crossborder trading. it is better that brussels is unaccountable bureaucracy that england will no longer have to answer to. that's a good thing.
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>> something else happened in europe over the weekend we want to talk about. swiss voters massively rejected on sunday a bill that would have provided every single swiss citizen tax-free unconditional annual income of over $30,000. 77% of swiss voters turned down this ultimate freebie. the question is, would americans have rejected this as soundly as the swiss have? jason what do you think? >> looks like the swiss voters were not feeling the bern in this case which i think is the, which i think is the right way obviously. melissa: that was pretty good. david: answer the question, specifically, would american voters have turned that proposal down to the same extent swiss voters did? >> yes they would have. david: okay. >> americans are too smart to say yes to that because the long-term vision is this. it is like does the nfl allow every single person to be in the league and get the pension after five years? no, that makes no sense. competition brings out the best in people. and if anybody in the world
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knows that it is americans. david: well i agree that it makes no sense. i think john would agree with that, but, john, there are a lot of people voting for bernie he is essentially offering as you vision of the same kind of world. >> i don't think americans will ever go for something like that the government is we. to offer up guaranteed income, means we offer it out of our existing salaries as is. morally i don't like the idea of voters being given the chance to vote themselves raises on the backs of their fellow countrymen of the swiss voted right. let's hope we never come to this vote in the u.s. david: i appreciate the optimism of both you guys. makes me feel a lot better. once again, the book is, "who needs the fed"? by john tamny. it is terrific little book. jason, you need to read it too. >> maybe i will write one. david: thanks, guys. appreciate it. melissa: major terrorist and plot to attack the european championship soccer tournament has been thwarted.
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more on this and what americans need to know when traveling abroad. david: we're less than 24 hours away from primary voting in six states. california is the big one where the future of the democratic race for the white house may be decided. should bernie sanders drop out if he loses in the sunshine state? our panel weighs in. melissa: donald trump under fire from the left and right about the comments about the judge overseeing his trump university case. why? >> his heritage is mexican. >> so what? >> because i want to build a wall. i have asthma...
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very strongly pro-mexican which is all fine i say he has bias. i want to build a wall. i am going to build a wall. >> if is muslim judge would you feel they would not treat you fairly because of that? the. >> it is possible yes. it is possible. melissa: presumptive gop nominee facing backlash, shockingly from leading republican figures. >> the comment about the judge the other day just was out of left field from my mind. it is reasoning i don't relate to. i complete disagree with the thinking behind that. >> i don't agree with what he had to say. this is a man who is born in indiana. >> this is one of the worst mistakes trump has made. i think it is inexcusable. melissa: here now is fred barnes, executive editor of "weekly standard." noelle nikpour, gop fund-raiser. fred, i will start with you, you scratch your head about this one. you make your point, no one cares about the lawsuit. >> yeah. melissa: why is he, one of those money things where it seems like
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it is juicy and you could stick it to him but they tried and no one cares. why is even talking about it? >> well i think he feels a grievance here. i assume that is it. but what he doesn't realize is, there is double-standard. if there is some liberal judge to says like sonia sotomayor when she went on supreme court, you know i'm a wise latina, meaning an hispanic woman. that will influence my decisions. and president obama said the same thing about how your life history should affect your decisions as well as judge but, when, but when trump tries to do that, he is making, he is making a huge mistake, particularly as sound bite you just showed on, conservatives absolutely reject this idea that you're, they say if you're a judge, you're supposed to rule on the law. melissa: right. >> not on your personal history or your inclinations or so on. so he loses both ways.
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this is not, this is hurting, this is hurting trump. no question about that. melissa: noelle, looking at it from purely political point of view, the fact that nobody predicted race would go the way it was, donald trump every time he does something that is crazy magically benefits from it, put a hat on for a second. is this a way secret genius we're all just not seeing? >> no. last time i checked, melissa, unpredictability was not a winning strategy. i'm a national fund-raiser. i can not imagine, if i worked for trump, having to pick up the phone tried to coordinate a fund-raising meeting between trump after these comments. another thing is, he broke a promise. he said if i'm the nominee, it i'm the nominee i will be more presidential. really? is this presidential? we're trying to bridge a gap between the trump campaign and the people from never trump and the establishment.
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this is not the way you do it. melissa: yeah. >> it also, this is the worst thing you could do. melissa: i mean i understand that i'm trying, i'm trying to drill down and see what is going on here. fred, you know, sometimes you suspect something is going on. maybe he sincerely suspects he is getting a raw deal. >> yeah. melissa: you tend to not say it, number one you don't necessarily have the proof. >> yeah. melissa: number two you possibly make the situation worse by just voicing your suspicions. >> uh-huh. melissa: maybe some people can relate to how he is feeling in this situation and they think you know what? he is right. he is probably getting a raw deal, he just has the nerve to say it. is that possible? not saying i agree with that. don't tweet that at me. just putting that out there as possibility, fred? >> sure, there is audience for that. and the audience may be particularly in the lower middle class, angry, upset, group that
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backs trump, really trump base because they feel society in particularly government, including judges have given them a raw deal. so they may agree with trump on this but they already agree with trump. he doesn't need to appeal with them. they are already on his side. melissa: i'm not sure we solved it. we gave it a shot. david? david: ceo facebook mark zuckerberg is latest target of high-profile hacking and it could have all been prevented. his social accounts on linkedin, pinterest and briefly hijacked and restored. in now deleted tweet on zuckerberg's account, says they got his password from 2012 linkedin data breach. the hackers, reportedly claimed zuckerberg of all people used incredibly weak password. let that be lesson to all of this. can you believe it? melissa: no. david: after all the rhetoric from his quarters, you have to have a careful password. melissa: change and dynamic and
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every three section something you can never remember. he is human. wants a regular one. david: bingo. melissa: irs is coming clean. why the government agency targeted tea party groups with extra scrutiny. that is coming up. florida bracing for a tropical storm picking up speed as it heads into the sunshine state. governor rick scott warning of extreme weather. details next. >> we have risk of tornadoes and lightning, hail. if you're going to be close to the water, you will have rip current. when they thought they should westart saving for retirement.le then we asked some older people when they actually did start saving. this gap between when we should start saving and when we actually do is one of the reasons why too many of us aren't prepared for retirement. just start as early as you can.
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david: florida is bracing for big impact from a major tropical storm. fox news's janice dean is tracking its path from the fox news weather center. janice, this is kind of stuff we see in the fall, isn't it? >> it is early. early to see three named storms in june. this is record. three named storms early on the season never happened before. yes the peak of the season is usually in the fall. what does this mean?
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well it doesn't really mean anything. it means we're off to a little bit after busy start. we'll have to see how the rest of the season unfolds. tropical storm colin, good news this storm will be picked up by a trough in the east coast and out of the way this time tomorrow. for now we're deal with heavy rainfall and gusty winds across florida and potential for for severe weather. we had earlier tornado storm. they lifted that east of fort myers. we could see potential for very strong winds, heavy rainfall as well as tornadoes throughout the afternoon and evening. so we have severe threat through tonight for much of florida, in towards georgia. elevated threat for tornadoes, not really big or damaging tornadoes. usually weak tornadoes with tropical landfalling systems. there is future radar. you can see heavy rainfall. this time tomorrow, david, it will be offshore. for next 12 to 24 hours. dealing with colin and then out of the way. david: janice, thank you very much. melissa.
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melissa: fox news's phil keating joins us from the ground in florida, checking out the prep prep -- preparations. phil, what is like there? >> we're in gulf of mexico in cedar key. pretty good wave action coming in. southwest of us where we are, that is where the center of tropical storm colin still sits. it is racing towards the northeast pretty fast and expected to make landfall next 24 hours after sunset tonight. this is what we see in several areas of cedar key, street flooding this is combination of high tide which happens hour 1/2 ago as well as the storm surge of this tropical storm, pushing ahead of the center's actual arrival on land. half of the state of florida is now in state of emergency. that is because governor rick scott declared that today. he actually canceled a trip
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scheduled for today to new york with donald trump, to stay put for this tropical storm. and this afternoon he issued that state of emergency and also announced that he is notified florida national guard to be on stand by which would give him about 6,000 national guards men and women if need be to respond to any damage or flooding which is what everybody is worried about here is a little bit from the governor. >> people from all over the state should follow this. it will impact, you know pretty much our entire state. we're, we have the risk of tornadoes, lightning, hail. rip currents. all of these issues. reporter: over the weekend in the tampa bay area especially, pinellas county, pasco county, a lot of preparations were going on, a lot of people sandbagging so that residents and businessmen and women could protect their businesses. three to six inches of rain are forecast for parts of florida
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over the next evening and tomorrow. and, someplace cost actually get eight inches of rain. the real concern is, if the storm stalls, not expected to, but if it did, that would mean more rain in the same areas longer. that could bring an increased risk of flooding in those parts. after gets through jacksonville, florida, though. it is off to the coastal carolinas. back to you, melissa. melissa: phil, be careful. don't get washed away there. thank you. reporter: all right. david: always knows it is bad when cameraman takes out kleenex to fix the lens. this is live shot from the white house. the president obama honoring super bowl champs denver broncos. what player not in attendance, was cornerback, a aqib talib they expect him to make a full recovery. peyton manning has two
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super bowl rings along with his brother eli. good stuff at at the white house sanders says he is in it until the bitter end but his campaign may not be so sure. >> i will do everything i can to unify the democratic party. i certainly am going to be reaching out to senator sanders and hope will join me in that. every day you read headlines about businesses being hacked and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime. and it affects each and every one of us.
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david: take another look at great market day. s&p and nasdaq is where records were made. these are highs for the year for 2016, s&p and nasdaq, new highs. melissa? melissa: the countdown to california. hillary clinton and bernie sanders making pitches to voters in the golden state. clinton needs 23 more delegates to clinch the democratic nomination after huge wins in puerto rico and the virgin islands over the weekend f you look at the superdelegate count. sanders has 46 to 548. the vermont senator is not backing down. our robert gray following the candidates on the campaign trail. robert, what is it like out there? reporter: hey, melissa. hillary clinton playing to a home crowd here. we're in plaza mexico in lynwood, south of los angeles. it is largely latino and immigrant community here.
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she was condemning trump's comments in the trump university case to much applaud. you can still see behind me as they're starting to tear it down. she went on to say she is optimistic and confident and pointing to economic prosperity when her husband bill was president back in the '90s. she talked about job creation. ing interestingly she talked about high-tech jobs. this is what she had to say. >> we are going to work together to create more good jobs, infrastructure jobs, our roads, our bridges, our tunnels, our parts, our airports, our water systems. we are going to have more advanced manufacturing i believe if we invent it in america we ought to make it in america. reporter: keep in mind sanders and trump supporters are supporters of keeping jobs in the states and not big fans of some trade agreements sent jobs overseas. interesting to hear that tone being struck during the speech today. clinton has two more events this afternoon.
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she has a concert at the greek tonight, the theater in los angeles. stevie wonder, ricky martin on the bill. sanders for his part was in the bay area with press conference. he is expected at a concert the at the presidio. tomorrow he is expected to be in los angeles while clinton is expected to be back in new york. melissa, david, back to you. melissa: busy busy. they will be exhausted, robert. thank you. david? david: sanders is still continuing to vow and fight all the way to convention but his campaign is pretty much split on whether he should stay in the race. we have mark aulder der man, hillary clinton supporter and. mayor, i will start with you, if bernie does win california, should he go all the way to the convention, even though he might not have the delegates to win? >> well, you know he is entitled to try to cross the finish line with dignity here and to keep fighting for the things he
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believes n he has got tremendous success by focusing on economic inequality. hillary clinton can help him there by adopting some of those principles in her campaign. david: mark, do you think that hillary is reached out to bernie, what is it going to take to get you to stop to endorse me the way i endorsed barack obama? >> i think what has to happen next here, david, is exactly that. what has to happen next. they have to sit down to figure it out just like senator clinton and senator obama did in 2008. senator feinstein hosted the two of them for a private meeting three days after california. i'm sure senator feinstein would be happy to host again. david: well, mayor, if bernie loses california, should he, even though you're a die-hard bernie fan, should he then bow out and say okay, hillary, you're the winner, i will not contest you during the convention? >> he wants to hold on to
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leverage so that -- david: that sounds like a no to me? >> to put it in the platform. there is in between phase here where he is pushing as much as he can get in the platform and as much as hillary clinton will be willing to champion as the candidate herself. he is entitled to do that. he is walking a tightrope how he does it. david: oh, he sure is. >> he has to be really careful along the way. but hillary clinton did a great job of going after trump the other day and she probably started winning more supporters in the democratic base. david: bernie supporters may come over but mark, on the other hand there are bernie or bust people that want to take it to the convention, say whatever happens in california, bernie loses they will take it to the convention. 22,000 of them signed up saying so. >> david, it is legacy time for senator sanders. his five-decade career has peaked. it will never get any better than this. and he has to decide how he wants to be remembered. david: could he, excuse me,
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mark, could he talk down those bernie or bust people within his support group? >> i believe he can and i believe he has to try. that's his legacy. he has to try and i believe he can and i believe he will. david: mayor, what do you think? could bernie sanders talk down -- a lot of these people say no matter what happens, sounds like their cause is even beyond bernie sanders the man. they have a cause that they will take to the streets of philadelphia? >> you know, when senator sanders has to respect that campaigns are long and hard. i know what it is like to have to finish a campaign. it is not easy. you have to give him the room to do that but senator sanders does have a leadership role in how he performs in the next few weeks and next month or two. will he maximize that leadership for issues he cares about? is what he has to figure out how to do now. david: mayor mcginn, mark alderman. thanks for coming in. melissa.
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melissa: president obama's failed economic policies and abysmal jobs report will hurt hillary clinton bid for the white house. according to fox business senior correspondent charlie gasparino who details this argument in an op-ed in today's "new york post" which was fantastic by the way. charlie, where does this hurt clinton? >> it is always about the economy. her old advisors said that. james carville. and you know, it is very interesting telling the last segment you were talking about how hillary clinton is speaking to, speaking in l.a. about how great things were under her husband's reign as commander-in-chief and ceo of the u.s. economy, not how great they are now and one of the reasons why is, as you saw last week, on friday, the jobs report was simply lousy. now it wasn't just an isolated instance. came after a very bad gdp print. the economy in the first quarter, barely growing at .8%. the two reports and some other anecdotal evidence mean we're heading into recession?
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no, not necessarily. but the facts are starting to build this economy is slow growth as it is, the slowest growth economy i think since the great recession, the great depression, is heading south. i will tell you this. this is where it gets interesting. why is donald trump talking about judges and all this other nonsense when he had an opening this weekend to hit hillary clinton on this economic issue? it is mind-boggling. it is quite frankly stupid and, you no know he is doubling down. something came just across the wires during your last segment, about telling his supporters to go out and attack journalists talking about this. this really is insane. i mean -- melissa: charlie let me ask about one of the great points you made in the article i really like. you said, one. reasons why all this stuff about the foundation and you know, any hijinks they do with money never sticks because people feel like
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that's the price of their competency. >> right. melissa: where this really hurts, if all of a sudden the competency isn't there. the economy isn't good. people like, wait a second, why am i putting up with all this other foundation stuff, do i get your point right? >> yes, exactly that. my point is this, when you think about it, what people like in the clintons, they like the fact they feel kind of secure, that they know what they're doing. melissa: right. >> they kind of ignore some of the sleazy stuff and emails, there was all sorts of stuff during bill clinton's reign. here is the thing, donald could attack that, their competency, particularly on economy. that she is not channeling her husband. she is channeling a leftist, bernie sanders. she was part of around administration that was clueless when it came to the economy. clueless when it came to foreign policy and that undercuts her competency. here is where it gets weird for donald. he doesn't do that. he goes after other stuff turns the competency question on him.
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that is what she did this weekend. we'll see what happens. you know the economy is right for donald. it is not d be getting worse. you wonder why he isn't hitting it more. melissa: listen to you, get pack to the economy. david? david: i think he is listening to charlie. a terror plot tied to the euro cup soccer championship next month foiled but summer travelers are still cautioned to play it safe. and today we remember the thousands of americans and allied soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice on d-day to end world war ii. ♪ you owned your car for four years, you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends, three jobs... you're like nothing can replace brad. then liberty mutual calls, and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement™, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer
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those sales prove my sustainable designs are better for the environment and my bottom line. that's how i own it. melissa: a french man busted by ukrainian authorities on the border of poland was planning attacks on the 2016 euro cup soccer championship in paris next month. the suspect was arrested with an arsenal of heavy weapons and explosives including chemicals
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that can be used to create homemade bombs. chris harmer is a naval analyst at institute for study of war. he joins us now with his take on this arrest. chris, i want to focus on first of all, what went right here? because we covered the story when it goes horribly wrong and there is an attack. in this case it was thwarted before it went off. what was the difference? did they get lucky? were they smart? do you know? >> two things went right here. first the terrorist himself was idiot. you don't go from france to ukraine, start buying up a large cache of weapons expect that not to go unnoticed. second thing right, the ukrainian security services we're well attuned to the threat. they saw what the guy was doing. tracked him and eventually detained him. point being i don't think he is member of foreign terrorist organization. he is not a member of coherent action organization. al qaeda, isis, they get off spectacular attacks they have
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much better ways to get weapons to their fighters than going to the ukraine, through a minivan. melissa: the killers were not directly affiliated with isis. they were idolizing them what we know. still pays to stop the lone wolf without question. is this incident? all those warnings went out, i think last week, stay away from the soccer matches. stay away from all these things over the summer going on especially if it is happening in france. is this what we were warned about, it is over and we don't have to worry, or does this show how big the threat is? >> this is preview of coming attractions. we got lucky this guy was idiot. i don't want to take anything away from ukrainian service. those guys are poe professionals. they have a running war against russian-backed terrorists. they're holding their own. i'm not taking anything away from ukrainian security service. european security services do not appear to have good handle on the project.
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i refuse to live my life in fear. don't let terrorists dictate my travel plans but at the same time not making myself easy target. i think it is wise to avoid large gatherings in europe. if you're interested in going, maybe not during what we call the fighting season of the summer when you have a mass wave of immigrants coming from north africa and middle east and we're certain to see islamist jihadist groups trying to secrete their people into that flow. >> i know you're not going to let your life be dictated by terrorists but you have loved ones in the u.s. wand everying around going to big gatherers, would you be worried about that, incoming olympic, beyond europe are you concerned? >> i would counsel my family, loved ones, friends, et cetera this is not the time to travel overseas for casual travel. if you have business travel, execute your travel plan. be safe what you're doing. don't go to places frequented by
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whenners and americans. don't go to places a logical, easy, what we call a soft target in the parlance of our times. i would say, be careful where you go. be careful what you, you know how you carry yourself. get your business done and get back home as soon as possible. melissa: chris harmer, thanks. we appreciate it. david? david: 72 years ago this day the allied invasion of nazi-occupied europe known as d-day began. incredibly brave storming of the well-fortified beaches and cliffs of normandy marked the beginning of the end of nazi empire but also marked the end for many is and allied soldiers. 4414 of whom who were confirmed killed on just that one day. their sacrifice an sacrifices made by many, many others in the days and months to come are remembered throughout the world today. melissa: the irs admitting to delaying the tax exemption applications of hundreds of conservative groups. a man on the moon again? one startup could be putting us
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david: actually must have been must worse than originally thought. irs admitting so singling out 426 groups throughout the country and for extra scrutiny applying for tax-exempt status. doug mckelway has the details. was thought to be 300, right? >> much less. congressional report doing what congressional republicans to do, force the irs to produce a list of unfarly and perhaps illegally
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targeted for scrutiny. the document production came in response to class-action lawsuit by norcalt-party patriots. only after the third court of appeals lost all patience with the irs stonewalling n a march 22nd opinion, i quote, at every turn the irs resisted plaintiff's request for information regarding irs's treatment of plaintiff class. eventually to the open frustration of the district court. >> only gotten this list after much wrangling, legally and otherwise. because we had a judge in this case who was willing to say no to the government. reporter: irs list includes 426 organizations that were singled out for extra scrutiny. 60 of the groups use word tea in their name. 8 used word constitution. all 26 others had liberty in theirs. tea party patriots reacted today tweeting this quote. it is time to impeach koskinen for failing to comply with a subpoena for evidence.
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now the irs has not responded but for three years congressional democrats have maintained that conservative groups weren't only one who is were targeted. >> i also want to ask the inspector general why he was unaware of documents we have now obtained showing that the irs employees were also instricted to screen for progressive applicants and why his office did not look into the treatment of left-leaning organizations such as occupy groups? reporter: but today's list contains only three groups with the words occupy in their name. david, back to you. david: terrific story, doug. thank you very much. unfortunately, you can only see it here and couple other places. melissa? melissa: first private space mission to the moon is nearing government approval. the company, moon express, wants to land a 20-pound package there sometime next year. a government endorsement would eliminate regulatory hurdles and provide the biggest federal boost for unmanned commercial
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space exploration to date while setting legal and diplomatic precedent for the future of commercial space projects. david: like who owns the moon? are there property rights on the moon? there are a lot of questions that have to be -- it is not simple. melissa: right. david: coming up we'll do something you saw over the weekend but with a special twist, we're remembering the champ. looking at muhammad ali with a moment from the past that will make you smile. that is next on "after the bell." >> who am i? what is happening. give me a shake. give me five. would ask you to give me 30 but your face is too dirty.
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she is muhammad ali and she really likes him a lot. and, would tell him, i tell him i wish -- [laughter]. >> [inaudible]. uh, you're, youd ali? you want to meet my sister? david: what a cute kid? melissa: sports icon was lost over the weekend with internet community celebrating passing of boxing legend of muhammad ali with this adorable video from the past. it was really cute. david: it was indeed. this was a clip from episode of candid camera, where i can remember, kids were asked by alley to be surprised by the champ -- ali. reactions on both sides are priceless. we thought we would share that with you. david: what a weekend it was.
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all those memories. melissa: so many people talking about fighting and everything else. obviously amazing career. that is so different and touching to see the softer side. david: even though we didn't hear a lot when he had parkinson's, example of somebody who handled the disease well was a model for everybody. melissa: that does it for us. "risk & reward" starts right now. >> and i believe, absolutely, that he is not only unprepared to be president, he is temper mentally unfit to be president. [cheers and applause] he doesn't, he doesn't really have ideas. he just engages in rants and personal feuds and outright lies, something that our country can not afford in a commander-in-chief. deirdre: hillary clinton gearing up for the general election, criticizing donald trump's temperment. with 24 hours to go on a close democratic california primy,
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