tv Varney Company FOX Business June 23, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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your wife is a super one of you dagen: to that point i grew up to china to dedicated families families who ran their own small business. we thought about god and family and country of angle day. this has been ignored in this country of the last 30 years. maria: there is the upset and what's going on every single day. stay with us for special coverage. mike murphy, dagen mcdowell, good to see you. let's get to stuart varney right away. >> maria, please give my best wishes to you beyond the birth of his sixth child care it is that right? by the way, you're the only person who could match me child for child. congratulations. thanks a much indeed. the book is in britain said the money is on this campaign. investors love it. stop straight out. good morning, one.
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we love this stuff. britain is voting now on the same issues we will vote on in november. at this moment, gamblers are getting desperate to stay in the european union. state of the overwhelming favorite. however, conventional polls say it is neck and neck. investors placing their bets and go in with the bookings. they are buying stocks on the expectation that written stays in europe. this is exciting rock 'n roll stuff. on this all day long. up 170 points. now look at this. house democrats turn congress into what i'm going to college students titled demo, an overnight city trying to change the poster lando debate from terror to guns. look at this. the attorney general says we need terror by loving one another. the new donald trump big speech. i message. the mainstream media grudgingly
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out of work. terrifyingly affect as safeway. we discover. "varney & company" is about to begin. trained to think you heard that. i'm pretty sure you did. the guy shouting was louis go mart, shouting that democratdemocrat s who staged a sit in on the house floor, same this is about islamic terror, not guns. that is congressman louie gohmert, frequent guest on the program. he's with us again 15 minutes from now. it is a rock 'n roll kind of day. the bookies say the birthday and the markets believe what they are telling him. and for a rally right the opening bell.
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a state that is considered by some to be applies for stocks. ashley webster as they are i think it vacationed frankly. you are there. you're right in the middle of the good weather the newspapers? its interest in. the timestamp reckoning has a picture of europe from the cul-de-sac and it is the day of reckoning. produce a period that "financial times" talks about how the city in london is trying to prepare long lines of foreign exchange dealerships and banks cannot seem stress test their system in the event of an out. that is kind of interesting. then we get to the partisan papers, the daily mail headline is mailed talking about trade with germany chart a, reforming
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borders and deportation of diagrams. in the daily telegraph, the time has come. that is all it is. june 23rd very well be independent -- and the united kingdom. stuart: i've got to ask if or where you stand now, that he thinks going to win? very well, based on people as token to, don't forget london is very thorough stay for the most part. i was fine that money. the bookmakers have said pretty strong but there's enough people who want to stay in your window so. thank you we've got a special coming to the brexit is early results rolling in. we can give you the trend at least by 11:00 to one is good on on afghan.
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the stock market today is going to be up and i do 100 for the dow industrials could be close to the youtube as an art. we always say this is a broad-based market indicator up to 1% higher. the price of oil not affect by this brexit bow. there are some scott not react to today around internal workings. these are names. barnes & noble to start with will be a today. a better outlook. different story at-bats and beyond pure sales down. profits were down. sales were flat is perhaps the stock is going to be down. his teaser used to be the electric stun gun. they just won a $60 million deal
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l.a. with cameras. any good deals on that? liz: yeah, they do pay chicago, baltimore, minnesota, minneapolis and philadelphia. big when they are trying to get as the new york police department. the lapd is the largest police force so far to my body cameras in case there's paid seven pounds so far. but the lease across the country. stuart: a company transitioned from teasers are they bound not to body cameras. let's get to politics shall we. the bread and butter of trans have been. all said and looks like my college days. 50 years ago business was adjourned at 3:15 a.m. the city and continued. they try to force a vote on gun control. they did not get it.
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denis k. williams. i thought that was a disgrace. i thought it was a post is done, a direct attack should. away from terror. it is guns. i come out right with the opinion. >> you've got to form an opinion on these. i disagree with will.. i actually thought, this is guns. i agree with you there. if you take a position, i think it is being led by representatives john lewis who has had not experienced with peaceful protesting cities amid demonstrations with civil rights work. it makes sense to me. what about the rest of the country? looking at this guy, mateen peer direct contact with isis. inspired by islam. we don't debate that. we debate guns. >> for me this is the gun use, but absolutely inspired by
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islamic terrorism. stuart: i'm jumping all over you. do you think that word? to divert the debate. >> it was an attempt to force their gun renewal proposals and it's not going to work like 2000 republicans did it. it didn't work either. the partisan divide is too large. demonstrations are not effective at this point. they can try all they might. it didn't do not effective. stuart: the attorney general says the way to combat terror is to love everybody. i'm being facetious and sarcastic. that doesn't work. we cannot leave our attorney general. they know where this woman is good they have eyes on her. she's just be in the face of the doj, and giving comforting words, not comforting for many in this country while a real investigation goes on behind
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closed doors and that's the way the fed works. it's part of their culture. stuart: look at this. >> historically this has been affect it. >> in 2008 i don't think the constituents of these representatives you like it. stuart: the attackers launched a filibuster, that is entirely legitimate. >> i'm talking about 2008 when they had done duration or the republican representatives should in this country are allowed to do that. when you have a position and you want to express it in a peaceful way, you can do that. stuart: you were on already last night. we will take you on trans heaven this morning. let's get to donald trump. he fired back to rent late but hillary clinton on the issues of jobs and the economy. it was this beach. it was media's reaction to that?
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let's start with slate.com. described his speech like this. trump speech about hillary was terrifyingly effective. that's interesting. terrifyingly affect it. they accept that this effective. way out to the last. they hate tron. this is from npr. trump just gave a speech republicans have been waiting 20 years to hear. not quite sure how to take that with tax tears running. fred barnes, you are a strong guy. the media is in shock. that means the new look on prompter, on point trump works. >> that was a better speech than trump has ever given before in this presidential campaign. i intend to find out. i think trump ought to use them again. the speech had all the right contrast.
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hillary is going been the status quo. i'm for change. she's under the special interests. going to crack down on special interest and on and on. the one line is that hillary clinton may be the most corrupt person ever to seek the presidency of the united states. >> it was a tough line. you could say it was an extreme line. and off the cuff shoot from the hip, shouted out kind of way, which would've made it even harder had he done that. the real question is can he keep this up? can he stay restrained on message, on prompter. >> one day is in a whole campaign. look what is happening. a big encourager of him to say whatever he wants. cory lewandowski, the campaign manager who was fired and trump.
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it's going to take a few days and doesn't have to live in have distractions and talk about some judge nobody cares about. here are the two things he needs to do. one of course is focused on hillary and stop attacking republicans who haven't acting at. before he was spending all this time attacking republicans. he needs to woo them. he can still get it, but not by sitting back and say induce republicans are ungrateful. stuart: there's two things you should do. stop attacking republicans. what's the other one? >> everyday. make that the focus everyday. both of those things unify the party. republicans for the most part are against hillary clinton, the few that are going to vote for her. to focus on that, whether she focused on? she focuses on tron.
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that's the right thing to do for her. but he's got better issues than she does. hillary, if you murder yesterday, she's that most of her time attacking job creators. that is not the way to tackle jobs. stuart: thanks for joining us. we'll see you again rose to. here you go sports fans. the dodgers first baseman adrian gonzalez made one of the best catches this season. a foul ball down the first race line rolls down his leg. he reaches out with his glove. he scoops it up, just before it hits the ground. wait for it, wait for it. there you go. got it. i could do that. that is the catch of the day. looks like if i say it looks like the higher opening today, ladies and gentlemen, we are up about 150 points.
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the bookies in britain say that the campaign winds. investors like it up 150. the cloud computing company known as red hat offers downbeat guidance and separate a percent drop in the opening bell. bases announced the secession plan. the stock will be up are to $3 per share, up by just a little bit air. hundreds of terror plots have been stopped in the u.s. since 9/11, many involving foreign-born suspects including dozens of refugees. there is a story. liz: 380 from places like pakistan, somalia, iraq. and also at the sport he initially had knitted as refugees. they are heavily concentrated in california, texas, new york, minnesota. justice department data released by the senate judiciary subcommittee on immigration.
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stuart: width of refugees. we call them refugees coming into this country. some of them, a very small number, but some of them are involved in terrorist plots. at least 40. >> so here's again. stuart: a large number when you think about it. trent or that is a large number. /sends a letter saying this is through the u.s. does not have a screaming kid for the individuals. east coast, west coast, north of how this kind of scary. is scary. dictator like a disease. if you are just waking up in just seen this coming maybe you are in hawaii. this is a sit in on gun control. house democrats 1960s style student them out on the floor of the house of representatives. our next guest says that
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fighting totally the wrong thing. within two days. >> radical islam. stuart: did you hear that? in the background, radical islam. the man shouting, that is congressman louie gohmert who is with us right now. you make quite an impact. that was political theater yesterday or overnight. you tell me this. did they successfully changed the debate from terror to guns? >> they have to a large degree. a lot of people are talking about guns instead of talking about the radical islam movement that is killing american like i asked some of them, he used a gun in her brando. but if you're going to be consistent, you've got to be banning pressure cookers because of what happened in boston.
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it is not going to do us much good to keep adding whatever new weapon they used. what we've got to do is protect ourselves from radical islamists. you are bringing up the very important issue with the information that 81,000 people are on the no fly list, that a thousand of them are americans. there are vast numbers of people coming in this country who are a threat to americans. my goodness, more americans need better guns the way this administration is failing to protect us. i've got to stay this. your earlier guests was comparing the antics in 2018 now. i started that in 2008. the only rule violated was by speaker nancy pelosi. we were allowed to make five-minute speeches on that last day before the august recess when she sought a bunch of us ready to make five-minute speeches. she and appropriately breaking
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the rules gaveled and adjourned and refuse to allow us. lynn westmoreland and i was ending their say and what are you going to do. i came to give a speech with or without. he said let's do it. that started it, but we never broke a rule. this is unprecedented. stuart: i've got 22nd last. as a reporter, tony, are they still sitting in on the floor of the house? >> they are still over, still disrupt income is still violating rules. all these things and the sergeant at arms that you guys when we violate the rule, these people we keep telling them, but they keep violating these rules. stuart: thank you very much indeed. we appreciate you being on the show. thank you indeed. how about teaser?
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he made a deal to outfit lapd with body cameras with a $60 million no-bid contract. teasers going up a bit more. 24 from 23. that is coming up on the opening bell. big speech from hillary clinton talking about income inequality, college giveaways. great internet. all of that. she sounds a lot like bernie sanders. listen to this. >> wall street corporations and the superrich pay their fair share of taxes. you pay your car insurance
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> i now how important it is to rebuild our roads, bridges and airports. we've got more work to do. let's build better and must connect every household to broadband by the year 2020. let's make sure that wall street corporations and the superrich pay their fair share of taxes. [cheers and applause] and all of this depends upon putting our families first. so let's set the goal to make debt-free college available for everyone so future students won't have to borrow a dime to pay for tuition at a public college or university. stuart: that sounds great, doesn't it?
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i want everything for free. alice hillary campaigning in north carolina yesterday. anthony k. williams, despite our previous disagreement is still with us. >> she is a walking, living in the reading proof of the effectiveness. if we didn't know before, we know now. it sounds good and really enthusiastic this campaign cycle. here's the issue. can she sell in any kind of credible that the way bernie was able to. when he spent the work wall street. for a modest goals. exactly. thank you very much in need. let's get to the market. a rock 'n roll market kind of day it is the price of gold is down again. big retreat. the brexit not affect the price of gold.
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oil still 48-50 bucks. tesla, a huge drop yesterday because they plan to acquire solar city. that worries investors than it should. why on earth do you have two companies, neither of which makes office, both which are led government subsidies to advise that at such a great thing? down goes the stock. burger king. is this the retreat? i hope it is. back in she does. deep fried mac and cheese come in with jieddo flavoring. comfort food. the grits vote today on stay. stay as the odds favor but the bookies. investors going and buying stocks at the market will open a couple minutes away and it would be straight up. stay there, everybody. this is a big day. all you do is press this, and in plain english,
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>> all right. here we go. this is going to be a very big and very exciting stock market today. it's thursday, june the 23rd. london, britain, is five hours ahead of us. in other words, doing the math. it's about mid afternoon over there and they're right in the middle of voting whether they stay or leave the european union.
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that will have a big impact on our market here. is already is. we're going to open sharply higher for the dow jones industrial average, the bookies say the money is going on the stay campaign. and stay means staying in europe, that's considered good for wall street. we shall see. bang, it's 9:30 eastern time, we opened with a gain of 84 points and should be well over 100. there we go, 102, 107, it's like a horse race, rear we go, off and running, 112. what a day, folks. how about the s&p 500? that's also higher. it's up-- wait a minute, that's wrong, get that off, it cannot be down. is it? is it? do we have the right number? s&p, thank you very much, up 13 points, exactly the same percentage gain as the dow
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industrials. and how about the nasdaq composite. home to the tech companies, and a 37 point gain there. the price of gold is down a little, no impact for the brexit vote to speak of. the price of oils still around 49, almost $50 a barrel and that's not reacting that much to the brexit vote. the 10-year treasury, ooh, 1.74%. i was away yesterday when we gave you the number tuesday, it was 1.67. the yield on the 10-year treasury has gone up again. now this, the british are voting right now on brexit, stay or leave. british companies, all of them, the vast majority of british companies, their stock price is going up. look at that. glaxosmithkline, diageo, the liquor company, and all of them up in large percentage term.
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bhp billiton, tobacco all going up in percentage terms, because they think that the stay vote wins. liz macdonald is here, dr barton is here, larry lefrps and jeff. all with us on a very big day. the british are voting. the bookies say the stay campaign is likely to win. larry, what difference does it make in your market if they vote to stay or leave? big deal? >> request -- well, yeah, it's a big deal. if they vote to stay. we'll see more of that. if we exit we'll have real volatility and people worries what happens in the state and from a traders perspective the volatility is what we want. i don't think we'll get it. stay, i think everybody here wants to be long the markets because that's the safer bet. if we get that, you'd have great action from the traders and investors and your viewers out there, but i don't think we'll see that. stuart: dr, do you agree with larry, that the stay campaign
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looks like it's going to win and therefore it's good for wall street. do you agree? >> yeah, larry is usually spot on and he is here. i'll throw on a little subtlety. there's murmuring among traders, if it's close, if stay doesn't have a blowout win, if it's a close number that could introduce some more uncertainty into the markets and people might say, well, that will open the door for france to call for a referendum there. stuart: liz, wait a second. if the leave were to win, 1 or 2 percentage points. is that enough mandate to bring out of europe liz: your point, other could. and pew, polling, majorities, many of them in italy, spain, germany, france, they don't
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like the way the eu has handled the refugee crisis. stuart: i think europe is going to break up anyway, regardless of the british vote, and if they vote to leave, it breaks them up faster. stuart: back to wall street. look who is here. perma bear, jeff sika. not always a bear. the stay vote looks like it will win according to the bookies. what say you? >> yes, the stay vote. i think they are going to vote to stay, but it's going to be dramatically close and people have to focus on the fact you mentioned it, it's extremely important. there's 40 to 45% of british citizens who favor leaving. the problem is, they're legitimately afraid to leave. they can't extract themselves from the debacle that the european union has become. they want to walk away from the banking crisis, but they can't and they know if they do,
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o to three years of hell and they don't want that. stuart: i want to go back round the table again. we are all assuming it's a clear-cut deal one way or other. stay wins, or leave wins. let's suppose it's a narrow victory either way. a narrow victory, doesn't matter which side it's on. a narrow victory creates real uncertainty what they're going to do next. >> i agree. the only thing i would say. if it's a narrow victory and they stay, i think the market goes higher in the u.s. if it's a narrow victory and they want to leave, that's different problems and volatility in the markets. and yes, that changes things a little bit, but stay, i think we kind of stay the status quo. they want volatility and i don't think they'll get that. stuart: let's get to the markets and their actual performance thus far five minutes' worth of of business.
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dare i take striking distance of 18,000? here is a stat for you. s&p 500 companies are sitting on a record $1.3 trillion worth of cash, cash. 1.3 trillion, those s&p 500 companies. >> they're buying back shares. they bought back about 580 million in shares. what's interesting about the share buybacks that are happening, we're about a little higher than we were at the peak of the market 2007. so they're borrowing at very low costs and taking that borrowed capital and buying their own shares. so, if people are wondering, why is the market moving up? one of the main reasons is 580 million-- 580 billion dollars in reinvesting liz: here are the number of s&p 500 companies doing it. more than 330. with dividends and stock
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buybacks you have a record shareholder returns going into this. stuart: that's where the money is going. >> and look at health care. health care sector has gotten the most of share buybacks and the health care sector has done well. let's ask ourselves, why has it done well? and look at the buyback. stuart: fair point, good stuff. i want to move on to individual stocks. nothing to do with the british vote at all. macy's, the ceo there says he will leave the company in 2017 and he will stay on as executive chair. the market likes that. astrazeneca, they've got a flu vaccine, it's a spray, a nasal spray. according to the c.d.c., it's not a good deal. even though the stock is actually slightly higher. the cloud computing company, red hat. down beat guidance, down goes the stock, 4%. herman miller. do you think they're a clothing company? they are not.
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they're an office furniture company. they make fancy chairs, i'd like one. and look at it go, 7% higher. steel case there's an office furniture company, but they gave a negative outlook for the future. down 8%. back to taser, now there they are, a body camera company, not just a stun gun things. well, they've won a $60 million deal to outfit the l.a. police force with body cameras. the market likes it. up 1% liz: we've got a new number. 16 cities have body cameras for their cops. miami, san diego, new orleans, including los angeles. stuart: i think the market would like to see new york city to go to taser body cameras liz: they just completed a pilot program for that. stuart: they did. barnes & noble, a better outlook, what do you think about a book company--
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>> barnes & noble are banking on the popularity of get this, adult coloring books and announcing a whole new private line. we get that. supplies, shirts, anything to take on amazon.com the ruler of the retail universe, right? this is the strategy, barnes & noble seeing declining sales for years and desperate. so adult coloring books, the way of the future shall the way forward. wall street likes it. stuart: when you say adult coloring books. >> yes. stuart: that doesn't mean a pornographery does it. >> no, they're comic books, anti-anxiety and detailed so you need fine dexterity. stuart: wait a minute, i've got nine grandchildren and i do that with my grandchildren, i like coloring, but i don't have that fine hand-eye coordination
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for adult coloring books. can we move off the subjects liz: this is a new side of stuart. >> i bought an adult coloring book and i went to barnes & noble and saw the display, reduce stress and i went and bought them and i use them, that's the truth. stuart: look, it's a big market day, the market is up nearly 1%. the brexit vote in britain and we're talking adult coloring books. that's a fine, fine report, you did well. and how about this? existing home sales, up 1% in may. best performance in nine years. that's a big part of the housing market. and it looks very, very healthy. larry levin, what do you say? that's pretty good for the overall economy, isn't it? a good housing market? >> yeah, for sure, stuart. i want to see the existing home sales numbers going up and the next one is seeing the new home sales numbers going up.
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there aren't a whole lot of people building new homes, but if the existing numbers go up, we'll see those and the signs for the economy and the market. >> good stuff now. i want to ask market watchers, dr and jeff. what is the one thing that they would buy, maybe today. regardless of the outcome of the brexit vote. dr, what do you like? forget the brexit vote, what do you like? >> despite the brexit vote, stuart, i love the defensive stocks here, and i'll give you two. we've talked about taser, you know i love that. that's going to do well regardless what goes on at brexit. i really like lockheed martin. they're doing so many things well. there's a rocket contract last week for $331 million, and they have that ace up their sleeve. they have one of the best cyber security consulting businesses
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out there and they haven't told us how big that is yet. when they do that, i think we'll get another bump in that stock. >> every now and again we have to break away from the british vote. we just did with dr and the same thing with jeff sica, what do you like regardless of the vote? >> it's hard to like anything. exxonmobil, right now we'll continue to have low interest rates i like 3.8, 3.9 dividend. i think it looks good. i think oil prices have essentially stabilized at this point. so he think it's going to be-- i think it's going to be a mover. stuart: sound the trumpets, jeff sica likes something. [buzzer] >> ♪ [trumpets] >> things coming at you from all sides. great open to the market today. look at it go. we're up 155 points. look, if you're just joining us, you want to know what is happening, the bookies in britain say the money is going
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to the stay campaign. the market likes like, that's why it's up. this is the story of the day, the british vote on what happens to our market. we're on it, believe me. burger king, this is an interesting story. they've rolled out something called mac and cheetos. back to lori rothman. you better explain this to us. >> forgive me, i actually have to read this because i can barely stomach it. mac and cheetos, deep fried sticks of macaroni and cheese encrusted in cheetos flavored breading. this was inspired by the dorito loco taco, the dorito flavored taco shell. they'll sell for for eight weeks or sl supplies run out. stuart: you seem leak you don't know what to say about this. let me fill in the blanks here. this is the end of cale. this is the end of rabbit food,
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like salads for breakfast pour something. this is comfort food, it's going to sell like hotcakes and look at that, the market loves it. >> only 2.50 for five. >> 310 calories, about an egg mcmuffin. stuart: where is my intern? i want an order right now. lori, thanks indeed. i don't know what's happened with the big board. we've been sitting there and a gain of 150 points. hardly any movement at all. up or down one point. it's set right there at this moment. it's all about the british vote. the bookies saying the money is going on the remain camp or stay camp, up goes the market. new details coming out on hillary's e-mail scandal. liz, you're shuffling your notes liz: no, no, following is story a key security feature to stop the phishing.
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one as disabled. then complaints were coming e-mails weren't flowing from government workers into the server. here is the fix, let's disable the software that is supposed to stock hacking e-mails. so, that's an issue. stuart: e-mails were flowing, state department, hillary's private e-mail and back again. they knew it, they interrupted it thought they had a security problem so acknowledged the e-mail flow was there. >> stay with me, this happened in december of 2010. hillary clinton already secretary of state made many trips overseas including to places like china. stuart: thanks, liz, good stuff. thank you. the news is not all about the british vote. we've got politics in the news, two big speeches, hillary clinton, donald trump. joining me now is lee carter. remember, she uses those dials to measure the audience response to what they're saying on the screen. now, what have you got for us today? tell me what you've got. >> we took a look at donald trump's and hillary clinton
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gave speeches yesterday and wanted to see voter reaction. stuart: what's first? >> what's first, i think we have hillary coming up first. stuart: roll that tape and you're telling me that it's the blue line that is the-- that's the independent. >> blue line democrat. independents yellow and red republican. roll the tape and let's look at the lines. >> in more than 3500 lawsuits in the last 30 years and a large number were filed by ordinary americans and small businesses that did work for trump and never got paid. painters, waiters, plumbers, people who needed the money and didn't get it. not because he couldn't pay them, but because he could stiff them. stuart: that's interesting. the blue line democrats came way down at the end then didn't approve and the independents, the yellow lines, they didn't approve at all. >> independents is a story we
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need to be tracking here, because that's going to be the key to the election. what we saw here, her attacks didn't work. she goes less semantic and details. she warts with 3500 lawsuits. by the time she gets to her point she's lost people. when she gets to that place, look, donald trump is actually getting success on the backs of the working class, the backs of the people. that's where you start to see he has a problem, but she buries the headline. stuart: remember, please, the red line is republicans, yellow line independents, the blue line is democrats. their approval of what they're seeing. roll the trump tape, please. >> hillary clinton, as you know, she-- most people know she's a worldclass liar. look at her pathetic e-mail server statements or other phony landing. [applaus [applause]
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>> or her phony landing in bosnia where she says she was under attack and the attack turned out to be young girls handing her flowers. stuart: we are looking at the yellow line, the independents liked that. they really liked it. see, again, what donald trump does, he goes after the theme, the theme is that she's a liar and that she's crooked and he hits it over and over again and look at hillary's polling numbers, a huge impact. she is the most untrustworthy candidate. that's what he's hitting and he's tapping into what people are i afraid of her for and goes it over and over again. the last three weeks, he lost independents. when he spoke they were on the floor and with the democrats he brought them back with the speech. yesterday he went back on the offensive. he needs to stay on the offensive. some being on the defensive and get back to the core message about the economy, jobs and national security and making people question hillary clinton. he does it effectively. stuart: that was the new trump and the independents liked it.
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>> they did. >> thank you for joining us, appreciate it. >> anytime. stuart: look at the dow 30. we've got the market scan. 29 are up. why is the market up today? well, it's really about the british vote. the bookies say the money is going on the stay campaign. the polls, however, say it's 50/50. we'll be back. the dow is up. every day you read headlines about businesses being hacked and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime. and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to fight cyber-crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information so we can track down the criminals. when it comes to the cloud, trust and security are paramount. we're building what we learn back into the cloud to make people and organizations safer.
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> people who don't know me, where are you from? i read that, oh, you're from here, how do you talk like that? and that's when the whole story comes up. stuart: that was a texas woman. she went in for simple jaw surgery and came out with a british accent. the doctors say, she has a foreign accent syndrome, a rare disease of which there are only 100 known cases and the syndrome usually affects people who had head trauma. doctors are running neurological tests to determine what went wrong. what? it didn't go wrong, it went right liz: apparently she's going to speech therapy to correct it.
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when are you. stuart: and speaking like john wayne-- what is the right tax rate for the rich. >> you want me to pay more than 60% of my income than i pay already, do you? >> i'll tell you what hillary clinton would like. stuart: no, what do you want? if i made a billion dollars a day, you don't deserve to take 60% of my income. >> if you feel this angry, if you feel this angry, how do you think that middle class americans feel who have-- >> i know how they feel. >> a republican president and people like donald trump come in and-- >> is it fair? is it? >> stuart, i'm not going to answer about your tax because i don't know your tax situation, i told you that it's fair. stuart: guess who is here? no, not mr. spurling, tamara holder is here. come on, let's have this out. >> let's just say what you call me what my title was, the
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communist. stuart: want to repeat that. >> like that intro, so you can bolster this interview up to your favor. go ahead. stuart: can i proceed? >> yes. >> i think it's that closely immoral and totally unfair that the government, any government, takes more than half of anybody's income at any point in income taxes. that's grossly wrong and immoral and you say? >> i agree, i stay half is more-- >> how can you go with hillary clinton or bernie sanders. >> very rich people refuse to pay their taxes. we have a presidential candidate who doesn't want to disclose his tax returns because he possibly didn't pay his taxes because he's being audited even though tax returns you can actually give to the public. however, anyway, i digress. the fact of the matter is we have major corporations and
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millionaires and billionaires spending money off shore. stuart: that was not the question. >> as a result-- >> the question was for individual, people who make good money, my statement is immoral for any government to take more than half in income taxes. will you please address that? >> i will. i'll address it, the reason why the tax code needs to be amended, fixed, made simpler. the rich are paying-- >> pay 53%, i'm not rich. stuart: one thing you cannot do on this program. you cannot repeat a lie. you cannot keep on saying that the rich refuse to pay their fair share. 1% of the country, the top 1% pays 40% of all the money that comes into the united states treasury in income taxes that's more than fair share. >> and they make all the money. stuart: i want you to retract that statement. retract it. >> i'm not going to retract it. stuart: they pay their fair share and more.
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>> a lot of them send their moan overseas. stuart: you're confusing income with capital gains. >> i'm not. stuart: you are. >> they're investing their money. stuart: if your income is on the box and live in a hi high local tax state. california, and whether you like it or not. we're out of i am too. >> half of the money you declare. stuart: out of time. check the big boards. [laughter] we're not where we were. we were up 170 and now 1122 points. the gamblers stay the brits will vote to stay. hillary clinton and donald trump are going at it. trump is effective and on message and even the mainstream media agrees with that. new information with congress show that hundreds of terror plots have been foiled since
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>> we are a half hour into the trading session. we're up 129 points. the british vote whether to stay in europe or leave it, that is a focus of attention today. and the sentiment seems to be the stay campaign wins. wall street likes it, up she goes. we have green arrows all over the place today, actually. the nasdaq, the s&p 500, and the price of oil is up as well. up today. british stocks across the board, they're up. look at them go. glaxo, barclays, royal bank scotland, diageo, hsbc. they're all up. bp is up. british american tobacco, all much them british stocks up on the expectation that the stay vote wins. let's see what happens if it doesn't. home builder stocks, they're going up this morning.
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i think we've just got new numbers on new homes built liz: bad news, basically, new home sales, expectations for 560 k. and so we're going to watch the home builder stocks to see if there's a reversal. stuart: they're up at the motel -- mortgage rates. >> still, lower than a year ago, 4%, watch this, the median house price now is up 5% year over year at $239,700. so, $239,700 is the median. stuart: the middle. >> dead middle. half above that price and half below. mortgage rates at 3.56% liz: almost like free money after taxes. stuart: we say it every week. we get this number thursday morning about 10:00 eastern, i
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always say it, back in my day, it was 12 1/2% liz: now, it's like a third. and i like you grabbing your heart. stuart: i should grab my wallet, i did back then, believe me. also this hour, we're monitoring, could be news from the supreme court. we're waiting for decisions on big cases, including abortion, affirmative action and the president's executive orders on immigration. when that news breaks, you will have it. also this hour, we're expecting a verdict in the case of the baltimore police officer ceasar goodman, the freddy gray case, goodson was driving the van and fac fac faces murder charges, and we'll get back to the british vote. what's happening right now. ashley webster is in london for us. wait a second, we hear there's flooding in london which could suppress the stay vote and a big music festival that could
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also affect-- what's that all about? >> well, that's interesting. yes, stuart we had torrential rain overnight that flooded manile areas in the south of england, even here in london, some polling stations are forced to close and move to other areas. the pub down the street is closed perhaps is the bigger story, i'll get back to that. yes, if this affects the turnout, the less people comes out, the more it benefits the leave campaign. you're mentioned 180,000 youngsters, mainly, down in the southwest of england, down there, they've been stuck in the mud. the question is, did they vote? a-ha, many of them say, yes, we voted either by post ahead of time, which was legal, or by proxy. they can have someone else vote for them. how many of those millennials did that? could it have an impact on the vote? we're not sure, but certainly we'll find out tomorrow morning, stu. you'll be on the air at 11 p.m.
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eastern, that's when we may start getting a sense of where this vote is going. stuart: you're going to join us as well. i go on the air at 11:00 tonight eastern time that would be 4:00 in the morning in london where you are and you're going to be chiming in from london during our special tonight. we might have the very early. ashley: chiming in. stuart: a british expression. i want everybody to join us tonight. because history will be unfolding and i think, ashley, am i right, that at 11:00 eastern time tonight we might get some very, very early results, like the-- we'll know where the trend is doing at that time tonight, right? >> that's exactly right, stuart. we'll hear from independent areas, those results will start coming in and from that we may be able to pick up that trend, but it may be sometime after 4 a.m. local or maybe midnight eastern time before we get a real sense where the vote has gone. stuart: you're going to be on the air, 24/7, webster and that's the way it is, son.
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ashley: some vacation. stuart: thank you very much, indeed. politics, donald trump on pro prompter, very much on point. the new trump, watch this. >> she's a worldclass liar, just look at her pathetic e-mail server statements, hillary clinton has perfected the politics of personal profit and even theft. the hillary clinton foreign policy has cost america thousands of lives and trillions and trillions of dollars. and unleashed isis across the world. hillary clinton may be the most corrupt person ever to seek the presidency. stuart: all right. now, that was donald trump very much on point. the mainstream media didn't exactly like it, but they were impressed that he was on point. npr, for example, here is the headline. trump just gave the speech republicans have been waiting 20 years to hear. there's a lot more somewhat similar to that.
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from the clinton insider, doug schoen joins us, for some strange reason he's in london, but we're not talking to him about the brexit vote, certainly not. i want to talk to you about donald trump. >> sure. stuart: you've been following what they had to stay. a lot of people said he looked good, this is the new trump. very much on a teleprompter looked like on point, on message. how does it look to you? >> oh, i think he's certainly done better in one speech. a couple of questions, one, will he be able to stick with it, maintain discipline, and second, can he moderate his message for swing voters who may well not necessarily respond to the red meat that was in that speech. stuart: i've got a feeling that you have warmed up to trump-- no, i've got a feeling you have not warmed up to trump, you're warming up to hillary and is hillary going to hire you as a political consultant? is that what's going on here, doug schoen?
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>> i don't think she's hiring me. very few things i'm certain of, that's one of them. i think that trump is doing better, down 5 or 6 points in the polls and frankly i thought he'd slip a little more, but he has to maintain message discipline, two key themes, an economic message of change for himself, and an argument on terror and why he is particularly well equipped to fight it. that's what his campaign needs to be based on. stuart: got it. and doug, stay there for a second. i've got to break away from other news coming into us. >> of course. stuart: the closed door meeting that donald trump held with about a thousand evangelical leaders. this was a couple of days ago. among those leaders at the meeting was our next guest, liberty university president jerry falwell, jr. welcome to the program. good to see you again. >> thank you, stuart, great to be with you. stuart: the 1,000 evangelicals, use that number, of those who were there, what proportion
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walked out of that meeting feeling, yes, we're for trump. he's got our vote? how many? >> i think the vast majority did and i think they were so impressed with his demeanor. he was presidential. he addressed all the issues that were important to them from religious liberty to who disappointees would be for the supreme court, to support for the nation of israel and he but it was passed in the '60s and before the big meeting with the thousand evangelicals. we had a small meeting that 30 or so from the advisory board. mr. trump brought it in to me privately, but he's been thinking about it the whole time. stuart: wait a minute. >> the biggest-- >> i don't think our audience
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knows what is the johnson amendment. tell us what it is, please, and donald trump's position. >> it was a law that was passed by lyndon johnson, an amendment to an existing bill that prohibited all nonprofits from using any of their resources to express a political opinion of any sort. and so, what mr. trump's point was this evangelical community is the largest voting block in the country, but they've been silenced and he said, i met with leaders who would have endorsed me, but were scared because of the johnson amendment they'd lose their tax exemption, and one black pastor in the room spoke up and he said you know, i can tell you why that johnson amendment was passed, it was passed to keep black churches and black congregations from organizing and supporting the civil rights movement. because back in those days, it was the republicans who supported the civil rights-- >> and donald trump wants to get rid of the johnson amendment, did he say that?
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>> he said it clearly to the smaller group and to the larger group later and that's-- for the last six months, i was a lawyer for liberty university for years. when i became president in 2007 when my father passed, i had to change the way i think, i had to change the way i handle myself ap i've seen donald trump do the same thing. he's evolved from a new york businessman to a presidential candidate and i was so impressed with his speech yesterday, he was the best i've ever seen him. stuart: okay. >> he's got paul manafort for his campaign manager, i think that's a great move. and he's on the track to become-- presidential. stuart: jerry falwell, jr., we're a fast-moving show. thank you very much. >> i appreciate it. stuart, good to be with you. stuart: i'm going to stick on the election here. bernie sanders telling c-span and here is the quote, it doesn't appear that mai'm going to be the nominee.
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e-mack, it sounds like he's accepted his position liz: yes. stuart: he's not running, he's withdrawn liz: he has withdrawn. will he release the delegates? he wants to stay on the democratic national party platform, and he says that hillary clinton is an establishment candidate. and pretty significant block of them, would vote for bernie sanders. stuart: that's the interesting point. 55% of bernie sanders voters who they would vote for-- >> 55% vote for clinton and-- vote for trump and a big slug of democrats, sanders voters say they may move to vote to tru trump. that's a big deal. >> if he gets them, he is the
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change candidate and voters for change. could trump get the sanders voters. stuart: that's a big deal. that's a very big deal. only half bernie's supporters would vote for hillary. >> let me help you, 55% plan to vote for clinton. stuart: 55%. but 22% would vote for trump and 18% for gary johnson. stuart: that's a big deal liz: it's a big deal. stuart: i'm telling you. and this, attorney general staying well away from using the phrase radical islam. well away. she says we should be fighting terror with love. meanwhile, hundreds of terror plots foiled in america since 9/11, many involving refugees. we have that story for you. and the story of the day, of course, the markets. investors seem to think that the stay campaign in britain will be victorious. that's why they're buying stocks and the dow is up. ♪
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>> well, we're going back up a little bit more. we're now up 150 points. look at the dow 30, all of them. 29 of them are up. just one of them, that will be pfizer, is down. that's a pretty broaden had based stock market rally. barnes & noble doing very well indeed. they're reporting bigger losses and say they're going to make a profit. they are selling adult coloring books. we are told that's one of the big reasons why this stock is up, adult coloring books liz: for stress, who knew. stuart: who knew. good work.
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who knew. bed, bath and beyond profits flat. is that right, the stocks is up. that's no retail ice age. bath and beyond right now. and then we have attorney general loretta lynch criticized for her comments yesterday on terror. listen to what she said. >> this department of justice and your country stands with you in the light. we stand with you to say that the good in this world far outweighs the evil that our common humanity, transcends our differences and that our most effective response to terror and to hatred is compassion, unity, and is love. stuart: former counterterrorism special operator jason beardsley is with us and jason was listening to what the she had to say, unity to fight terror. you fought tower--
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fought terror and what do you say. >> it's tripe, and they need to get a hold of a ranger handbook. the most cash producing weapon. we need to get the department of justice fighting terror not acquiescing and capitulating from their ivy towers. stuart: and you were an army ranger? >> army special forces. stuart: special forces, so you know what you're talking about when it comes to on the ground fighting terror, you've been there. >> that's right, we're not going to do it with love. that's a ridiculous statement. our justice department has turned a blind eye toward the extremist radical islam nested or protected under this global form of islam and not letting our military and law enforcement dig deeper go after them at the cause. and come out with a statement we ought to love the enemy. again, get a hold of a ranger
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handbook and we'll show you how to take care of the enemy. that's not it. stuart: and in congress, we have 580 people convicted of being involved in some kind of terror plot in the united states. 380 were foreign born and 40 came to america as refugees. involved in terror plots in america. what do you make of that? >> it's an erosion of our national sovereignty, rampant unchecked immigration. and the reason the military is there so we don't have to fight it here, but when you let these people come in unchecked and we don't look at their behavior and we are not looking what they believe or that they love america, the greatest country in the world. either it can involve our national sovereignty or erode it. and harmony and happiness, we
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need to be much more careful about who we let in and let our justice and law enforcement officers actually go after the terrorists. stuart: you're a trump guy? >> you know, i like that he said, look, america needs to be great again. we believe in strong leadership, we haven't seen that for eight years. we want to hold his feet accountable, hold it to the fire, but what he's saying is resonating with people like myself. we know how to fight this. we can't do it with soft words and meli-mousamealy-mouthed rhe. stuart: you've told your story. thank you, indeed. the crews company, carnival crews line moving higher, some analysts say the stock is a buy and some say it's going to $58 a share, it's 49 now. donald trump going after hillary clinton. trump says she wants to let in thousands more refugees, going to cost us billions. trump says we should use the
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switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> breaking news from the supreme court, it's a big ruling on affirmative action case. >> the supreme court ruling moments ago that the university of texas's policy of allowing race as part of the admissions process does not violate the amendment. the 4-3 ruling here, voting from the supreme court, consider rule deference is owed to a university in defining those intangible
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characteristics like student body diversity central to its educational mission. the ruling goes on to say in striking this sensitive balance, they can serve as laboratory for experimenttation. what this they're arguing, race is part of that college experience. in the 4-3 ruling, note that justice kagan sat out as part of the ruling, that's how you get to the seven justices here, of course, the passing of and the antonin scalia. stuart: bottom line, affirmative action, using race for college admissions is okay. >> it's a laboratory of experimenttation. stuart: thanks, blake. the democrats gun vote sit-in.
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we heard from congressman louie gohmert last hour. >> on the floor, he used the gun in orlando, but if you're going to be consistent, you've got to be banning pressure cookers because of what happened in boston. we-- it's not going to do us much good to keep banning whatever new weapon they use. what we've got to do is protect ourselves from radical islamists. stuart: let me backtrack a little. we woke up overnight to a sit-in, house democrats literally sat in. they wanted a vote on guns, they didn't get it, but they staged a sit-in to try to get it. doug schoen is with us, now, doug, this was a form of political theater, this is a way that the democrats tried to get the terror debate away from terror and to guns. my question to you is, was it successful? >> i don't think so, stuart. the congress is in recess. it was a small group of house
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democrats and whether you think gun control helps or hurts the fight on terror, clearly there's a lot more beyond that that needs to be done. i think this is mostly a side show. stuart: a side show. political theater nonetheless, right? >> correct. absolutely. stuart: i just don't think it looks good when you've got people lying around the house of representatives defying the rules of house and making out some kind of student protest, i just don't think it looks good, doug. >> stuart, i don't think so either. at the same time, i doubt come november people will be thinking about this particular incident. stuart: they call it, only time will tell. that's something you're not supposed to say in journalism. >> very view. doug schoen enjoy that london vacation you're on right now. >> i always do. stuart: thank you very much indeed, sir. appreciate it. now, the big story of the day, talk about your money, and
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green arrows all over the place on wall street. when you look at that, that's the dow 30 stocks, 29 of them up, one of them unchanged and that would be pfizer. what's going on here, the back drop to the vote in britain. do they stay in the european union or do they leave? sentiment from the bookies suggests that they're going to stay and that's why we've gone up in the market thus far today. still on that british vote. the leave campaign are worried about immigration. that's the leave europe campaign. they came out with this poster, it says that britain is at the breaking point with a lot of the refugees in the background. the critics say that that's not fair. that that poster was not fair. more on that in a moment. ♪ closing the stage
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tree into breaking news from germany. there are reports that a gunman in a movie theater. transfer report say a heavily armed man issue name and a movie complex than they are high in south of frankfurt just north of heidelberg. he has a cartridge he shot an air. the s.w.a.t teams are moving in frankfurt. more for you is the story develops. multiple casualties right now. western germany. south of frankfurt just north of highlander. the movie complex. stuart: any conclusions happening right now. checked a big word up 126
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points. markets are up today. the price of oil very close to $50 a barrel but not that much change in price. the big banks are mostly higher today. they're all higher in percentage terms. the bookies are saying that the state campaign is getting all the money in britain. that's why the banks are out. move on sales down in may after a surge in april. homebuilder -- no big deal. the homebuilders are on love. a tech ipo. is that correct? they incorporate text messages into their apps. a bit like with your overdrive or. of 67% on day one. as you know by now, the voting underway in britain. whether they stay or whether they leave. i'm not vote, look at this
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poster from the leave campaign. the guy in the center leaves the campaign. he wants britain out in a usenet poster with lots of immigrants in the background calling it a breaking point. clearly the campaign does not want those north african and other migrants coming into britain. it raises the issue of political correctness in britain and about over there. attorney and former professor of european union law at pepperdine university is with us now. the political correct this is strong in britain, just like it is here. i believe there is a movement in britain as well. what is your problem with that poster. >> that poster wasn't sanctioned by the official camp in. the reason people didn't like it
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is that it is that it is the other side the chance to say you guys are the nasty side. you guys don't like immigrants. what we've seen in this referendum is to remain campaign has been trying to dominate the narrative of kindness and togetherness in unity. the poster really played in their hand. one of the interesting things we've learned because of this referendum is the referendums don't lend themselves very easily to me one analytical discussion of the fact. what you see pitching against each other are very complicated, very subtle issues competing for social media attention and headlines. the analysis you really want. stuart: i've got your point. you do need analysis. but at the same time, you can't discount in motion.
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the way the british feel about their own culture and where they are going in the future. a lot of them feel threatened by an extraordinary wave of people coming into the country. that's an emotional response. that has to be part of the debate. >> that just as important not to demonize people that are really concerned about immigration. european union allows free movement of people around 28 member states and those member states could grow and expand. people all over this country are worried about the effect of that on public services. that's one of the key drivers of the campaign. the referendum is really split. households down the middle split work places. what we've really learned is that referenda are not always the time and place for the intellectual analysis in these
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situations. and you're right. if the emotion that drives there, which is why there's a real battle for capturing the mood. stuart: i've got 20 seconds left. who do you think at this moment wins? can you tell me? it's been a sudden surge to leave in the last few moments of the campaign. people getting into the ballot box and probably a bit unsure. they'll stick with the status quo. the closeness of the result tells you what you need to know. we are very divided. >> if it is a close vote with the leave campaign, they win by one or two points. hardly a mandate to call britain out. thanks very much for being with us. >> you have to respect the vote of the people. it is a majority verdict at the end of the day.
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i think what we will see is a sudden rallying towards the end of the day. stuart: thanks very much for your input. let's go to donald trump yesterday talking about hillary clinton's push for spending on migrant coming to america. watch this peer >> hillary also wants to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to settle middle eastern refugees in the united states on top of the current record level of integration that we are to have. for the amount of money hillary clinton would like to spend on refugees, we could rebuild every inner city in america. stuart: with us now, author of con job, how democrats give this profiteering and racial division. that's the name of the book. here is the author, crystal ray, frequent guest on the program. pay to see you.
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stuart: donald trump says instead of spending money on migrants, we could spend it on the inner cities. how do you feel about that because he bought been railed against the idea that inner cities need a vast new amount of money from the federal government. what do you say? >> i haven't read against good policies. isn't this the third rail of democrats? hillary clinton won the nomination over bernie sanders largely due to black voters in the inner city who vote democrat. donald trump is exactly right. she's willing to sacrifice the well-being of her black constituents who are, let's face it, they are living in war zones in baltimore and chicago and she wants to spend billions of dollars to bring in serious refugees, some of would-be terrorists over helping black americans. i'm not willing to pour more money into these cities are
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corrupt politicians. hillary clinton stuart: i'm terribly sorry to interrupt you. i just got breaking news from the supreme court about president obama's immigration plan. liz: effectively the supreme court was split for-4. it blocks the president's immigration plan. basically 25 other states have brought the case say that exceeded its power. stuart: are you still there? the supreme court says you can't do that, president obama. it was like 4 million from even 5 million people coming in by executive action. the spin court says you can't do it. congress has to vote on immigration. i read about this, how president obama's executive order to grant amnesty to illegals pouring in our inner cities like donald trump has said black
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constituents, black voters start dealing with double-digit non-employment. rather supreme court. this is a devastating election issue for hillary clinton who has told black voters over and over again flatlands matter that i support mass illegal immigration. this is a wonder for donald trump. i hope you will see that. that was his most disciplined speech he saw and like others have said on your program, donald trump can win the black vote if he keeps talking about these failed policies and how hillary clinton basically make sacrificial lambs of lax over and over again. democrats have done this for 50 plus years. when are we going to wake up? stuart: i've got a little bit more to add to the decision here. >> it was a split premise that basically effectively keeps in place a lower court ruling that blocked the president's plan about 4 million people as you
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point now to be here illegally. they've been here since 2010. they have children who are u.s. citizens. >> i've got another verdict. nothing to do at the supreme court. this is the friday great case. the man charged with the most serious charges in the friday great case has been found not guilty. he has been found not guilty of second-degree depraved murder. i believe the gentleman charged was the one who drove the van with freddie gray, the so-called rough ride. the man who drove the vehicle has been found not real to you. kristol right is still there i believe. >> stuart, i go into detail in my book. freddie gray and other folks in the van at the police department had caught that day said that he
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was high and he was trying to get out of the seat belt. we all know that police are protected. this is a class example of the prosecutor rushing to placate black lives matter, not looking at the fact the rules are always different when police officers are so-called charged with killing black people. right now you have in chicago over the memorial day weekend, 60 plus people gunned down over a three-day weekend of bloody carnage. nobody was outraged by that tear stuart: you've written extensively about the freddie gray case. tell me what president obama and the attorney general caveman said about that case. i think they have something to say about it. i think they were not on the side of the police officers. >> we know that eric holder went
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to baltimore. obama gave comments about freddie gray when he was on vacation, just like he did with michael brown. i have a whole chapter in the book on racial division. it talks about how we thought over and over again president obama used the white house for this black young men that were killed. we've never saw the president stand up for gmail shaw. these are young americans killed by illegal immigrants. whenever saw the bully pulpit for that. it's because a president it's because a president barack obama and eric holder's comment why you had an aggressive prosecutor file charges against a police officer that were never going to stand. it's all about race at these guys. stuart: some very interesting verdict. the supreme court in baltimore about some very serious cases here and they recap a couple of things. earlier this morning, about 20
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minutes ago, the supreme court allowed race to be used in determining admissions to colleges. they upheld affirmative action in the case of race being used in college admissions. they affirmed that. they said that's okay. later really, 10 minutes ago, the supreme court said the supreme court will not revive president obama's plan to shield illegal immigrants for deportation. stuart: 25 other states in essentially the president exceeded his powers under the constitution in pushing for this. stuart: the president did not want several million people -- they can stay. they now say you can't do that. many illegals have children. it's a tough case.
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20 seconds left. i give you the last word. i hope we see him seize the moment and tell black americans democrats do not have your interests at heart and look at what happened today. he needs to make the case went in and about for him. thank you indeed. good timing. before we go on to another subject, let me bring you up to the market. today the markets are all about the british boat. within the european union. at the moment, the gamblers in britain suggest that the britain will stay in the european union and that's going down well with wall street up 130.179 on the dow industrial. the markets preoccupied with the british boat. now we have donald trump.
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he says clinton cash. you read it so he could put together yesterday's attack on hillary clinton. watch this. >> hillary clinton state department approved the transfer of 20% of america's uranium holdings to russia 19 investors in the deal funneled $145 million to the clinton foundation. hillary clinton appointed a top donor to a national security board with top-secret access. hillary clinton accepted $58,000 from the government of brunei when he was secretary of state to cover up her corrupt dealings. hillary illegally stashed her state department e-mails on a private server. train to a moment to bring in the author of the book clinton cash, which mr. trump had read before he
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made the speech. the author is peter schweizer. welcome to the programs it good to see you again, sir. >> great to be back. stuart: the crimson campanis counterattack saying that there is no proof that money given to the clinton foundation had any impact on policy. what's your response to that? >> my thought is i think everybody gets money and politics is a problem and whether you talk about wall street or big oil, and they give money to politicians because they are expecting something in return. with the clintons it's not any different. the problem is the amounts are larger because you have speaking fees, foundation, which other politician have. it's not americans trying to get favors or beneficial action from the american government. it's now foreign entities. if they want us to also spend
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and say people are giving them hundreds of millions of dollars and not getting nothing in return, i guess they can make that argument. the american people are more sophisticated than that. stuart: you just had hundreds of millions of dollars. that's a lot of money. and off a lot of money. isn't that much? it just seems a shock to everybody that they could accumulate that kind of money. >> that's exactly right. i did two chapters in the book on this rush a uranium deal. donald trump talked about his speech. "the new york times" actually took our reporting and did a 4000 word piece confirming all of it. you're talking about $145 million from shareholders in a small canadian uranium company that needed to hillary clinton state department to approve the sale of their company to the russian government. but the clintons want to say is
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there is this spontaneous outpouring of benevolent the suit by the shareholders and had no effect on her. we would like to find out what kind of communication might have taken place. she deleted her dozen e-mails. but this needs to be investigated and i'm really shot that a lot of news outlet than i would name them, cnn, nbc for example are not interested in pursuing the story. the story came out again front-page "new york times" the year ago period it was in the book good hillary clinton has been on those networks numerous times and she was not asked one single question about this transaction. an amazing lack of curiosity. stuart: thanks for being with us on a very busy news day. thank you indeed. it is a very busy news day. supreme court ruling on affirmative action and immigration.
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on the top left hand side of your screen, a developing situation in germany. a gun man is active in the western part of the country. there are casualties we believe. he has barricaded himself in. >> 50, possibly several fatalities. a hostage situation. elite police are being brought in. stuart: i do not know if this will have an impact on the british boat. the british notice today that the european union because they don't like a lot of foreigners deported to europe, poured into britain. liz: we don't know the identity. he was heavily armed. stuart: we also have a verdict in the freddie gray case. the man who had the worst, most severe charges leveled against him has and found not guilty. the supreme court, i don't intend this, but i will repeat it will repeat it, decisions that affect them affirmative
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up, maybe you're in hawaii and waking up. this was a sit in to protest -- they want a vote on gun control. half democrat did in 1960 styles didn't them i'll on the floor of the house of representatives. our next guest says that fighting totally the wrong thing -- just listen to this. >> radical islam. stuart: did you hear that? and the background, the man shouting was congressman louie gohmert who is with us now. you made quite an impact. that was political theater. you told me this. did they successfully change the debate from terror to guns? >> they have to a large degree.
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a lot of people talking about guns instead of talking about the radical is on the movement that is killing americans like the 49 down in our land. as i asked some of them on the floor, okay, he used a gun in orlando. but if you are consistent commies got to be banning pressure cookers because of what happened in boston. it is not going to do as much good to keep him in whatever new weapon they use. what we've got to do. we were given information that 81,000 people are on the no-fly list, but a thousand of them are americans. there are vast numbers of people coming in this country who are a threat to americans. stuart: louie gohmert, we appreciate you being on the show as always. thank you in deed.
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stuart: we start the hour in the hour and we have breaking news on several fronts. two stories in particular we are following. the supreme court ruling and also something going on in germany on the left inside of your screen. a gunman in a movie theater. hadley are details. liz: he took hostages. he was massed, identified. we don't know the identity of the shooter or his motives good helicopters, police now on the same try to stop the situation from getting worse. monica crowley you are with us. it seems like we've had in van slyke this in the past in europe. i'm not going to call it a terror incident because i don't know what it is good that it is a mass shooting going on now. the slightest possibility that this would affect the british boat because they've got another four or five hours of voting until they stop with this
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interactive hero. >> the vote is underway. there is still hours ago. this is breaking news. one of the big push is, one of the big motivations on the leave the e.u. side is massive immigration of central and western europe. the producing to have the negative effects in the e.u. this could have some psychological effect on those who have yet to vote. stuart: i'm not going to speculate because i don't know the nature of this attack and i don't know the motivation of the shooter. it's an ongoing story somewhat similar to other mass shooting that we've seen. both in america and europe. it seems very similar to me. the thought of going to die. ashley webster in london listening and hearing the same news items we are hearing. same question to you, ashley. the vote is still proceeding in britain about leave or stay in the european union.
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immigration is a big issue. is there anyway you think that this shooting at the theater in germany affects the british about? >> it could. and it would be to push more people forward to leave. one of the issues as monica was just saying this immigration and control of the borders is very difficult for the u.k. right now to deny entry or deport anyone based on the roles dictated from brussels. depending on the way this turns out, we have reports from local media in germany where this happened that the shooter has been shot dead. we have not confirmed that, are we believe it's a single person. the motive we have no idea. however, with six hours ago before the polls close, it could push more people to delete site. stuart: thank you indeed. local newsreports.
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local reports from germany suggest the gunman has been shot dead. look at the market, please. the other big story, which were obviously following this stock market. we are up today significantly higher. the dow was up almost 1%. it been that way all day. why is the market up? the bookies and britain say that all the money being bet on the election is going on this day campaign. investors appear to be taken not in running with it but this suggestion that this day campaign will win. that is what investors and to want to have been that the brit stayed in europe. so at this moment, wall street is following the bookies and investors say maybe this day campaign wins. stocks going up. what is on your screen now could have some impact on the vote in britain because it is a shooting in nature when theater. there are reports of injuries in
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a couple reports of fatalities. don't know the nature of the shooting or the name of the person who's done it. that could have an impact on the vote. written as five hours ahead of us so it is 4:00 in the afternoon over there. the polls stay open until 10:00 at night. six hours of voting that has an impact. just maybe. the other story of the day is voting for the supreme court. president obama can not shield illegals in this country already, cannot shield them from deportation. avril came in about 20 minutes ago. >> a4-for decision. the effect of the decision as to allow the lower court decision to stand. the lower court had blocked obama's move to shield these illegal immigrants from deportation.
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going forward for the rest of mr. obama's turn he will not go forward at the policy. >> i wonder how this will affect the election. stuart: i've got judge napolitano with us right now. he's the one to go to with a supreme court decision. am i reading this correctly at the supreme court has said you cannot block four or 5 million illegals from deportation. >> you got it right. the supreme court issued a one line statement seemed equally divided court as monica just sad that affirms the decision below. the decision below is a two to one decision of the united states court of appeals in new orleans upholding the trial court, which blocks the president from shielding these people from deportation. this is an historic moment in american history.
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a single tenured trial judge sitting in texas and hearing the arguments in this case that the president of the said of america from material he altered immigration law and that decision has now been upheld. stuart: hold on a second. a lot more from you. >> hillary clinton: that's unacceptable. >> the reason this campaign took off was on -- this gave added impetus to this that the supreme court hangs in the balance of this election. stuart: mercedes is with us. i believe you are there. mercedes, you are there. now we've got the supreme court
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ruling saying that the president cannot shield millions of illegal immigrants from deportation. we've had it suggested on this program moment ago and this favors donald trump. let's say you as a republican strategist. >> i also did hispanic outreach. a certain extent, this does help. this division helps hillary clinton in the sense she can go to the hispanic community, many who have voted for her and say listen. we need to get a justice in there that is going to support or make sure that we have a liberal justice and plays. this immigration rulings would have been very different. it would've been different than what we've seen out. so i think that the issue becomes that for hillary she has an opportunity to make the case, take it politically to the hispanic community. stuart: she's got the hispanic vote.
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>> it's not that. it is energizing the hispanic vote. donald trump opportunity this on the economic message and also defining hillary as a world-class liar and bringing balance to the hispanics. at the same time, for hillary it does energize the base for her. it does say she's a liar, but at the same time as she is true to her word on immigration reform and assuring that justices to change this type of ruling. i think it would favor her. stuart: hold on for a second. i've got to ask you to our viewers what is going on the left-hand side of the screen. that is video footage from germany. there is a theater shooting. we have reports of up to 50 injured. also board of potential fatalities. stuart: the gunman reportedly
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was shot and killed. this is a fast-moving story. we will bring you developments. >> i'm not going to speculate, but with another in an in the united states and europe whether a shooter conducts a mass shooting. we certainly saw that in paris. we saw that in orlando and san bernardino. is this another somewhat similar terror related case. i don't know that. i don't know who the shooter is. his name or where ever he came from. but the incident is very similar. therefore there could be political repercussions to the shooting you are seeing on the left hand side of the screen. monica, if it's a tear in the dead of this kind, that is for trump. that is a plus for donald trump. >> absolutely. donald trump throughout the campaign has projected strength,
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decisiveness and whether or not you agree with him. he's also got the need for strong security policies. this is that the takedown of hillary clinton was like yesterday. the secretary of state is a disaster. they have left this ally of crass the middle east. including germany a lot weaker. the german policy has open a door to a million plus muslims and we have no idea what is involved in this particular attack. donald trump's hand will be strengthened by attacks like what we saw in orlando and now germany. stuart: mercedes, this is from congressional studies of the issue. there have been 580 combat did inside america taking part in being involved in terror plot. 380 of them were foreign-born. they were born overseas. 40 of them were refugees.
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now we have -- i'm not going to say this is a terror incident in europe, but a shooting incident in europe much like once occurred here in america. i have to suggest to you that this is a plus for donald trump. >> donald trump is making a strong case that hillary clinton and i think it brings the reality is that the united states doesn't want to become era. we've seen germany and many of those countries with millions of immigrants coming into their nation where they have no control. for donald trump, saying we don't want this in america. but just an ad hoc without having a sophisticated process is dangerous.
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these terror attacks not only abroad but not that we deal with their own issue here in america, it allows donald trump to make the case that he is the one that will not leave the same way obama dead are the same way hillary clinton would lead. i think that gives them the advantage. stuart: judge napolitano is still the best and i want to bring him in. you always give us the constitutional side of this. i'm going to ask you to take a look at this german jewish and as it is developing out and what impact you think it might have on immigration policy in the united states. >> well, i basically agree with what her colleagues have been saying. i'll put a little bit of nuance on it and then stores the politics when a crisis like this happens, it should benefit donald trump. he portrays himself as the stronger, sterner protector of our shores, far more so than clinton. i had to depends on how to
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respond to it. he did not adequately respond to the slaughter in the pulse nightclub in orlando because he blamed an immigration decision 35 years ago too attenuated for the public to grasp the decision to admit the killer's father. do with the new donald trump, pose scored into a dusky trump, he can one up mrs. clinton on this tragedy. it is a tragedy. people are injured and may be dead. but there's going to be consequences and they will be political and he needs to know how to address it. stuart: i think it's a word out rage. not prepared to use the word tragedy. in this shot down in cold blood. a trump foreign-policy adviser watching the news very carefully. walid, let me bring you up to date.
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a german theater shooting. reports of multiple injuries. also reports that may be fatalities. also reports unconfirmed thus far that the shooter has been shot dead. it occurs to me with colleagues around the table this morning that this is a plus for donald trump. expand on that one. >> it's early to say a plus or minus. indeed, this is a case of terrorism. politically motivated terrorism. not just a person psychologically unstable. this will prove further that terrorism is that even europe. what is important is to see if there is a link between nine and 10. very early that it meant in the other incidents in paris, brussels. if the individual is just an extremist of any sort for a person has not banned.
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stuart: i would say regardless of the nature of the shooting in germany, regardless of who did it or the motivation, i would suggest that a mass shooting in germany with possibly fatalities to guide his politically bad news for angela merkel. that there is talk from our sources, from where we sit right now, there is a frustration, especially an exchange of fire. look at the armed presence in germany. the system and they have not seen before. the problem with e. if that person is edgy high the nature it's going to be an immense political problem for chance for merkel because of the issues of migration. the public would make that link. stuart: walid, hold on a second.
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the do with going on with his vote on whether they stay or that the european union. at the moment, the dow jones industrial average has gone through its best level of the day. now up 180 points. i thought for a moment that the shooting in germany would encourage the lead boat in britain and therefore our market would react with not quite such a big rally. that has not been the case. we've had reports from germany. the vote is still going on in britain than it looks like our market is holding gains of 170, 180-point. evidently the market feels the shooting in germany will not have an impact on the vote in britain. certainly not the league campaign. that's not what i thought originally, but that's the way it's coming in now. republican strategists, what do you make of all this going on this morning?
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>> well, whenever you see these international crises, if it is in fact a terrorist attack, we don't know at this time. it makes you a step back and realize what policies are working, what policies are not working. will they impact the breakneck sitting the european union. we don't know. we know, for example, when you look at jo cox, the labor party leader who was killed this shift a little bit and we should be in the european union. appropriateness particular. they're making a critical port point at this moment. david cameron is definitely trying to make it seem that he's going to make concessions that would benefit or great britain to stay in. backing for the people there is the sense that they want to secure their borders.
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this all goes back to the fact -- stuart: mercedes, the issues they are our same as the issues here. control your borders pakistan and their acid is here. >> this breaking news we see out of germany today, regardless of who the perpetrator is, it feeds into yet another impression that the world is out of control. in this chaos everywhere and a wholesale lack of leadership. that's why it plays into the strength of donald trump which is leadership and decisiveness. western democracies need a handle on their own sovereign countries. stuart: before we come to you. liz: injuries are due to teargas. we are trying to get a fix on how many people were shot and the casualties there. german police moving rapidly to stop a hostage situation reportedly shooting the man who
quote
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did this to. stuart: ralph peters. come on in, please. i'm not going to speculate about the nature of this shooting in germany. i will simply say it looks very similar to other incidents that we've seen in europe and in america. >> well, it is clearly an act of terror. the question is what kind of terror. we need to know the identity of the gunmen. it could have been an islamist terrorist. it could've been an anti-immigrant. we don't yet know. you know, basically what has just been sad, what we are seeing is the globalist nation of independent violence, whether it is south starter that applies to the or just the crazies on extreme left or extreme right. stuart: ralph, you are right. we also want to get control of this, don't we?
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the world sees this happening. we can feel it happening in our societies and the demand is control it. do something about it. the authorities in europe and north america appear unwilling to get a grip. >> absolutely. the internet is the greatest tool for spreading hatred at least since the invention of the printing class. i would argue it is much greater a threat to civilized orders just because it's so much more widespread and even less control than any printing press has been. this dissemination of fame for these characters, or the gunmen and suicide bombers become internet stars. that's a real motivator. they want to be somebody. whether secular or religious. the impulse saying this is certainly a great mom and i
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never tied. beyond that, the content of so many internet sites and chat rooms, where people egg each other on. the fundamental problem we face right now are the radical -- the ultraviolet she hotties goes well beyond not to the glorification of violence in general. it is going to be very, very tough to control. this horse has left the station and there is a fence around the world somehow about these fringe characters, the basement dollars that violence is not only okay, but somehow the ticket to fame. trade to let me remind everyone that when we came in early this morning, the story was the house of representatives on the floor of the house, house democrats had occupied it. they had a sit in.
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the house floor with solid democrat who were singing in dancing. they want to make gun control the issue. not terror poster amanda. they wanted to discuss gun control. so they occupy the house of representatives as a way of getting their message across. it occurs to me that in germany right now a strict gun control. not to my knowledge of this. there is no handguns. ralph, doesn't it sound like a glaring jet positioned to you? sorry, ralph has left us. monica, glaring juxtaposition? >> the truth is that any terrorist or criminal would get their hands on weapons whether it's guns, grenades, automatic rifles as the kinds used in the paris attacks. if they are committed to waging this kind of bored kind of bored and committing this carnage,
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they will always lay their hands on the weapons they want and need to carry it out. the gun ban in brussels didn't stop that attack your district gun control didn't stop the paris attacks. district to join california didn't stop san bernardino. stuart: we are getting reports that say the injuries were caused by teargas. the ap says the police say nobody was injured by the gunmen in the movie theater we are lowering the temperature on necessities. liz: we still don't know the identity of the shooter. reports on the ground say he was shot dead. german police will be taking hostages. stuart: let me backtrack. the real story in the financial world, the political world is the vote that is still going on and written as we speak. that vote is should the great stay in the european union, should they leave the european
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union? early this morning we found that the bookies have taken an not a whole lot of money on this day can't tame. people who are betting on this are betting that the state campaign wins. american investors picked that up to suggest that the state campaign would win. that's what they want and up goes the dow jones industrial average. 176 points. who was on the phone with us? come on in, please. i'm not going to jump to any conclusions here. we have a gun man in germany. injuries caused by teargas, not necessarily by the gun man himself. but it is an incident somewhat similar, looks like two other is in europe and north america appeared with your reading of this pairing in mind we don't want to speculate about terrorism or otherwise. >> yeah, you know, we are in a
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time of very high alert right now. the month of ramadan were peaceful muslims are seeking a time of atonement. we have to realize in the wake of orlando and others that germany has not been this type of attack and isis has called for attacks wherever possible. they will strike in areas where the softest target are. this is a significantly soft target. we pray it is not another attack of war, but if it does turn out to be an islamist inspired by radical islam, it is clearly another front in this battle. stuart: i'm going to break away for one second. i am bringing news on the supreme court as you know about an hour ago, the supreme court ruled that president obama could not shield four or 5 million illegal immigrant from deportation. in other words, the supreme court said they can be deported
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or the president cannot block the deportation order. 20 minutes from now, the president will make a statement on the supreme court ruling on immigration about 11:45 this morning. the supreme court has essentially ruled against it. the supreme court has said you cannot shield for 5 million people from immigration law. that's essentially what the supreme court that. ambassador bolton is on the line with us. he's in front of a camera. obviously he's there in london. ambassador, we've got all these reports of incident of germany, a shooter. at this point it doesn't look like it's had any impact on the british vote to stay or leave the european union. is that accurate, sir? >> well, i think that's right. honestly, it's very hard to know how this vote will come out.
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the polls do not be in it total evidence to show that it's very close. it is now raining heavily in london. back at the press turn out a little bit, which is a very aero remain. i think it will be a late night and very uncertain in the outcome whichever direction it is. stuart: can i ask you this? speculate for one second. we can see her face now. now let's suppose that it's a very, very narrow victory. one or two percentage points is all they went by. that is not a mandate to pull britain right out of europe. you can see political chaos if that were the result. >> no, i think it is a mandate. i must say it is a miracle that the leave campaign is as close
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as it is. the entire british establishment is in favor. david cameron's government has done everything they can to use power of government for people to say. the fact right now according to the poll, i think it shows the strength and feeling of the leave aside the it's very close in terms of numbers, but in terms of intensity is on the side of those who want to leave. stuart: if the league side wins, prime minister cameron finished? >> i think he is. i don't see how he can remain. a number think he should stay on to show continuity. i'd be very surprised. even if they win, i think it's finished. i think the odds that the
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leadership challenge are here certain. stuart: that's an extraordinary story. please go back inside. your duty has been done. we can tell it is raining cats and dogs. what do you say? >> i don't think there's any point to it now. i will just stay out here the rest of the day. stuart: okay. get back inside. i know you're drenched already. you have something to add on to one of these stories. liz: the issue is what was the motive of the shooter. the german police act did rapidly because it was a potential hostage situation unfolding. the second thing is we don't know how many people were shot or if other casualties were related to the use of tear gas. we know the german police moved rapidly. they put in helicopters, a s.w.a.t team, you see the forces. it started unfolding at 3:00 p.m. german time and was
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resolved quickly. that is an indication that there was a threat there that he would possibly kill people. stuart: which makes it a terror incident. but we don't know makes it a t incident. liz: we don't know yet. stuart: show me the big board. we are nearly at the high of the day, now we are 180 points. our market today is all about the vote in britain today. they are voting on whether to leave the european union. word has it that all the money being bet on this is going on this day campaign. wall street wants that. wall street likes this, therefore the tao goes up 185 points. thanks for hanging on with us.
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you are political, not financial but you understand the link between wall street and the british vote. >> absolutely. the key for the british people, those who want britain to leave the european union feel they need a voice. they are dealing, the british government spends more time trying to handle the european union than having to deal with their own people, between paperwork, the fact they have no control of their borders which is becoming a big political issue in britain and what we see happening in the united states so if it does turn out -- such an unpredictable year politically in the united states but there is something to be said of the fact that the leaves campaign has had such a powerful influence in forcing the hand of
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david cameron to say we need to make some changes within britain because for too long the european union has had too much power over the british people. stuart: i will definitely go with that one. back to the shooting in germany or the incident in germany. on the phone from berlin, he works with the wall street journal, he is on the ground, on the phone. tell me exactly what is the very latest news from this incident. >> the latest news according to german state authorities were this incident took place is the suspect who entered the movie theater armed with a gun has been shot dead by the authorities. no other people in the movie theater have been injured in this incident. stuart: we are receiving reports that anybody who was injured was injured by teargas canisters
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being used in the theater. can you confirm that? >> that is the media reporting. we don't have that confirmed. what the interior minister said in state parliament a few minutes ago, no bystanders were injured in this event. stuart: the interior minister made any comments about the identity of the now dead shooter? or his motivation? >> he did not. he did say the suspect apparently entered the movie theater according to the state interior minister and fired four shots and moved around the movie theater complex and made a confused impression. that is all the authorities are
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saying so far on the motives or identity. stuart: he made a confused impression, as bag as you can get. we don't have any statements. >> nothing like that. it is not clear according to the interior minister whether the gun the suspect was armed with was loaded with live ammunition. stuart: appreciate you being with us. >> the german interior minister saying the shooter appears to be, quote, a disturbed man. stuart: everybody back off. a disturbed man. when you get into this, following so closely orlando and paris and san bernardino and all those other places, it is not that you jump to the conclusion, you make a similarity between what happened in germany and what is happening in previous incidents, you don't jump to a conclusion but you link them.
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inevitably you link them. stuart: >> this is about the feeling of safety, security. movie theaters, people are so vulnerable and we got to return to what is going on with people in germany and the eu, how the eu is handling the bureaucrats, 48% of germany say they don't like it and don't like the way the year fiji crisis -- stuart: there is a feeling of lack of control. >> especially in western liberal democracies. for a long time because of our second amendment, europeans have had a sense of superiority because they have strict gun control and so on when incidents like this happen when a disturbed individual, terrorism, put the lie to the left-wing argument that if you have strict gun control or gun band you won't have this kind of activity. stuart: bottom line, what you are looking at now on your screens is a disturbed
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individual who was giving a confused impression as he was walking around a movie complex, moviehouse complex. that according to the interior minister where this incident occurred. look at the market please. when this incident was first reported, the tao was up 120 points. i think it was about numb 170 and dropped plus 120 and now it is at the high of the day. this may be because the german incident was not apparently at this point, not apparently a terror incident in the sense that it was jihadi terror. that is not the case. he was a disturbed individual. had it been a terror incident, likely would it be the leave campaign in britain would have
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gained some ground. in fact it is not that kind of terror operations so this day campaign has probably gained a little momentum and our stock market has gone up, up 182 points, 17,963. what is next? i want to go to the supreme court. we have two decisions handed down. first off, you are allowed to use race in deciding who gets into college. affirmative action is legitimate in college admission. second item the supreme court ruled president obama cannot shield 4 or 5 million illegal immigrants from deportation. that is the more significant supreme court ruling as far as current politics is concerned. >> all these rulings are significant to the future of the country but in terms of the political environment we are in given this presidential election year i think it is critical because it is playing into one of donald trump's strongest
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arguments which is whether you agree with me or not on certain things, whether you agree with my style are not the future of the supreme court hangs in the balance. do you want to turn it over to hillary clinton so you will have decisions like the affirmative-action decision or do we want to make sure decisions like the immigration decision are upheld. stuart: the immigration ruling favors trump. >> the president is going to speak in six minutes on this ruling from the supreme court on immigration. stuart: larry elder is a radio talkshow host in southern california who joins us on camera. i want your comments on the immigration ruling by the supreme court and as it relates to president obama. >> cuts the feathers, doesn't it. president obama has shielded 5 million illegal immigrants from deportation and what the supreme court has done is said he cannot do that, it is a violation of separation of power. congress the's job is to handle immigration, the president can't
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decide this group of people, children who came against their own will have no say in the matter to be shielded from deportation. i am happy to supreme court did this. stuart: whenever you get a decision of this time you look at american politics in terms of the election, trump versus hillary clinton. do you think this ruling favors either side? is there a connection? >> i think it favors donald trump because donald trump argues when i become president i'm going to reverse all these executive orders president obama has rammed down the throats of the american people. the supreme court agrees with donald trump. it helps him. stuart: hillary can now say to all hispanic voters this tell you why we need to not control the supreme court but have your input on who gets to be the next supreme court justice. that would seem to favor hillary with hispanics.
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>> i agree but most americans believe our borders are too porous, most americans believe if the government wanted to do something about controlling our borders we could but for all sorts of reasons the government does not so most people i believe feel the way donald trump does and that is that our borders are out of control and something needs to be done. stuart: you are in southern california and i have asked you this question many times and wonder what your answer is going to be now. can you see -- i don't want to put the hammer on how many years i have left but can you see the day coming when a republican could win the state of california in a presidential election? >> i don't think so. the registration is 3 to 1 democrat in favor of republican. there isn't a single republican elected statewide in the state in large part because demographics have dramatically shifted. republicans haven't carried california at the presidential level since george herbert walker bush did.
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this is a state, or two step program, keep the illegal aliens, deport the liberals. stuart: i think i have this straight. are you ever going to move. i know how passionate you are about politics, are you going to move to nevada? >> i don't think so. i am born and raised your, lived in the east coast and ohio and michigan and i prefer it out here but i tell you the taxes are through the roof. even bill marr said when california went to a 13.3%ome t are too high. when he says taxes are too high taxes are too high. stuart: am i right in saying anybody lives in california, they make serious money in the top 1% of income earners they are in fact at least 50% of their income in federal and state income tax? that is accurate in california? >> the sales, closer to 60%.
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phil mickelson complained about it, got hammered in the media come you can't even complain without people feeling you are ungrateful. stuart: don't know why you don't leave, don't understand it. i left britain. if i can leave britain, come 6000 miles to america why can't you leave southern california and hitchhike a couple hundred miles to nevada. i don't get it. last word to you. >> it is not out of the question. i'm a syndicated radio host, i could do my show anywhere in the country including florida or texas or some other state where taxes are not there or even low. don't think i haven't thought about it. stuart: i have facelift available for you in my place on the east coast. thank you very much. the speaker of the house, paul ryan is scolding democrats for what house democrats did overnight. we woke up this morning and saw pictures of the house floor with
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loads of democrat sitting around, some of them dancing and singing, holding a 1960s style student sit in to protest the lack of a vote on guns. they wanted to vote on guns, they didn't get it. paul ryan tried to conduct business as usual, couldn't hear a word he was saying, eventually adjourned the house at 3:15 a.m. eastern time. the house democrats still there making their point about orlando, their point is it is not terror, it is guns. that is what he is saying and paul reiners scolding them as of right now. quickly to the markets, let's not lose track of the story we were following from the get-go which is a nice rally on wall street, up 174 points for the
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dow industrials because some indicators suggest that this day campaign will win in britain, wall street wants that, like that, expects that and we are up 176 points. what is next? tell me please. i do believe the gentleman sitting next to me is michael caputo. you are the guy who said when corey lewandowski left the trump camp, ding dong the witch is dead. >> i quoted somebody who said that in a nice song. stuart: is this the new trump, on message, on point, on prompter? >> this is the old trunk of the trump i have known since i tried to recruit them to run for new york governor. the trump we need to see. of the one hold on a second. that is not the trump we saw from june 16th onward. we saw donald trump larger-than-life shooting from the hip, making outrageous comments about things. is not going to do that again?
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>> by making the change in leadership on monday you will see a whole new campaign, you are seeing a whole new campaign. he intended to make those changes ten weeks ago but things were a little messy in the transition, the transition is over now and you will see the kind of candidate, the kind of campaign donald trump deserves. stuart: word you a camera operator on the floor of the house? >> i was in charge -- i was assistant director of the house of representatives radio and television gallery. we were in charge of all television coverage. i would be in good shape by now. stuart: what you make of the house sitting on the floor? >> interesting situation. i was working there under jim wright, the democrat. if the republicans had a sit in over an issue like abortion they would have been hauled out by the capital police, violating every rule in the house of
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representatives. it was absolute anarchy as it is right now. i don't understand why the republican leadership of the house couldn't handle this situation. it is a difficult process. stuart: monica is with me. >> good to see you. i thought his speech yesterday was a tour they force and the most important thing he did was lay out the parameters of the attack on hillary clinton which said she is fundamentally unqualified to be president because she is deeply corrupt. i also think a successful candidate is not just to share your -- tear your opponent down but you have to offer a positive reason to vote for you rather than just against the other guy or gal. something else i saw in the trump speed. >> he flooded the zone with information and brought it down to the most basic distilled point of his candidacy and that is do you want change or more of the same. stuart: on the left-hand side of the screen looking at paul ryan, speaker of the house going after
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democrats who staged a sit in. >> this bill was already defeated in the senate, similar version was already defeated in the senate. the issue really is terrorism, we don't know who was putting people on terror watch list, which government official can do that. he is saying there is due process at stake. we one paul ryan, what the house democrats did was a fund-raising stunt. >> absolutely right. they are trying to change the topic, no question. stuart: do you think what the democrats did in the house overnight and maybe pool republicans back towards donald trump? >> not just that. it is the american people. it was on all the cable channels, watching this political stunt and people understand donald trump is with the american people, he wants to take a look at whether we are giving guns to the wrong people
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by looking at the terrorist watchlist, no-fly know by kind of situation. his openness to speak about that and find a solution, they made fools of themselves. this was never happened before and we have a problem in the house of representatives so when the democrats take over the house the republicans will do this too. stuart: you could say they changed the topic of conversation post orlando. >> because the media is on their side. they cover this kind of thing and amplify their message. they do these political stunt on the house floor, send protesters to the streets to protest mister trump and so on. the great silent majority still exists, watching all of this and are sick and tired of it. >> couldn't agree more and john
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lewis, you can't argue with his credentials. the speaker was handcuffed because you can't turn off the air conditioning on john lewis. he is a man of honor. the fact that he was leading this lens credibility to it but in the end it is all about changing the topic for hillary clinton and keeping her off the topic of terrorism. stuart: are you still on the inside of the donald trump campaign? >> i am as far as you can get. i am a big supporter of donald trump. we will see a different campaign from here forward and that is why hillary clinton and the democrats had to change the topic. they saw a good speech and rapid reaction out of the campaign, all the key hires are being made and the communications division supporting a message that comes out of a candidate that is a crucial message. do you want change or more of the same? this scares hillary to death.
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stuart: was there a big meeting? i think it was last weekend where they got together and said corey lewandowski is out, the kids, the trump children have some influence? do they all get together, big meeting, new campaign, starting again. >> this is a meeting that goes on every monday morning with the leadership of the campaign and the family. they do this every monday because the family is connected. it wasn't some big huge organization to blindside corey lewandowski it was a regular meeting where they made a decision and they pivoted you see the results. stuart: we have several stories breaking at the same time. i will recap a few of them. we are waiting for president obama who is do to make remarks on the supreme court decision on immigration, that came down an hour ago. that podium on your left, there will be remarks by the president coming from that podium. we received a two minute warning meaning the president will appear two minutes from now. let me wrap up the other
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stories. from the supreme court, they are saying it is okay to use affirmative action, race, in deciding who gets into colleges. affirmative-action in that sense okay. second story from the supreme court, the president may not shield 4 to 5 million illegal immigrants from deportation. that is a blow to the president's policy. it will be discussed in a couple minutes from that podium. we also had a decision in the freddie gray case, not guilty on the man charged with the most of your charges, the man who drove the van, the so-called rough ride, not guilty. we have a vote in progress in britain, they are 5 hours in front of us meaning trying to do the math here, 10 minutes to 4:00 in the afternoon in britain meaning to have another, let me do the math, 6 hours worth of voting still to come in britain. voting on whether or not they stay or leave the european
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union, the bookies say all the money being bet on that election, on that referendum is going on this day campaign implying the stay campaign wins. now the president of the united states. >> in the affirmative-action case i'm pleased the supreme court upheld the basic notion that diversity is an important value in our society and the country should provide high-quality education to all our young people regardless of their background. we are not a country that guarantees equal outcomes but we do strive to provide an equal shot to everybody and that was what was upheld today. second, one of the reasons america is such a diverse and inclusive nation is because we are a nation of immigrants. our founders conceived of this country is a refuge for the world and for more than two
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centuries welcoming wave after wave of immigrants has kept us youthful, dynamic, entrepreneurial, shaped our character and made a stronger, but for two decades our immigration system everybody acknowledges has been broken, the fact the supreme court wasn't able to issue a decision today doesn't just set the system back even further, takes us further from the country we aspire to be. to lay out some basic facts that sometimes get lost in what can be an emotional debate. since i took office we have deployed more border agents and technology to our southern border than ever before. that has helped cut illegal border crossings to their lowest level since the 1970s. it should have paved the way for comprehensive immigration reform.
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and as many of you know it almost did. 70 democrats and republicans in the senate came together to pass a smart common sense bill that would have doubled the border patrol and offered undocumented immigrants a pathway to earn citizenship if they pay their taxes and play by the rules. unfortunately republicans in the house of representatives refused to allow a simple yes or no to vote on that bill. i was left with little choice but to take steps to make the immigration system smarter, fairer and more just. four years ago announced that those who are the lowest priority, diligent, patriotic dreamers who grew up pledging allegiance to our flag should be able to apply for work here and study here and pay their taxes here. more than 730,000 lives have been changed as a result. these are students, teachers,
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doctors, lawyers, americans in every way but on paper. today's decision does not affect this policy. it does not affect the existing dreams. two years ago we announced a similar expanded approach for others who are also low priority. we said if you have been in america for more than five years with children who are american citizens then you too can come forward, get right with the law and work in this country temporarily without fear of deportation. both were the kinds of actions taken by republican and democratic presidents over the past half-century, neither granted anybody a free pass. all they did was focus in force and resources which are necessarily limited on the highest priorities, recent
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border crossers and threats to national security. as disappointing as it was to be challenged for taking action to another in ministrations of taken, the country looking to the supreme court to resolve important legal questions in this case. today the supreme court was unable to reach a decision. this is part of the consequence of republican failure so far to get a fair hearing to mister merrick garland, my nominee to the supreme court. it means the expanded set of commonsense deferred action policies, one that i announce two years ago can't go forward at this stage until there is a ninth justice on the court to break the tie. i know a lot of people are going to be disappointed today but it is important to understand what today means. the third action policy that has been in place the last we 4 years is not affected by this ruling. enforcement priorities developed by my administration are not
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affected by this ruling. this means people who might have benefited from the expanded deferred action policies long-term residents raising children, will remain low priority for enforcement as long as you have not committed a crime, limited immigration resources are not focused on you. but today's decision is frustrating for those who seek to grow our economy and bring rationality to our immigration system and allow people to come out of the shadows and lift the virtual crowd -- cloud on them. it is heartbreaking for millions of immigrants who made their lives here, raised families here, for the opportunity to work, pay taxes, serve in our military and more fully contribute to this country we all love in an open way.
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where do we go from here? most americans including business leaders, faith leaders and law enforcement, democrats, republicans and independents still agree the single best way to solve this problem is by working together to pass commonsense bipartisan immigration reform. that is obviously not going to happen during the remainder of this congress. we don't have a congress that agrees with us on this, nor do we have a congress that is willing to do even its most basic jobs under the constitution, which is to consider nominations. republicans in congress currently are willfully preventing the supreme court from being fully staffed and functioning as our founders intended and today's situation underscores the degree to which the court is not able to function the way it is supposed to. the court's inability to reach a decision in this case is a very
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clear reminder of why is so important for the supreme court to have a full bench. for more than 40 years there has been an average of two month between nomination and hearing. i nominated judge merrick garland to the supreme court three months ago but most republican so far refuse even to meet with him. they are allowing partisan politics to jeopardize something as fundamental as the integrity of the justice system and america should not let it stand. this is an election year and during election years politicians tend to use the immigration issue to scare people with words like amnesty and hope that it will whip up volions of us, myself included go back generations in this country with ancestors putting in painstaking effort to become citizens. we don't
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