tv Varney Company FOX Business June 8, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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>> to both candidates don't use the facial expressions that kat and i use all day long. >> going like this. [laughter] >> what? why? >> oh, great to see you all. ladies, great show. that will do it for us, tomorrow, same time, same place. "varney & company" right now. stuart, take it away. stuart: game on, take your seats for the wildest election you ever saw. november 8th, exactly five months away. are you ready for this? good morning, everyone. shock of the day, hillary won california by a huge margin. nobody saw that coming. she is the democrat's candidate. did the media mess with yesterday's voting? we will explain that one. bernie not happy about any of this. he seemed to accept he will not be the nominee, but he will take his agenda to the convention. reportedly he's laying off half of his campaign staff. and trump, he's doing what he does best. he's on the attack, but it was
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a more restrained attack. he used a teleprompter. candidate schedules, hillary will be interviewed by bret baier on fox. and monday, trump has a big speech. a broadside aimed at hillary. and then there is this. wall street still the place to make money, stocks right at an all-time high and we will be up when that market opens today. what a day it is. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ >> the last thing we need is hillary clinton in the white house or an extension of the obama disaster. >> donald trump is temperamentally unfit to be president. >> i know that the fight in front of us is a very, very steep fight, but we will continue to fight. stuart: all right, there you
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have it. and triumphant hillary, bernie's socialist agenda not done yet and trump just getting the attack machine rolling. stuart: as of now, the political world is dealing with the california vote. look at that. a double digit win for hillary, 56-43, not a single pollster forecast that or anything close. the ap, however, let's get into this, called the nomination for hillary very early yesterday morning. it was before the polls opened in new jersey or california or anyplace wells. now, ashley. ashley: yeah. stuart: you don't do that. ashley: you don't. in fact, you know, it's interesting because when that was put out, bernie sanders was at a rally where thousands attended in san francisco and they said we've found out that the associate press that hillary clinton has the required number of delegates. not true. there was a loud boo and realized that it comes down to the super delegates. okay, they say they're going to back hillary clinton, but
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bernie has said all along that when he gets to the convention and before, he is hoping to turn people around. you cannot say that she has the required number. so what impact did that have on the vote in california. they woke up to the news. stuart: the headline in the times, yesterday morning, early yesterday morning, here it is. hillary clinton has clinched the democrat nomination. right out there. if you're a bernie supporter, why would you go out and vote? if your candidate has already lost? >> yeah, i don't know that you would, especially because a lot of the voters are voters who haven't voted before, they're not voted enough and this is a statement. they're going out to make a statement, hillary, you're not nominee. what's going to happen. i'll be interested to look at the voter turnout. stuart: i think it suppressed the vote all over, not just california, but all over. and you can't quantify that. >> no, you can't. stuart: you don't know which bernie supporters didn't show
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up because of what the times said yesterday morning or the ap. >> it's an open primary, how many registered because a lot of that's what bernie voterers would have been doing and if those didn't turn out then you'll know. stuart: on to this, donald trump is now courting bernie supporters big time. >> all of those bernie sanders supporters left out in the cold by a rigged system of super delegates, we welcome you with open arms. stuart: lee, is he going to get-- is trump going to get disaffected bernie sporters? >> i think he's going to get a fair share. polls tway between 30 and it's this isn't an issue of republicans versus democrats. this is an issue of establishment versus anti-establishment and many people energized with bernie, were energized because of something different. stuart: you're a political
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watcher, 30 to 40% could go out? >> it's high, but i don't think a lot of them will go to hillary. i think they'll stay home. stuart: we've got them angry, we've got a bernie supporter angry as the day is long at hillary not so much the trump, but at hillary. would you like to give me a number? >> let me work on that. stuart: i'm staying on trump for a moment because he has announce-- i'm going to say a set piece speech on monday, going right after hillary. byron york is with us. if i could call this the playoff stage of the election, who, as of now, this wednesday morning, has the advantage, has the momentum? >> well, i think a couple of weeks ago we would have said donald trump. he had caught up with hillary clinton after being back by double digits a few months earlier. now if you look at real clear politics poll, hillary clinton
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has had an edge in the past few polls up by two points, essentially tied, but we have to see if there's an effect with hillary clinton formally wrapping up the nomination. i agree with what was said about bernie sanders, he has a significant amount of support, those supporters are angry and you know, last night, watching his speech, you kind of expected him to pull out and then he didn't. so, i think the big democratic task for the next few days is to talk him down out of the tree, but after that's done, hillary clinton may experience a boost in the polls. stuart: but he could make trump-- bernie could make trouble at the convention, couldn't he? he could certainly sway the platform if that counts for anything? >> i don't think byron heard that. are you there, byron, can you hear me. ashley: or he's stunned by the question. stuart: he's so stunned by my question, i don't think he got the audio there, i don't think he did. oh, so, so, lee, what do you
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think? [laughter] >> i think it could have a lot of disruption. stuart: it could. >> i think hillary had planned, clinch the nomination and move to the center. that's her plan. now she can't do that. she's got to go to the convention and bernie supporters and i think she'll have to pull left. >> now she supports, for example, a $12 minimum wage, will she move to the $15 minimum wage. will she skew even further left, that's the question. stuart: some of us are old enough to remember the democrat convention in chicago in 1968 when it was wildly disrupted and was followed by the election of richard nixon. there was also some disruption among the democrats in 1980, when jimmy carter, sitting president, was challenged by kennedy. that was a big fight which was resolved, but led to ronald reagan got a landslide win. what's the chances of the same thing? when i say disrupt the convention, i'm talking about some-- >> splitting the democrats.
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>> really, the two sides going at it, with real hostility. >> i think there's a real possibility that's going to happen. he is saying he's not leaving. it's not about winning, it's about his cause. stuart: byron york can now hear me. we're talking about serious disruption possible at the convention for the democrats next month. what say you? >> i think it is entirely possible because if you remember back in 2008, it took hillary clinton supporters a while to get used to the idea of barack obama. i think there may be a more fundamental challenge now that bernard sanders poses to hillary clinton and they're going to be, i think, more supporters who cannot reconcile themselves to a hillary clinton win. so, and we are hearing reports today that bernie sanders is bitter, he's angry, and he doesn't believe he's gotten sufficient respect for what he's done. if you put that into-- if he sends that message to his
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supporters, you could have trouble. stuart: okay. he used to be bernie. you just called him bernard. >> we'll go with bernie. stuart: all right. thank you very much, indeed. >> thank you. stuart: let's move to the markets. we're going to be opening a little bit higher today. let's see if we can make another push towards the 18,000 level. if you remember, if you watched yesterday, we got to 18,000, we are went just above it and slipped all the way back. maybe they'll make another push at 18k today. look at the s&p 500, close to an all-time record and the significance here, this is a barometer of 500 big name stocks. all, not all of them, but that index near an all-time high. how about oil? it's at $51 a barrel as of this morning and that's the news on oil. up again today. that means, of course, higher gas prices and 2.35 is your national average. back in february, a buck 69. we've come up 66 cents in what, trying to do the math. >> a short amount of time.
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>> short amount of time. there you go. next case, donald trump calls out the clintons last night saying they're using the clinton as their own personal hedge fund. he used those words. he's going to attack them in a speech next week. >> and immigration sinking to new lows, some people are kidnapping children, taking advantage of our open border and of course, desperate families, what a story. a blog post published in the huffington post, saying that the violence at trump rallies is justified. what?
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how about amazon, news this morning, investing $3 billion in india. barron's says amazon could be the biggest company in america by 2020. what's this all about? >> meaning it's half full. exxonmobil. really, what it's about is growth. what we're talking about is e-commerce. it's only about 12% of u.s. retail is set to possibly triple by 2020. and basically, amazon could dominate half of that. that means the growth potential is enormous for amazon right now, according to barron's. >> growth, growth, growth, where the stock goes up. a report in the washington time says illegal immigrants are kidnapping children to sneak into the u.s. as family units. what's that about? >> according to the obama administration, this kind of goes back to a federal judge last year that said families captured running across the borders should be released immediately, or quickly. so, in other words, at the time the administration officials said don't do that because you
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could end up with kids being kidnapped because people getting across the border want to appear as a family unit, knowing if they are captured, this'll be released quickly and by the way, 2016 is on track to set a record for families caught trying to jump the border. stuart: so they are doing this? >> they are doing it. stuart: illegals grab a couple of kids, looks like a family unit, walk across the border, no apprehension, from that point of view, it makes sense. remember when things got truly violent and totally out of hand outside of a trump rally in san jose last week? one liberal blogger says that violence is justified. by the way, the huffington post is giving that blogger a platform. here is the quote, whatever your personal beliefs regarding violence resistance, there's an inherent value in forestorming trump's normalization, violent resistance accomplishes this. i can hear heavy breathing on the other side of that camera, i think it's ralph peters getting steamed up.
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what do you make of this? it seems like it's legitimizing street violence in american politics? >> it's not only legitimizing it, it's an attempt to incite it. the left, the hard left has always romanticized and fetishized political violence and the revolution comes and they're the first one to suffer the violence in the state, but this article, this hair-brained article by a pseudo journalist, he just -- it's amazing. he uses all the left wing language. he accuses trump supporters of being fascists, forgetting that the fascist movements of the 20th century resonated from the left. and mussolini and hitler came to power by political thuggery. stuart, you just know, there's no place for physical violence in our election campaigns period. stuart: i've been told, you
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take your politics to the street and you get violent and you lose. now, if this is a taste of things to come, could we say, these guys, these violent guys, they're essentially going to lose the political debate? >> well, i will tell you personally that i do not support either candidate, but the one time i think, hey, you know, maybe i should vote for trump is when i see people burning the american flag and flying and waving the mexican flag and that really infuriates me, but beyond that, this whole leftist about the republicans are fascists and he talks about the need for uprisings, political uprisings. the greatest political uprising was the confederacy uprising for slavery, do you like that very much? because the left knows no history, it makes it up as it goes and so we've got this crazy double standard where when trump calls for any kind
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of violence, which he should not do, that's bad, but left wing violence by illegal immigrants and others, that's okay. ralph, i think you're right. >> that infuriates. stuart: i think that's where we are and where we're going and i think we're going to see quite a bit of violence in this campaign and we'll all regret it. >> i hope not. it's wrong, it's unamerican. stuart: ralph, see you again shortly. thank you very much indeed. now, i've got to bring this to your attention, new york city is going to spend a quarter million dollars, taxpayers dollars, quarter million of them, on an ad campaign to tell you to use whatever bathroom you want. and donald trump uses a teleprompter, calls out the clintons and says he's the only guy for the economy. that went over well according to lee carters dials. >> we're broke, broke. 19 trillion going quickly to $21 trillion. you pay your car insurance
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speeches last night after the primaries. lee carter still with us and she brought with her those dials. this is where she puts the tape up on the screen and the whole audience, different kind of political people, they watch the tape and they respond to the tape. watch the response when trump's on the screen talking about the economy. roll tape. >> we're broke. we're broke. we owe $19 trillion, going quickly to $21 trillion. our infrastructure is a disaster. our schools are failing. crime is rising. people are scared. >> now, the blue line there was democrats. expected to be at the bottom, but that was a pretty good response. >> you expect it to be at the bottom. they're willing to give him the benefit of the doubt after the tough week 'd. they listened to the speech and this is the most time democrats have reacted. you saw independents and republicans were off the chart. ashley: independents are yellow.
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stuart: you're right, independents and republicans are up there. >> they're tracking together. stuart: and getting close. just on the economy where he's going after hillary. >> just on the economy bit. it was fascinating. what they said they all agreed things are a mess, we need to fix it. >> why didn't donald trump go after her on the economy a week ago. let's roll a hillary clinton, where she's attacking trump. she says he is unfit for the presidency, now, in particular, watch the independents, the yellow line. watch this. >> donald trump is temperamentally unfit to be president. and he's not just trying to build a wall between america and mexico, he's trying to wall off americans from each other. >> i can't believe it. she lost the independents. >> she lost the independents
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totally. this is a speech of her life to democrats. they loved the speech, but independents sat pretty much the whole time on the floor, which was absolutely shocking to me. there were a lot of positive messages in that. this particular part. it was an attack on donald clearly, but it didn't work. independents are tracking with republicans. we haven't seen this in years, it's happening right now and we know that fully 40% of independents say they're going to support donald trump. this is a new day with independents. they used to track democrat liz: is it because of jobs, because he'll create jobs? >> he's got a very simple message and everyone knows what it's about. when you say i stand with her, what does it mean? he's going to have impact on jobs, immigration, china taking away our jobs. stuart: good stuff, lee carter. we like that. >> thank you so much. stuart: we're opening that market in four and a half minutes, the s&p, that's what we'll look at toed. a broad based indicator, an all-time record high.
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keep an eye on amazon, making a big investment in india and one analyst says it could be the biggest u.s. company by the end of this decade. plus, legendary investor bob doll talks about the best candidate for the markets. there's a lot of places you never want to see "$7.95." [ beep ] but you'll be glad to see it here. fidelity -- where smarter investors will always be. if only the signs were as obvious when you trade. fidelity's active trader pro can help you find smarter entry and exit points and can help protect your potential profits. fidelity -- where smarter investors will always be.
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>> well, it's going to be an interesting day, is it not? because we're coming after the primaries in california and new jersey. a resounding win for hillary clinton, by the way. will the market make anything of that? we're expecting a gain of maybe 10 or 20 points. that's it. here we go. 9:30 eastern time where are we going? down 3 points. not much change. [laughter] there you go. a little indecision at the opening bell. look at the s&p 500, please, that's an interesting one to watch today because it's such a broad-based indicator and it's very close to an all-time record high. what does that tell you about the overall stock market? ashley is here, liz is here, jack hough is here from barron's and shah galani. i don't know who he's-- >> he's with himself. >> the stock market just wants
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to go up, what do you say? >> it's nearing record highs because everything else is record levels of inattractiveness, not a lot of earnings growth, we know that. shares are a little pricey, we know that and that's the best you can do. >> i hate to ask you about sentiment, but does it run to just want to go up. >> the natural tendency to go up. if it gets past it, i think it could liz: he's a sentimental guy. >> it's a little sticky here. stuart: if you talked to the political-- to the market professionals, the sentiment indicators, you don't know what they're talking about. does this market just want to go up or what? >> the psychology says, yes, it does. stuart: thank you very much, in plain english liz: you just blew up a number of jobs on wall street. stuart: oh, i wish, i do wish. all right, we're off and running and one and a half minutes in and 33 points up for the dow.
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i'm not going to put us on 18 k. we're close. amazon, 725 this morning. a couple of stories, they're putting $3 billion into india. jeff bezos met with the prime minister, and amazon could be the biggest country, and you can't afford not to get in according to barron's. >> i can't afford to get in. my metrics say it's pricey, but i agree with the sentiment that it's going higher. he's a builder and he'll continue to build it. in terms of the two biggest areas, cloud commuting and he's there. stuart: jack, you're with barron's, i don't know that you wrote that article that they're going to be the biggest company. you're saying yes. >> i have written that and i agree with it. amazon, there he an always a lot of sentiment baked into the stock price, do not put everything on amazon right now and see what happens, but when
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you look at the top of the market there's only a handful of companies that are biggerment a couple are growing slowly. ple and microsoft. when you look at the others, you look at facebook, look at google/alphabet. what we know about them. they're in the advertising business. that's a fixed pie. we know what the size of global advertising spending is going to be, attracts gdp. so they're playing for larger slices after pie. amazon has the fastest growth and longest runway of growth of any company in the world right now. stuart: we keep going back to amazon because that's where the money is going. and would you look at that chart? we hear twitter could be for sale next year. one thinks it could be the best thing to happen to that company. >> yeah, right now, it's struggling. it's got massive management turnover, many almost like who is on first, you can't keep up with who is in charge there. lack of growth and innovation,
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you would think that the ratings from the analysts would be, don't go near this thing, but they still have a buy on it because they believe it will be a tough acquisition next year. >> who would buy it, google? >> lets me be the first to say they're overpaying. [laughter] 10 1/2 billion at the bottom here. >> it's chump change to a lot of companies. >> you've got to manage the users, for the companies it's lack of products. stuart: a long list of big names that we quote frequently. where is google, up eight bucks, 739. netflix well over 100 the other day and down to 98.80 as of now. macy's got clobbered in the retail ice age. struggling back to 34. microsoft, i own a little. 52.26 as we speak. how about nike? they came down, it's not--
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it's staying down, $53 a share on nike right now. we've got, what i'm told is a better sales outlook for dave and busters, and we haven't taken dave and busters. give me the story, dave and busters. >> first of all, the stock is at 7 1/2%. this is an all-time high for dave and busters. dave and busters is arcades meets casual dining. it's a place that's fun for the whole family and their earnings per share beat. they raised their revenue guidance. they're doing a share buyback of 100 million and the stock charges go straight up and you have a brand new high, 45 and change and route now 7 and 3/4 of a percent. stuart: dave and busters, i have been there. thank you very much. hey, will you look at the market? i'm not going to say we're on 18k watch, but we're up nearly 50 points and only 12 1/2 points from 18k. let me bring you this news, too.
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higher cost biting at profits of lululemon. what's the highest costs from liz: a lot of products on shelves and the cost of their stores. this is a company that sells those hot athletic outfits and hot yoga pants. not having a hot start of the year. sales were up ap profits were hurt by costs. and even though it's up fractionally. stuart: liz, i'm going to disrupt you liz, that was a serious report. it was. >> and very witty, witty. stuart: you said those hot yoga pants and ashley chimes in and says see-through and shah says-- . lowering it on a wednesday-- >> we love the chorus. stuart: 53 points, 53 points and 17,991, ladies and gentlemen, it ain't over till it's over. within this block we may hit 18,0 18,000. and the varney jinx is on, cue
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the buzzer. [laughter] >> far too much fun. this is a real financial show. how about wal-mart, another minimum wage protest in chicago. ashley, they're trying to shut the thing down. >> accuse wal-mart of paying poverty wages and forcing employees to rely on social programs which in turn hurts the taxpayer. they're trying to get the responsible business act passed in cook county, illinois, that basically would force wal-mart to cover the cost of health care and other social services, if they're not going to raise wages liz: cue the robots. stuart: that's a fair point. we brought you the story, the drones and they will or trying to for inventory reading liz: in the warehouses, yes. stuart: you don't need workers for that. so there you go. you want to say anything, jack howe. >> i like a good minimum wage rant, but that's context of 7- 1/4 minimum wage.
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it's not at the top of my naughty list. you're going to stay quiet liz: you had a great rant last time. >> i like the idea of a higher minimum wage and linking to inflation, i'm not sure that wal-mart is the company to go after. stuart: 17, 994-- >> and the u.s. growth. come on, this is exciting. people are looking at this and saying, my money-- i'm making money here liz: what a time to be alive. stuart: yeah, wall street heavy weight bob doll. we used to call him the trillion dollar man. >> the one on the right-- >> bob doll, trillion dollar man says that hillary clinton
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would be the better for the-- >> 18,000. stuart: we hit 18k. ashley: we just hit it. stuart: i have a voice in my ear, hearing voices. >> there you go. stuart: around the table, jack howe you first, is hillary better for the market than trump. >> i think for people with money invested, the statement, yes. do we have anything to lose here? if you're someone who is struggling right now you might not feel you have a lot to lose, but people with money invested, they're saying give me the candidate who's not going to break anything that matters. give me the one that we know more about. stuart: that's not answering the question, better for the market, hillary clinton on donald trump. >> and barron's ran a story that hillary to be better for the markets than donald trump and as you know, barron's is never wrong. we don't endorse candidates, but say that-- >> best for the markets, hillary or trump? >> trump. >> i think that the knock on him is that i don't think
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that's going to be true, he's going to surround himself with great people and a much better president. and the thing with hillary, devil you know is better than the one you don't. stuart: i will not be buzzed with this particular story. do not buzz me, it's a legitimate story. first of all, can you imagine janet yellen buying the bonds of an american company, apple or mcdonald's? can you imagine that happening? no, you can't imagine it. well, it's happening in europe right now. the european central bank, doane buzz me, don't buzz me. [buzzer] >> the european central bank is buying the bonds of european companies. ashley: that's right. stuart: but those totally politicizing the corporate bond market. ashley: of course it is. it ruins the corporate bond market ap messes with it and they can't buy financial institutions, but they'll pick between what, volkswagen, as you say, mcdonald's and volkswagen is in the middle of a scandal. >> quick points.
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>> basically it was divided already, very weak europe. there's complaints in the euro zone about governments, basically which bonds th government bonds they buy. [buzzer] . >> and hold on. other countries in the euro zone could get mad if it's skewing to germany and did-- >> if this doesn't cause the brits to exit, i don't know what will. stuart: jack and shah galani, thank you. we're right there at 18,002. let's see if we hold. 18k. look at that. yesterday at a time later in the show yesterday. we hit 18,000, we went to 18001 and thinking maybe it's going to hold right there liz: it's bungee coding.
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stuart: i'm not going to say if it will hold. 18,003 as we speak. and can i see the s&p 500? >> the s&p is up 5. stuart: 5 points? i said goodbye to you, but i'm bringing you back. can 18,000 hold? >> it-- >> the market should be for a month here it has to get above 18,000 to be secure otherwise the market is toppy here. if it doesn't hold, investors are going to be nervous. why can't it hold it up. stuart: i think that the nasdaq is very close to all-time highs. ashley: 4973, close to an all-time. stuart: the important point there, the home of technology. that thing is up because of technology largely. those are the stocks which we always concentrate on because that's where the money is flowing. >> and the movers. stuart: they are the movers indeed.
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have we got any other stocks to go through? that's it. the judge is with us now. okay, which totally-- >> good morning. stuart: this is not a nonpolitical story. wait a second, it's a financial story, okay? >> with tremendous political implications. >> so listen to this, donald trump in his speech last night, he revealed he's got a bombshell coming next week on hillary's dealings with her foundation. roll that tape, please. >> hillary clinton turned the state department into her private hedge funds, the russianses, the saudis, the chinese, all gave money to bill and hillary and got favorable treatment in return. it's a sad day in america when foreign governments with deep pockets have more influence in our own country than our great citizens. stuart: all right, judge, that's a straight forward statement of conflict of interest involving the clinton foundation and you say what? >> most people have probably forgotten that there are two
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criminal fbi investigations of mrs. clinton. the secret server in her house, the e-mail scandal which we talk about all the time because it involves the failure to protect-- the alleged failure to protect national security secrets and the one that donald trump mentioned which is actually a team of fbi agents looking at allegations of public corruption. and may amplify what donald trump would say and refine it slightly, i wouldn't call it a hedge fund. i'd call it a slush fund which obviously is worse. the allegations are that she exercised the sovereign power of the secretary of state, given to her under the statutes, so as to benefit her and her husband's pocket book, by doing favors for foreign governments and foreign countries and receiving from those persons and countries substantial, i'm talking about hundreds of millions of dollars, in contributions to the clinton foundation/slush fund. stuart: now, that's not necessarily illegal, but it is highly political, isn't it? that's the point.
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>> it is illegal if her decisions as secretary of state were influenced by her knowledge or the high probability of her knowledge that the contribution would be coming. stuart: is that what the fbi is looking at? >> yes, that's exactly what the fbi are looking at. i'll give you the most extreme example involves her giustra, frank, a canadian, her husband's friend, who asked mrs. clinton as a foreigner for permission to own shares in a uranium mine in utah. secretary of state has the permission. she granted the permission. he sold 80% of his shares to vladimir putin, the russians now own this uranium mine in utah. he then gave $145 million from the proceeds to the clinton foundation. now, you're raising your eyebrows. anybody's eyebrows would be raised listening to this.
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admittedly i've given you one of the most extreme examples of this. there are many others, this is really perhaps the most incendiary of them. stuart: it's 145 million dollars goes into the clinton global initiative or the cl clinton fund and part of that came out of the proceeds of a sale of an american mine to vladimir putin. >> not to putin himself, but to an entity. how can she explain that kind of judgment? so trump's argument is this is the mentality that's going to to put herself out for the white house. do you want the same corrupt mentality as president that we had as secretary of state? >> that's totally separate line of investigation and charges? >> and from anything to do with the e-mail. and the different team of assistant u.s. attorneys and a different team of fbi agents because the fbi, like any major organization is decided by
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specialties, so they have a team that investigates public corruption. corruption of public officials, we have a team that investigates breaches of national security. stuart: now. >> two teams are investigating her. stuart: would the team looking at the foundation have access to e-mails and written records? >> yes. stuart: have they subpoenaed it? >> in order to subpoena it, a grand jury must be summoned. now, if a grand jury is sitting and issuing subpoenas they've kept is so quiet, we haven't heard a peep about it, which is unusual that we wouldn't have heard about it. you're probably familiar with the incredible financial work, excuse me, of a brilliant wall street fellow named charles ortell. mr. ortell supplied the fbi with a tlot of these materials which they've begun to act upon.
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it's below the radar screen until we heard donald trump last night say this is going to be something i'm talking about next week because it goes to her judgment, as a public official. stuart: why didn't they do this in the first place? they knew hillary clinton was going to be running for the presidency, everybody knew that and they still went out and did this kind of deal. it's extraordinary. >> yes, yes, extraordinary. and the ortell report has a lot of other deficiencies in there, monies in the name of charities that weren't legitimate. money missing, so much of that stuff going on. almost too much for the fbi to get their arms around e not too much for you. thank you, judge. >> it's the intersection of law enforcement and politics and the presidency,all in one. stuart: and money, too. judge, thanks a lot. we'll see you next hour, or the 11:00 hour. >> we've held at 18,010.
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no jinx implied and no jinx expected. 18012. and she won big in california after virtual ties in the polls. what happened? did the associated press have anything to do with it? we'll check it. sanders vowed to take his agenda to philadelphia, disrupt the convention and hillary. we have one of those people on the show. ♪
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james lacy is with us, he's a california delegate for donald trump. what happened last night in california? hold on, has it got anything to do with the new york times and the associated press early yesterday morning, before any votes had been cast in california, saying that hillary was the nominee? so your vote, bernie, doesn't count in california. got something to do with that? >> it was a curious development, but because of the voting patterns of californians, most of the votes were already in before election day because of absentee voting by mail. so this was more of a case of the polls being completely wrong. it might be an unconventional win for hillary, but it was a very strong one to come in strongly. i say unconventional, we think of donald trump as the unconventional candidate and there was something remarkable primary in california that was
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donald trump won 76 of% of the vote despite the news and the press of the last couple of weeks. as a matter of fact, in a very poorly reported fact, and i am he going to give you a little bit of news right now. tom stire, the liberal democrat who has a super pac in california spent 1.4 million dollars on anti-trump ads in the last two weeks of the election and they had absolutely no effect. trump ended up in this election in california about where mitt romney was four years ago, with no controversy, so, trump is showing some strength in california and some of the other states. stuart: fast forward to november 8th, the general election. do you think there's any chance that donald trump wins california? >> well, if the polls were incorrect with respect to hillary, i'm not so certain that the polls are going to be predictive of what happens in the fall with respect to donald trump. now, two weeks ago donald trump was in single digits against hillary clinton in california. single digits.
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and you have to look at what's going on in the state. in our senate race, because of the peculiar nature of california laws, we have two liberal democratic women, camilla harris, our attorney general from the san francisco bay area and loretta sanchez, a hispanic from southern california and a democrat running against each other. the democratic party this fall is going to be in complete disarray and who is hillary clinton going to endorse when she comes to california? is she going to endorse the woman from the north or woman from the south basically liberal democrats? there's going to be some room for republicans to make some gains, i think, in california because of that internal disarray, but we'll have to see. stuart: it's unlikely, i'm trying to read between the lines here, it's unlikely, but not beyond the realm of possibility that trump could win in california. highly likely, but just possible? >> it's unlikely, but, stuart, the fact that the democrats
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already have spent 1.4 million dollars in california to try and break trump down here with no effect means that's 1.4 million less that they have available to spend in other states and try to effect him and donald trump is doing very well in many blue states across the nation. stuart: james lacy trying to keep hope alive for donald trump in california, we appreciate that. thanks very much indeed. we'll see you soon. >> thank you. stuart: by the way, donald trump used a teleprompter last night and looked like he was trying to rein himself in a little bit. here is the question, can he keep himself restrained? that's a good question. also, ahead, ron paul, libertarian hero, a question for him, what does donald trump need to say to win ron paul's support? and how is this for a headline. we are sitting on 50 trillion dollars worth of oil and gas and the only thing stopping us from getting at it is the u.s. government. that's the full story on that coming up.
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cd, they give you 50 cents return on a 100-dollar investment. ashley: s&p within 1%, record high, you put your money and put it in the stock market. stuart: we are back at 18,000. [laughter] stuart: fiscal time columnist. >> indeed. stuart: bob dole says hillary is better for the market than donald trump and you say? >> i have enormous respect for bob dole and the markets love certainty. what i would push back certainty of four more sluggish growth, unachieving economy, that's not what we want. i think the markets are not going to like that either. we have seen enormous gains on
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profit growth that came out of restructuring and cost cutting and financial manipulation, we need growth, we need sales to increase and hillary is not going to provide any of the underpinnings for a resurgence economy. this we do know. stuart: he said on this program that trump is better for the markets, listen to it. >> it's not even close. i don't think hillary, if you look at economic plan, the infrastructure is anemic, we haven't done is move heaven and earth to create jobs, i think donald trump is prepared to do that. stuart: he's backing you up there. he says trump is the guy. the growth. >> it's all about redistributing income. if markets are not always comfortable with unknowns, he's
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heading in the right direction. that's what he need to campaign on. bringing jobs back and building on the economy. i think trump worries a lot of investors because you don't know what he's going to do or say. policies are not exactly set in stone. they're movable objects and that worries people when they're putting money into a stock or a particular market. hillary, though, you know what you're going to get. >> absolutely. four more years. stuart: third obama term. >> exactly. stuart: the stock markets has done very well. >> yes, but again more slowly than europe. stuart: but the market has done well. >> true, that's because of the federal reserve and the federal reserve stance on very little growth. you can't have it both ways. hillary clinton can't campaign on four more years and argue that the fed shouldn't be raising rates. the two don't compute.
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stuart: item number one, they're going to put $3 billion into india, item number two, financial magazine says amazon could be the biggest company in america by 2020. that would mean goes beyond apple and exxon mobile. that's quite a statement. 725. big name you know it, lululemon up by a buck 69. look at the oil markets. latest read on how much storage. nearly 80 cents, nearly a buck at 51 this morning. let's get to pure politics, shall we? i know you love it. did you see donald trump sticking it -- sticking to --
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[laughter] stuart: he stuck to the strict. let's get it absolutely clear. [laughter] stuart: he ran off a teleprompter. >> i'm going to be a champion, i'm going to be america's champion. this election isn't about republican or democrat, it's about who runs this country, the special interest or the people and i mean the american people. stuart: that was off a teleprompter, the tone was slightly different. look who is here jeff the whitt. [laughter] stuart: you think you can keep him on the prompter, on message. >> if you saw how great that went, it went him on message. he's a great order, he can speak with no notes, no teleprompter
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and keep the completely engaged. stuart: you know the but is? >> the things that donald trump will have the most positive impact on. stuart: you chair his campaign in arizona, he's going to use the prompter, change the tone, he's not going to go over to attack somebody in outrageous fashion, is that the word that is coming within the campaign, is it? >> but we are not saying anything. he's donald trump. one of the slogans we have in the campaign is let trump be trump. but at the same time what he has to deal with and the questions that are thrown at him is so different. i myself, if i went in crowd of supporters and said this campaign is on a rocket ship to the stars. great metaphor. if trump does it, where is his
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rocket ship, two days they're all down in houston interviewing nasa engineers and three days later he has ten surrogates from the clinton campaign and double parking in the handicap spot. [laughter] stuart: you may fun of it but he's taken a hit recently. which trump do you like the one on prompter or let it rip trump? >> it's the same. stuart: no it's not. he knows what he has to say. it's on the prompter for him. do you like that trump? >> well, it's the same thing. if you saw an interview, he pivoted on the questions. let's talk about the economy, let's talk about jobs. stuart: exactly. >> let's talk about putting america first. he's growing these things. i had to learn it.
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thankfully when i learned it was in a room of five people in arizona, not in front of america. he's having to learn these things. stuart: you chair his campaign in arizona, are you going to cross the street to meet in new york? >> he's great. stuart: are you going to pass the message? >> i will tell him what you say. stuart: no, no message from me. [laughter] >> thanks for joining us. stuart: meanwhile there was no poll out of california that predicted a double-digit victory hillary over bernie sanders. ashley: not even what the polls. >> saying. we talked about this before, how much of an impact the announcement by the associated press that hillary had reached required number of delegates to
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seal nomination. it'll be interesting to know how many people said, okay, i didn't go out to vote. stuart: there was a lot of early voting in california. we don't know the number. it was still a shock. 13 points. nobody saw that coming. ashley: so much for polls. stuart: possible new future for veterans affair department, one that would take it out of government control and into private businesses. >> a new bill take it away va and put, create a new nonprofit corporation, much like a hospital. it would say to the vets, listen, you don't have to wait anymore for va care, a lot of us wait a month or longer or even a year, basically say, you're not happy with care at the va, we are going to give you a voucher,
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you go to a private hospital and get help there. it would reward good workers and fire bad workers at the va. stuart: it might be vetoed for president obama. you have to have a republican in the white house to get that kind of movement. >> here is the thing. there's been bipartisan support for this bill because this is such a hot button issue for vets across the country. stuart: i still don't see this administration -- not this one. not at this point but down the road possibly. stuart: possibly. [laughter] stuart: we got the point. votes on whether or not to leave european union. that's on june 23rd. now, a big snag in the voting system. people across britain are outraged. supporters of bernie sanders angry that he's being denied the nomination. he's not going to get it. one vow and make trouble.
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he's next. >> next tuesday we continue the fight in the last primary in washington, d.c. [cheers and applause] >> to all of those bernie sanders' voters who have been left out in the cold by a rigged system of superdelegates, we welcome you with open arms. with usaa is awesome. homeowners insurance life insurance automobile insurance i spent 20 years active duty they still refer to me as "gunnery sergeant" when i call being a usaa member because of my service in the military to pass that on to my kids something that makes me happy my name is roger zapata and i'm a usaa member for life. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members
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stuart: there's a big vote coming up in britain on june 23rd, about two weeks away. they're going to decide whether or not they stay in the european union or get out of it. however, ash, a problem with the website for registering voters? >> so many people saw, sorry, we are having technical problems. 200,000 per hour, it just crashed, couldn't handle it. david cameroon had to go during parliament and rigged over this.
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they have extended the registration period. they are preparing for 80% turnout. whether it'll be that high -- >> wow. ashley: that may be an overestimate. it could, indeed, get that high. they are plan to go work on that scenario. >> we don't know where they're swinging, right? stuart: more likely that the brits leave. ashley: yes. stuart: we will see. check out board, we did drop back below 18,000, significantly so. stop laughing lindsey, i probably jinxed it. the parents of the clothes brand, the parent company there, the reported lowest sales, lower
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profits, lower demands, that's the biggest brand and that stock is taking it on the chin. now, this bernie sanders he lost the california primary by astonishing double point. he lost it. he promise today bring agenda to the convention. seems like he knows he's not going to get the nomination but going to convention to take agenda there. our next guest says he is plan to go make trouble. [laughter] ♪ >> elvis there. stuart: alan rasco. you're listening elvis singing "trouble. ". >> we are promising that we are going to do everything we can to bring the democratic bring back
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to progressive groups, we are going to fight to end mass incarceration, we want to see to it that the 99% is represented and fought for and we are going to have to do that by being forceful by letting our presence be known -- stuart: hold on a second. forceful. >> we do not know what we are going to do. the sanders' campaign is negotiating on issues and positions with the clinton campaign, who knows, we may walk out with everything we want or the vast majority of the issues that we care about, but, you know, we are skeptical that the establishment of the democratic party, they're likely to tell us to take a walk. stuart: by right now, forget the expression, you're mad as hell, because you figure that the establishment stacked the rules against you at the convention?
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>> the dnc has worked very hard against bernie sanders and against -- stuart: also yesterday morning before a signal vote was cast in new jersey and any place and certainly not in california "the new york times" and the associated press came out with a big headline and said hillary is the nominee. she's won before the vote -- >> before the votes are taken she's not the nominee. stuart: it did have an effect in bernie supporters in yesterday primaries. why should they turn out to vote when they know they've already lost. >> i'm sure that was a factor. that's always a problem with polls coming out before people to vote which discourages people from voting because they figure it's a lost cause. no matter how we act out and demanding we are and how the progressive wing and the democratic party takes on the establishment, we are going to be united against donald trump. we are against racism. stuart: i'm old enough the 1968
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chicago convention, there was violence on the floor and that resulted in the election of richard nixon, disruption in the 1980 democrat convention and ronald reagan wan in a landslide thereafter. are you worried that if you disrupt that convention from the left you open the door to donald trump? >> i do not believe we are going to disrupt, doing any favors to donald trump. stuart: in ten seconds can you tell me what you think should be the top rate of federal income tax? >> the top rate of federal income tax? not sure but i would love to see donald trump's income tax return. stuart: you can't tell me what it should be? i'm asking you a question? >> can you tell me? stuart: i've got more video from that storm in florida, colin is
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the name. that's a water spout. you don't see that very often but we saw it with colin off the coast of bonita beach. that's a water spout, i have never seen one in reality. saw it on tape. manatee, sea cows someone spotted one in a flooding backward. floating to feed on some grass. that's a manatee, folks. don't forget your money is growing, s&p 500 heading to all-time record highs. watch that market go. stay there, please. you both have a
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. stuart: surely you recognize this, of course, it's william shakespeare, yale university doesn't want students to learn it. >> never mind shakespeare fellow, here is why, creating a hostile for people of color. ashley: much to do without nothing. stuart: it's not much to do about something, it's very important. >> this is part of a bigger thing going on in college campuses. we need to step on the students. it's time university and administrations to take a stand, otherwise they're perpetuating ignorance, history and literature. who cares who the people were
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that wrote this, this is the bedrock of our literature and our classics and everything else. this is ridiculous. stuart: they're a spineless bunch. >> they are. stuart: latest reading on oil. well above $51 a barrel. let's see if that oil storage number changes the number on your screen right now. back in a couple of minutes. don't forget, hillary clinton took a victory lapse strong and our next guest says she has a great deal to worry about. he explains in a moment. >> hillary clinton turned the state department into her private hedge fund, the russians, the saudis, the chinese, all gave money to bill and hillary and got favorable treatments in return. poor mouth breather.
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get all of the $50 trillion worth of energy. but what else is stopping us from going and getting it? >> well, for three decades there've been all kinds of federal strictures on oil and gas and coal production on federal lands. i might add that although the climate is not positive for people entering the industry, but the show revolution is misunderstood. it is not -- it's demise has been far overestimated. while 60% argon from the field, we still maintain record production levels. what is happening is select wells on the basis of rapidly improving technology are increasing productivity and cutting costs.
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>> i'm not energy to energize their cells for many, many years to come. >> yes, we do. the real victory of the revolution has access to what geologists call a source route, where the bulk of harsher carbon lie. conventional wells get out only 1% to 10% of the oil and gas resource in the geologic information. the show revolution through franking and other high-tech technologies has given us access to the mother lode of oil and gas resources. we can talk about sustainable oil. stuart: good lord. who would've thought that her government would stop us being energy independent. that's exactly where we are. kathleen commissary cut this short, but we've got a jampacked newsday today. come and see us again soon. we appreciate you being here. >> thank you. thank you. stuart: hillary clinton is the shocker of the day. she won california by double
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digits last night. 66 -- admit that a 13-point gain. here is hillary clinton from last night. >> it belongs to generation of women and men who struggled in sacrifice jonah goldberg is with us. he's not a chump them. he's got something to say that she is in fact far more deceptive. your words are deceptive. make your case. when donald trump is deceptive it is like a guy which arrives. joe biden who doesn't plan on shouting get the squirrels off of me. he just does weird things on the spur of the moment.
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meanwhile, hillary clinton is so premeditated. her idea of spontaneity instrument prepared remark of no cards. she plans everything out and rehearses everything. she was a kid you all to tell the teacher you forgot to give a quiz today. it was always planned with talking points. she gave her press conference. it was festooned with lies, deceptions and half truths and were all premeditated. i think that is part of our problem. donald trump seems authentic, seems blunt. he changes his tune all the time. hillary clinton when you catch her in a lie, you know did it deliberately. stuart: she's been avoiding the serious political press for a long, long time. tonight she will be interviewed by our own brad beyer.
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right now so it is doing. i has to believe that he will ask the questions and press the questions. so maybe hillary's position will be a little bitless secure after tonight's interview appeared when you think? we will see. rats wright's top flight and all these kinds of things did the thing to listen for are the classic clintonian formulation scared she learned at the feet of the master. bill clinton was in improvisational jazz when it came to line. there are uses of the word is. there is no. stuart: she can't help herself. they use that kind of parsing. i'm going to go to costco and get a huge palette of popcorn and cousins going to be a fun one to watch. stuart: it is possible that
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president obama this week will endorse hillary clinton. i'm told it's likely and that he may well go out on the campaign trail with her. do you think that he is an asset to hillary clinton at this point? >> there are two things to keep in mind. barack obama's endorsement campaign for candidates has never helped and not a single off here or midterm election. he's only good at selling himself. secondly, this time around it really also depends his wordplay on where where his approval ratings are, you know, generically whether people want four more years. it really depends on where the economy is good if his approval ratings are about 50% the kind of coalition hillary wants to turn out, and it may be helpful, but it can also galvanize a lot of opponents because there's a lot of people out there happy to vote against her for a vote for a change after eight years of obama.
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tree into thank you for joining us. i'll be in front of the screen as well tonight. i have the popcorn. i'll be watching. we will see you soon. you know, it seems like old habits die hard at banks. risky mortgages make in a come back? stuart: you think we learned our lesson, but there is a light dark set up by basically all you have to do is hurt by your employment, two months work in trade worth bank statements. you'll be offered a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage that will have an interest rate between 5%. they don't do 30 year loans. stuart: god is nothing like the old liar loans. nothing at all. you put 40% down. all you've got two produces the document. you've got a job. >> you have to be able to cover
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it. stuart: that is not old habit. nothing at all. 40% down. ashley: emile baeza docketed a mortgage. stuart: in the old days you could lie to your back treat. no documentation. here is the money. it is not like that at all. liz: there is an irony here. this is being done by the bank in queens. these kinds of laws -- it's a community development bank to help revitalize low-income communities. 40% down. stuart: we've got some news out of north korea. have you got that? ashley: at the state department and there's indications north korea has started its production of plutonium fuel in its efforts to pursue nuclear weapons. it's been sanctioned to the hilt. this is a worrying development for the u.s. and no one really knows there is a suspicion that
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they are now producing plutonium. >> it speaks to the iran deal. the north korean nukes and plutonium direction and the deal has already spent suspect. >> the price of oil is up at the dow jones average is up 40. 17980 on the dow industrials. minimum-wage protesters taking to the streets in chicago again demanding $15 an hour and a target at wal-mart. they try to shut one of the stores down. stacey dash are being singled out as an african-american conservative. her take on donald trump and the black vote. start walking, stacy. here she comes.
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.. ashley: "varney & company" starts at 9:00 a.m. eastern shore. judge napolitano on hillary in the clinton foundation. >> most people have probably forgotten that there are two criminal fbi investigations of mrs. clinton. the secret server which we talk about all the time involves the failure to protect the alleged that you protect national security secret and the one donald trump mentioned, which is
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stuart: good choice. any excuse because we do love these markets. overall, stocks iraq. not this time. verifone holdings. you know what they do? i may tell you. swipe your credit card. the machine is selected on is what verifone makes. they are down 30%. 40% from the swipe machine. i want you to hear some sound from donald trump speaking last night. roll this latest tape. >> we are going to rebuild our inner cities, which are absolutely ashamed and so sad to
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take care of our african american people that have been mistreated for so long. [applause] we are going to make you and your family safe, secure and prosperous, prosperous again. stuart: can donald trump get the black vote? let's bring in our next guest is the author of the new book, there goes my social life from clueless too conservative. stacey dash is here. >> thank you for having me. stuart: you finally made it on the program. you heard what donald trump had to say. >> yes, i'm very excited about that. stuart: you think he can make a sizable proportion? >> i know he can. black people like to make money. they like their money. what they are not being given us a chance to do that and he will give them the tools and the opportunities. that's what they need. stuart: a lot of people say and
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democrats say he's a racist. >> no, he's not a racist. stuart: maybe not. that is the perception. that is the democrats say. that the narrative they say about all republicans. we are all racists. he just has to do what he has to do to get on the ground, get before these people in inner cities and let them know that he cares. i actually will be a part of that. i have a plan to do that. they strategy. stuart: you want to take him, go right to african-american areas and put it to those people. >> i have a high level minorities that are very prominent and they are willing to be a part of the strategy with me. it's a tactical strategy that's been used in afghanistan and his work. i can use it domestically and i look at the republican vote. stuart: you are an actress.
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that's how i know you. a very successful one. how do you get away with being a black female conservative in hollywood? >> i just do it. i have gotten ostracized paper you know what, i'll find a way around that. stuart: there's the title of your book. there goes my social life, from clueless too conservative. have they really been ostracized? >> yes, my agent just shot me because of my politics. the casting director said i give you credit for pitching her with a straight face. stuart: that is extraordinary. i didn't realize it goes to that extreme. your agent drops you because of your politics. that is strong. the hollywood greats, the liberal credit is not strong. >> what i would say to republicans in hollywood is get a backbone. stand up, come out of the closet because we don't know what the ratio race. republican too liberal.
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republicans will come out. stuart: i see a lot more coming out recently. the republicans are not in hollywood say put your money where your mouth is and invest in hollywood. hollywood dictates the culture of the country. stuart: guess it does. you are right. and when you come back to the show. is that a promise? >> yes. read my book. stuart: i will repeat the name of the book. there goes my social life, from clueless too conservative. stacey dash, everybody. >> thank you. stuart: novice and the new york city spending taxpayer money on a transgender bathroom at place. ashley: 265,000 to be exact. they are to residents, tourists to look past pink and blue. use the restroom that is consistently to the wire. we have some transgender models also featured in this.
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we are proudly standing with our transgender and gender nonconforming new yorkers. the thing is there's already a city lot in place that calls for this. they just want to reinforce it. stuart: i said goodbye to stacey dash, but she still care. do you have a comment? go ahead. >> i think it's ridiculous. stuart: thank you. next hour we pose the question to libertarian ron paul. what does donald trump have to say to get as though? i will ask him. bernie sanders will take his agenda all the way to the convention in philadelphia. trump is saying to sanders supporters, don't vote for hillary. you vote for me. back in a moment.
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stuart: remember when things got truly violent and totally out of hand outside a trump rally. one liberal blogger says the violence is justified. either way, the "huffington post" is giving the blogger platform. here's the quote. whatever your beliefs are regarding violent resistance, there's an inherent value in
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first-time trumps normalization. violent resistance accomplishes this. i can hear some heavy breathing on the other side of the camera. ralph peters getting steamed up. it seems to me like that's legitimizing street violence in american politics. >> at not a legitimizing the it's an attempt to incite it. the hard left has always romanticized and fetishized political violence. they are the first ones to suffer the violence of the state. this article, and this harebrained article by a pseudo-journalist. it is amazing. he uses all the left-wing language. he accuses trump supporters of being fascist, forgetting the fascist movement originated in the last and mussolini and hitler come to power by use of political century. there's just no place. you and i know -- we all know
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there is no place for fiscal violence in our election campaigns. stuart: i've always been told you take your politics to the street and get violent in you this. these violent guys are essentially going to lose the political debate. i do not support either candidate. maybe i should vote for trump when i see people burning the american flag. stuart: i think we will be seeing quite a good of violence in this campaign. >> i hope not. it's un-american to stuart: we will see you again shortly. thank you indeed. ashley: an exclusive from judge andrew napolitano has to do with it for the e-mail scandal. buthat's not happy the president is about to endorse him d theyre investigating. plus libertarilibertari an ron paul on this program.
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. stuart: it is 11:00 in new york city, 8:00 in california. hillary won a landslide there. 13. up on bernie sanders. every network today will tout hillary making history. the first female presidential nominee. mainstream media laughing it up but not us. we're taking her to task on playing the woman card. now that hillary is the presumptive nominee, president obama is going to get in the game. he's meeting with bernie sanders tomorrow what kind of deal will they try to make? also this hour, exclusive new information in the hillary e-mail scandal. the feds are not happy that the president is about to endorse someone that they are investigating. and ron paul, he's with us. what does trump have to do to get ron paul's vote? i'll ask him.
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how about your money? it's still going up a little bit today. 36 points higher for the dow. brushed back from 18,000, which it did hit earlier. how about oil? fifty-one dollars and countings. we have less oil in supply. the price has gone up 51 bucks a barrel. the s&p 500 very broad base stock market indicator, very close to an all-time record high. please, look at amazon. they're putting $3 billion into india, barons says it's going to be the biggest company in america by 2020, at 723. a few dollars short of its all-time high. all right. everybody, listen to this. the mainstream media all over hillary clinton making history tonight. >> thank you. stuart: you're about to out onto that stage as the first female nominee for a party.
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and i'm curious what this moment means to you. stuart: okay. i think we get the point. greenwich onwith us, and ashley and elizabeth. now, greenwic gretchen, she's playing the woman's cars. >> it's whether or not she's playing the woman's card and the press is dealing her with softball questions. lobbing only softball questions at her. she did a rare media avail the other day during my show, and all the questions were softballs. people had tears in their eyes, blah, blah, blah. but she has to play the woman's card. she has to. number one because women are a low approval generating for donald trump. she has to capitalize on that. she has to play the women's card because it's one of her best things to talk about. she's the first female presumptive nominee for president in the united states. i'm thinking of angela merkel, the australia prime minister, all women in america the
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leading nation has never had that. she has to play the card. liz: but too to bring up the policies that are favorable to voters. equal pay, the family leave act and how she will expand them as well. stuart: she's playing the woman's card. >> here's the flip of it. also the first presidential nominee to also be under investigation by the fbi. so there's a lot of firsts to talk about here. yeah, she's the first woman but also she has that problem. and how could she be the candidate for women if donald trump is going to go back 20 years and talk a whole heck of a lot about bill clinton and hillary enabling him during those escapades with other women. that's going to be a problem. stuart: if i can get a word in. >> you wanted to know what i thought. stuart: is it going to be successful playing the woman's card? does she get the vast majority? >> right now unless donald trump changes something to get more women to come over to his side. stuart: you think it's a winning card? >> i do.
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stuart: and you approve of her playing it this way? >> i'm not she's going to win the election because of it. she's doing so much better with women. it is a winning card. stuart: what surprised me is that you know how politicians have the background, always arranged. people who are on the stage with her are always arranged. i mean they put certain people right there. >> with trump too. stuart: of course. all politicians do it. but with hillary, it's almost always women. >> same with trump. stuart: trump -- >> i think it's smart. he was his daughter and wife by his side. stuart: i'm talking about the crowd so to speak. the crowd they've arranged. it's always women for hillary. can you overplay the women's card? >> possibly. but she's doing so well with women in the polls that i think it's one of the best cards she has to play. i really do. i think donald trump is very smart in his positioning with women on the stage and that's why i bring it up.
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very smart of him to put strong women up next to him because that's the area in which he needs to do better. stuart: all right, gretchen, stay there. i'm sure you'll get another word in edge-wise. >> it is "varney & company." i'm going to be quiet now. stuart: no. no. no. you stay rite. by the way, this is news. brett bare is going to interview hillary clinton. the man in politics fox news, 6:00 tonight the interview with hillary clinton. i don't think she's done that before with an acknowledged quality prime time journalist. ashley: no, we will have the popcorn and drinks ready to go. hey, listen, maria has been suspended for two years by the national tennis federation for doping. two-year suspension. planning on playing in the olympics. i don't know what it does to that. stuart: she was banned by. ashley: the international tennis federation. stuart: so out of all tennis. ashley: yes. liz: yes. stuart: that's just in i believe. >> that's harsh. stuart: you think that's
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harsh? >> i believe. when you think of baseball and steroids and those fans, not two years. rodriguez not out two years. stuart: you have to do something with doping in sports, though. that's a problem for them i think. now this. president obama getting in the game so to speak. meeting with bernie sanders tomorrow. eskimo in, doug shown, fox news contributor and former adviser to president bill clinton. now, what's that meeting all about? and what's the objective of that meeting from both sides? >> there's one objective from president obama's point of view. get bernie sanders out of the race. period. he wants a united democratic party and fast. from bernie sanders point of view, he wants to press his agenda going forward. and before he gets out, he wants to be certain that his interests will be protected however he perceives them. and if i had to predict, stuart, i predict he doesn't get out.
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i predict he stays to the convention. stuart: because he won't get all he wants on the platform. he won't get all the stuff he wants. so he walks saying i'm staying in. >> there's that reason, and i couldn't agree more. there's also something else. gretchen mentioned it. stuart: yes? >> and james sanders mentioned it. >> yes? . stuart: th >> the e-mail investigation. as long as the fbi and the attorney general of the united states are investigating the secretary of state and her top aides for alleged crimes that may have been committed with the e-mail scandal and potentially even the clinton foundation, i don't think bernie sanders is going anywhere. stuart: but then bernie sanders may ask the president what's with the e-mail scandal? are you going to prosecute? are you going to do this? >> i don't think he's going to say that. stuart: no? >> no because you really don't if you're in bernie sanders position raise that question because it's in the hands
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extensively, stuart, of law enforcement. stuart: okay. let's move on. >> yeah,. stuart: doesn't get out of the race. >> i don't think so. stuart: he takes his troops to the convention. >> i think he does. stuart: and he causes trouble, disruption? >> well, i don't know if he will cause trouble. stuart: well, his supporters. >> well, that's a delicate issue. what he says to his supporters and what they do are two very different things. stuart: yes. but if his supporters go into that convention and create trouble, i mean shouting and screaming. >> sure. stuart: and pushing and shoving may be a little bit of that. you're back to chicago 1968 and that's not good for the democrats. >> that's right. and that's another card he will play ever so subtly. because whether he encourages, discourages, or neutral on such protests will have a determine at the convention. stuart: he has a lot of cards and they're very powerful cards. >> yeah. and i think the mainstream media misses the fact that he has a lot more in
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his quiver of initiatives than they've given him credit for. because unless the democratic party is unified, it's going to be very tough for hillary clinton to beat donald trump. >> and the polls show that bernie sanders does beat donald trump. not -- >> bernie sanders will make that point to president obama tomorrow. that we are certain. stuart: thank you very much indeed. check that big board. we're coming back down a little bit. we're -- okay. we're up 20 points. we have been at 18,000 and now we are not. but i'm going to bring you two stocks within the dow 30. both of them hit lifetime highs this morning. united health, 139 right now. that's an all-time high. 3m has backed off a little. earlier it was too athe an all-time high. now this. do you remember the violence at the trump rally in san jos san josé, california? leftists attacking supporters? how about the woman attacked
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by eggs simply because she was wearing a trump jersey? well, a liberal blogger says the violence may be justified and the handcuffing post gave that blogger a platform. more on that too. and we've shown you the horrible images from venezuela people picking through dumpsters and garbage trucks in food. we have a more disturbing update for you coming up shortly. and ron paul shows us, what does trump have to do or say to get ron paul's vote?
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stuart: for all of your tesla fans, there is news that company is working on the battery for the model 3 exclusively with panasonic. i thought it was samsung. ashley: well, was it samsung but yesterday we hear news indeed panasonic already provides some of the batteries for tesla is now in talks to be the exclusive provider for the model 3, which will be the first mass market electric car that tesla brings out.
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so tesla moving higher today on this news, up as you can see nearly 2%. stuart: all right. look at amazon. baron says amazon could be the biggest company in america by 2020. that means it would surpass apple and exxonmobil. what's that all about? liz: yeah, this is -- basically the argument is it has more room for growth than any other large company. so what they're talking about now is internet shopping is just about 12% of u.s. retail. so that could triple. amazon could have half of that space by 2020. so that's a lot of room for growth. more room for growth than other big companies. stuart: that's the reasons why barons said it. very interesting. all right. i want to get back to that story from the world of tennis. just breaking now. maria suspended for two years. why? ashley: because she tested positive earlier this year after the sorels open the quarterfinals match she had,
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and she tested positive for meldonuum, that is a substance that was banned, it regulates your metabolism, sharon maintained that she did not see the list or unaware of it, but it didn't fly with the authorities, and she has a two-year -- stuart: two years out? ashley: yeah, suspended. stuart: former governor of michigan and a hillary clinton surrogate. governor jennifer admitting that the democratic super delegates are quote all about tempering the raging masses as in bernie sanders people. those comments have a lot of democrats upset, bernie sanders in particular. and donald trump is taking advantage. he's urging bernie sanders people, hey, come on over and support me. roll tape. >> all of those bernie sanders voters who have been left out in the cold by a rigged system of super delegates, we welcome you with open arms.
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. stuart: ramirez dnc vice chair, super delegate for hillary clinton. how many bernie sanders supporters you think will go to donald trump? >> well, i think first we need to acknowledge the process that hillary clinton is now our nominee, the process for uniting our party is only just beginning whereas on the republican side it has been happening for several weeks, and i think as this process unfolds, you're going to see that the one thing that unites democrats is a large number of bernie sanders supporters are going to support secretary clinton. stuart: okay. bernie sanders is the outsider here in the democrat party, and we've got jennifer saying you super delegates, clamp down on the bernie sanders supporters. they're not going to be very pleased about that, and they're already angry at hillary's machine, which they think has sort of a -- pushed them out of contention at the convention.
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you think that those bernie sanders people, they're all just going to migrate to hillary just like that? really? >> well, again, here's what i know about the election so far. secretary clinton has won a majority of the popular vote. a majority of the state, she's won a majority of the pledge delegates, and a majority of the super delegates. when you look down the break down -- stuart: those are talking points. >> they're facts. not talking points. we know that secretary clinto c. stuart: what did she i asked you -- are you confident that you can get all of those bernie sanders supporters, they'll come on over and support hillary clinton? are you confident of this? >> we are confident that people who are supporting the vision of secretary clinton and the democratic party will unite behind our nominee in an effort to did defeat donald trump in the general election. we also know that there are some people who viscosity in our contest that aren't necessarily democrats. we may not have them in the general election but we're confident that those who do in the democratic party and those who believe in our values are
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going to unite behind the nominee. stuart: do you remember the violence -- obviously you do, the violence at the trump rally in san josé. you've seen it and heard about it. now, we have a blogger at the huffington post saying that that violence, what you're looking at now against trump supporters may be justified. i'm going to quote directly from that blogger. whatever your personal beliefs restarting violence resistance, there's an inherit value in forestalling trump's normalization. violent resistance accomplishes this. that sounds to me like it's okay. get out there and use violence on the street. you're going to aggregate that? you're going to say flat out, no, that's absolutely wrong? >> yeah. we do not condone violence. i do not condone violence as a dnc member or democrat, party activist. you know, we've seen several instances of this. we don't condone it. we condemn acts of violence, we believe in campaigning that you other means, and we do not
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encourage our activists and party supporters to engage in violence means to -- stuart: how about the waving the mexican flag, which was an appearance? >> there are a variety of people who go out there to protest for a variety of reasons. that doesn't enemy they're democrats, it doesn't mean they're part of our party or coalition. people will support protests for a variety of different reasons. what we are asking people those involved in the democratic party and who want to engage in our process is not engage in violent means. stuart: okay. we heard it we hear. thanks so much for joining us. we do appreciate you being with us. thank you so much. >> thank you. stuart: check the big board. kind of flattened out not going very far today. up 33 points. we're still now -- let me see now. about 38 points shy of 38,000. here's what's coming up for you. andrew napolitano, the judge has some inside information about the hillary e-mail investigation. the fbi worried about obama's endorsement of hillary. he'll give us some details on this. national star gary says he's
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going to vote for trump. he says the areas of the country that are really hurting and will make the case about why he's voting for trump. and we've got more -- the only way to describe it. liberal lunecy this time involving shakespeare, yale university. you will not believe this one [beekeeper] from bees to business expenses, i'm in charge of it all. 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.
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. . stuart: look at this, you've seen this before, the collapse of venezuela. they're eating food from trashcans, liz be you have news. liz: yeah, people now are selling trash. basically food, fruit, and vegetables. so this is a real shock what's going on in venezuela. recall vote is being pushed forward, small business owners who were once thriving now in the black market dealing in paper towels and toilet paper. stuart: the shock of the day and america is clearly what happened in california yesterday. hillary clinton won that state's primary, the democrat primary by 13 points. nobody saw this coming. not a single poll suggested it would be a 13--point margin. but that's what we've got.
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larry on that a little bit later in the program. what a shock. check the big board. nothing there. up 30 points. that's it. the s&p 500 broad-based indicator less than 1% away from a. federal investigators are not happy about the impending endorsement from president obama of hillary clinton. judge napolitano has that story with us. what does trump have to do to win ron paul's vote? does he have talk about the free market? >> i'm going to be your champion, i'm going to be america's champion, because you see this election isn't about rapport democrat. it's about who runs this country. the special interests or the people, and i mean the american people. years ago, i was starring in a one-woman show
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about a cat allergic to other cats. opening-slash-closing night it hit me: hats for cats. everyone said i was crazy. when i went online. i got my domain, catswithhats.com from godaddy. now these things are fee-ly-in' outta here. got a crazy idea you think you can turn into a success? we know you can and we've got a domain for you. go you. godaddy.
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stuart: donald trump has the delegates to secure his place as the republican candidate. what does it take? what does he have to say to win the support of ron paul? could trump do it? is there any way he can do it? joining us on the phone, congressman ron paul himself. congressman, welcome to the program. good to have you with us.
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>> thank you, stuart, good to be with you. stuart: is there anything that donald trump could say that would get you to vote for him? >> no. not that i can conceive of. i mean if he would convert to libertarianism, you know, that would be great. but he's an authoritarian as all politicians currently involved are, libertarians s and like authoritarians, we our own economy and that sort of thing. so trump is not likely to do that. stuart: any part of donald trump's program that you know of that you like and support vigorously? anything? >> i think he's done us a great service to not be intimidated by pushy and types of people in the media that miss treat politicians. but he has stood up to them because most candidates, including myself, we generally
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get intimidated if you attack them, their attacks are greater, but they haven't been able to retaliate. so i think this political correctness he has contributed something. but when it comes to the important things, he says good things about foreign policy, but i don't know where earlier stands. some things are horrible. trade policies, i think they're horrible. civil liberties, he sees people in collectives, you know, mexicans and chinese and this sort of thing, and we people as individuals. therefore i don't think he has much to offer to the libertarians. stuart: can i ask you to analyze california politics. that might seem a bit of a stretch for you. but we'll -- [laughter] i'm going to ask you anyway. the shock of the day and, to me, at least and a lot of people was hillary's 13-point victory in the california democrat primary. 13 points. nobody was expecting that. >> yeah. stuart: can you explain it in any way? >> yeah. i think it's all your fault. [laughter]
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you've been sod good at a few things pointing going on in venezuela -- this is what a socialist nation looks like. so maybe -- maybe sanders is on the defensive now, and a few people in the media like you are pointing out that socialism is not such a great idea. and i think that you get all the credit to blame. i don't know which it is. stuart: well, actually your friend and colleague judge napolitano is sitting next to me. and, yeah, it really is all your fault, stuart. he was chiming right in there. >> and the judge is always right. stuart: so he says. lovat [laughter] ron paul, thank you so much for joining us. i knew when i asked the question is there anything that donald trump could say that would get you to vote for him and your answer was immediate, and it was a "no." thank you very much indeed. gets straight to the point, ron paul. >> nice to be with you. stuart: yes, sir. see you soon. now this. more from the judge. he's got a story for us about more trouble for hillary clinton. i want you to explain this
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because you've got some inside stuff on the fbi investigation. go. >> this is taking a weird turn right now. and, by the way, ron paul, here's what we learned. he watches the show. he knows exactly what you've been exposed -- stuart: very flattered. >> there is trouble brewing in the fbi over the following issue. the president is likely to endorse hillary clinton for president. he's likely to do that in the next 48 hours. stuart: yep. >> if he does, think of this. his two most important law enforcement appointees, the attorney general of the united states and the director of the federal bureau of investigation are engaged in two -- not one, but two criminal investigations of her. and they know that their boss wants her to succeed him. does that endorsement undercut their investigation? or does that endorsement remove his appointees,
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attorney general lynch and fbi comey from the chain of command over the investigation in which case is this appropriate for an independent counsel? a person not subject to the attorney general, not subject to the fbi director, with his or her own budget, with his or her own prosecutors, with his or her own fbi agents. this is what it's going to come to if the president makes this endorsement. because the people investigating her on the e-mail side are the most serious, most credible, least political members of the fbi who will think what is happening to this year-long investigation? is it being undermined now? is this a dog whistle that we're not going to present to a grand jury. stuart: no, you won't have to present to a grand jury now. you'll have to wait a long, long time until you get a special prosecutor, the justice department, that would take forever.
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>> so the president has created an enormous conflict, and i tell you another conflict he has. several of those top secret e-mails that were sent to her that is e-mails containing material clearly recognizable as top secret sent to her personal e-mail server were sent by him. stuart: sent by the president? >> by the president of the united states himself. stuart: meaning? >> meaning he exposed the same type of secrets to hacking that she did. does he have a conflict in playing any role in this now? that's how complex this is becoming. the evidence of -- to present to a grand jury to obtain an indictment is overwhelming. the evidence to secure a conviction is overwhelming. but the people who will have to make those decisions, the president, the two political appointees, the attorney general lynch and director comey. and i'm not demeaning them, they're serious professionals. they have to have the will to do it. stuart: okay. what a mess.
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that's all i can say. what an absolute mess. >> earlier should reframe from endorsing. everybody knows he wants her. reframe from the endorsement. stuart: would you stay right there for a second? i want to go to jeff flock in chicago. jeff, you've got protesters now inside the walmart store; correct? >> inside a walmart neighborhood market. perhaps you can see them. they have blocked all of the check out lines of this store. here is the reason, stuart. you can see the sign. walmart clued due to poverty wages. they are demonstrating in support of something called a responsible business act. and as i talk, perhaps you can see all of these lines have been shut down as literally hundreds of protesters have come inside this store. the responsible business act is something that is now on the docket in cook county, illinois. it essentially says that walmart and mcdonald's are paying wages so low that people have to go on the public aid in order to make means eat. even if they have a job.
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if they pay a low wage, the companies have to pay a fee to the county so that people can afford these social programs, which the county has to pay for like health care, like food stamps, and what we call welfare, which is public aid. i want to show you as we talk here, larry, walk all the way around so that you can see how all of these lines are being brocked. i think this young lady let me past at least. but you'll see this is the scene all of these lines now being blocked in demonstration, in support of this responsible business act, which i think fair to say has a chance of passage. it has considerable support on the cook county board. that's the scene in chicago in this walmart. stuart: that is happening right now. jeff flock in the middle of it. essentially, jeff, that walmart where you are now is essentially shut down and that was the objective of the demonstrators. i can hear the loudspeaker. >> they tell me that they will stay until the police begin arresting people.
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they plan here to stay until the cops come. stuart: all right. we'll be back if we get more action. but suffice to say that walmart shut down in chicago as of right now. by the way, go back to the big board for a second. we're coming back up again. maybe making another run at 18,000. i don't know and i'm not making a prediction. just saying we're at 17,988. we are 11 points away from dow 18,000. believe me, we'll break in and show it to you again if it happens. i've got another one for the judge. are you ready? >> yes. stuart: at yale, students petitioning the english department saying they should not feature quote straight, white, wealthy, and male english poets such as shakespeare words of t. s. eliot. you're a princeton guy. what have you to say? >> spoke english, but he was american. stuart: that would be picky. what has a princeton guy think about yale? >> well, anybody who thinks
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that you can overlook the rich body of english literature because of the color of the skin of the writers and study something else is destroying their own intellect. you cannot have an education in my view and not being aware of that rich body of english literature. this is political corruptness and absolute lunecy. . stuart: when you study, sentence structure, how to read a whole paragraph, how to read through the whole novel or play, the use of english language. that's what they did so well. >> what are these people, these students suggesting that they should read instead? let them go out and write their own works, but i don't think they can do that without the fundamentals that they would learn from studying these dead, white males. stuart: the lunatics have taken over the asylum. don't quote me. >> well, we know that from the
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school of economics the generation. stuart: ever since i was there, for heaven's sake. all right. princeton, you're dismissed. check the big board. we're close, nine points away from 18,000. yes, we are. up 53 as we speak. that makes it eight points and change. we're on it. also watching that scene at the walmart in chicago. minimum wage protesters have shut that one store down as you heard from jeff flock moments ago. and look at this. flooding from tropical storm collin causing big problems still. flooding in st. petersburg up to ten inches of rain in that city and the area around it. how about venice beach? this was venice beach, florida, by the way. huge waves crashing over a seawall. a car driving down the street. i'm glad i'm not in that. >> why would he go down there? . stuart: why would he go down there? that's right. more rain could be coming into florida later this week. go to the london school of economics.
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are we going to lay out trump's roadmap to victory of a purple swing states of florida, virginia, ohio, pennsylvania, are they the key to trump and the election? we're going to analyze that. and don't forget a new episode of legends and lies this sunday 8:00 p.m. eastern. this one's about john adams ready for war i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways 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
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actor has i'm nicole petallides, the dow off its earlier highs had been up over 70 points. right now the 56 points, 17995, a obtain of up with third of 1%. the s&p 500 and the nasdaq also gaining. names leaving the dow? well, you have united health hitting a new high today. caterpillar as well as pfizer also winners. all up more than 1%. as a matter of fact, united health up 2%. let's take a look at some of the homebuilders. we are keeping a keen eye on this, low rates have helped all up arrows across the board. up about 7.5% this week. and the gold mining stock we have a weaker dollar that is considered a safe haven. you did have the world bank global, the growth forecast for the globe. global growth forecast. so we are seeing people moving
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stuart: hillary clinton won the california primary by a double-digit margin. nobody saw this coming. now, several polls showed a dead heat. a couple put bernie ahead. but with most of the votes counted, hillary won by an astonishing 13 points. what happened? maybe the media gave her a big assist. more like a giant leg up. they love her, and they helped
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her. early yesterday before any votes were cast, the media ran with a dramatic headline. hillary had won the nomination. victory. think about that. she had been declared the winner before new jersey or california had voted. surely that discouraged bernie sanders supporters. why turn out to vote for a candidate who had already lost? this goes against the grain of election reporting. don't affect a vote in progress by declaring results before the vote is done. but that's exactly what the media did. no wonder bernie supporters are lived. the party had manipulated the nominating process to favor hillary then her allies in the media carried out. there's nothing bernie can do about it now. the damage has been done. but don't expect his people to go quietly. they can still make trouble at the convention, and they will. and they can drag hillary's platform even further to the left, and they will. and they could take out their
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anger by voting for the other outsider, donald trump. peer conjecture on my part, by the way. larry, the director of senator of politics. he is with us now. all right. larry i think you heard what i have to say. hillary gave the media an assist inherently california. am i onto something? is that a point? >> look, it may have discouraged some bernie sanders people from voting. i don't know. it's a human response. you did note the mail in part of this. solid majority of the vote in california was already in before she was declared the victor by ap. i think the key that clinton's large win in california, cher correct to say was not perceived by most of the polling ahead of time was generated by the clinton campaign itself. they knew they had to win california, and they spent the
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bucks on early voting to make sure that it happened. but as far as the sanders supporters being discouraged, i'm sure some of them were. stuart: i think they're mad as hell to quote a phrase as of this morning. actually i believe they are. let me turn to donald trump. can you point us to a roadmap for victory for donald trump? does it come to florida, virginia, ohio, and pennsylvania? that's it? >> well, those are critical states. i would say, no, that's not the entirety of it. the easiest way for him to win, of course it's never easy, stuart, but the easiest way for him to win is win all the rom in any way states and that includes north carolina, which is never for either side, keep the romney states and then add the following three big states. florida, ohio, and pennsylvania. and the one that is really critical there is pennsylvania. i was just in pennsylvania on monday. and i talked with a number of legislatures and other
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political types there on both sides, and they indicated to me that pennsylvania is indeed competitive. so there might be a chance for trump given his appeal to blue-collar workers in pennsylvania. that gets you to 273, stuart. that's the easiest way to do it. but there are other paths. stuart: there are other paths indeed. but at this point, you obviously cannot call it at this point. you're a political pro. there's no way you're going to start calling it now. >> no. it's june. yeah. no, it's june. i'm not going to do that. stuart: don't do it. who's got the momentum? as of right now this wednesday morning, who's got momentum here? >> well, clinton does because she just got the bump from being declared the winner. and, by the way, her campaign was very unhappy with the ap poop it wasn't just the bernie sanders people. they had planned a big event for tuesday night, and it made it antiicallimatic .
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personally i think she has the momentum. but we have to get to the convention. that's when you retail the story. get to the two compensations, you let things settle, and then you start polling two weeks after the convention. if you get to get an accurate read on what's going to happen. >> larry, you know what you're talking about, we appreciate that. >> thanks a lot. >> nashville star, larry gatlin is here, he's supporting donald trump. and, by the way, the police have been called to that walmart store in chicago. it's been shut down. we'll take you there in a moment you both have a
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. stuart: development protest at the walmart store in chicago. we believe the police have been called. jeff flock is there. what's going on, jeff? >> they have. some of the protesters have left stuart but maybe you can see. police are now beginning to arrest those who refuse to leave. people are still staying in the aisles of checkouts and blocking the store. police have just begun to handcuff people. this gentleman here has been handcuffed and they're preparing to take him out to a police squad roll. if you look inside this store, maybe you see the other aisles that are continuing to be blocked by police officers. the police now asking me to leave, sir. oh, just a little whack?
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okay. thank you, sir. happy to get away. police asking me to step back a little bit. so i'm doing that. stuart: okay. i think we just lost his ad. no, he's there. look, that's what's happening right now. a little background here. that's a walmart store in chicago. the demonstrators tried to close it down, and they were successful. they want $15 an hour. it's the $15 per hour minimum wage story. that's what they're going after. they -- jeff, i hear you now. keep going, please. go ahead, jeff. >> yeah. i've got you now. you can see the bulk of the protesters have moved out to the street right now and are marching on the street outside the walmart. but some people designated they will stay inside and not leave until police literally drag them out. and maybe you could see this fella here, can you see? he's literally being dragged out. and multiple people being carried out. and i should point out, the reason for this protest is this responsible business act.
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what it does essentially and here comes another, essentially would require employees that don't pay what they call a living wage and that's yet to be determined. but beyond a minimum wage if employees don't to that and they're a large employer like walmart or partly cloudy skies, they would have to pay a fine to the county so that food programs and other assistance programs, welfare programs can be paid for. the county says you're essentially making huge corporate profits on the backs of the taxpayers who are paying for these social programs because you're not paying high enough wages. that's their argument. and i will tell you, stuart, that it has a fair bit of support here in cook county, illinois. i leave you perhaps with a picture of these protesters continuing on the sidewalk on it here. quite a scene and these folks at walmart were not expecting this. and they quite successfully for a time at least shut it down. . stuart: all right, jeff, we saw it. we hear it. they did shut it down.
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jeff flock right there in chicago. thank you, jeff. special guest joining us now. you know him. country star here with us right here in knox. now, wait a second. you have an announcement for us on this program today. do it. >> mr. varney, i'm going to vote for donald trump. my friend gregg asked me a question the other day. and donald is an old friend of mine. donald doesn't make friends, he takes hostages. so i've been a hostage for over 40 years. he's been very nice to me. stuart: what do you like about trump? >> he would not be my first choice. i hope he doesn't get on tv and he says he couldn't sing anyway and never could write a song. he probably will. but the thing is when i think about -- when i think about what is going to happen, i'm concerned about the economic factors, you know? with the other side. to me, when i think about what is going to happen if hillary clinton is elected president, i'm asking my friends who have
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said they won't vote, think about the babies. planned parenthood is going to look like childs play. stuart: is that your key issue? are you telling me -- >> it's one of my key -- although donald has painted it with a pretty broad brush, i think he's talked to our friend art laugher and some of the others in the economy, i think for the long-term, let's does ourselves that question. stuart: which donald trump do you know as a campaigner? do you want the guy who shoots from the hip, he's loud and says whatever is on his mind or do you like the more nailed down donald trump who uses a teleprompter like he did last night? which one do you want? >> yes. stuart: i know what you're doing. >> that's what he would do. all of them. stuart: does he worry you a little bit? >> well, of course he worries me. i think we have something in the constitution. and for those people who are worried about donald trump, what he's going to do, the
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loose canon, all of that. we have something in the constitution called impeachment. the best thing to do is vote for him, hope that he does great with those good qualities of leadership and art of the deal and comes out and makes a great president. that's what i'm going to do. stuart: you've got influence on him. why don't you tell him? go after the e-mail scandal. go after the weak economy. those are surely good grounds to vote for donald trump, but he goes off on tangents. >> donald, do what mr. varney said. talk about what you're really going to do with isis, i want to know what you're going to do with 11 million people, come on, donald, we don't believe that. that's not going to happen. stuart: time's up. >> i'll vote for him. but i'm not going to tell anybody else to. stuart: by the way, the dow industrials did not get back. at least not in the last few
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minutes to the 18,000 level. they tried. they got pretty close, but they weren't quite there. but they made a decent effort at least. all right. my time is up. but charles payne is waiting to take it away. charles, it's yours. >> two days in a row you tease us with this. take it to 18,000 and then drop it in our laps with this. thanks a lot, stuart. see you soon. 2016 the donor battle now just heating up because the general election is now in focus. welcome to cavuto coast to coast, i'm charles payne in for neil cavuto, they've got the nominations and now vying for more donors. but does trump hurt fundraising efforts by getting off script? charlie gasparino is in with the recent backlash. not a good week for donald trump. will it hurt him on raising money? >> it's still not clear. i talked to a lot of people. there are some interest -- there's a lot of interest when the polls start to tighten up. but i think this last week has put a lot of big donors off.
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