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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  May 25, 2017 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT

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contracts for other people. [closing billion rings] it is asset light which we like. liz: kimble brooker of first eagle funds. he ithe portfolio manager. 105 billion in assets. maybe you added a little icing to the cake today bus that is a record for the s&p and the nasdaq, david and melissa. david: we'll take it, thank you. the dow climbing into record territory though for the dow not enough to end the day at new record. s&p getting it done second day in a row, bringing nasdaq along for the ride. hi, everybody, i'm david asman. melissa: i'm melissa francis. this is "after the bell." more on the big market movers. first here is what else we're covering for you at this very busy hour. one of president trump's most pivotal moments from his first trip overseas. new details what the commander-in-chief is demanding from world leader as the president prepares to double down against the fight against terror. both sides are on the attack.
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democrats pouncing on republican plan to repeal and replace obamacare but do the numbers add up? we'll report, you decide. this hour we're joined by judge andrew napolitano, charles hurt from "the washington times." bob cusack from the hill.com. that is a good group. david: that is a good group as the dow edges higher. the s&p and nasdaq end the day with new closing highs. phil flynn, price futures, fox business contributor is watching all the action in oil and gold. he is in the cme. lori rothman on the floor of the new york stock exchange. lori, president trump making a lot of headway in his foreign trip, really talking truth to power in europe and in the middle east. is that calming market as little? reporter: i think so david, fair to say. we have good earnings. a lot of optimism circulating around best buy. i will show you best buy and some of the retailers. let's break down some of these indexes.
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the s&p a record up six straight days a gain of almost half a% today. the s&p is up 8% year-to-date. six days is the longest winning streak for the broad market index since february. nasdaq, all-time high for this one as well. up 15% in is set of. has doc outperforming index of three benchmark indexes we follow on regular basis. specific stocks hitting all-time highs. you have amazon and google. look at price on those coming ever so close to the $1000 per share mark. that is stunning right? gains of up over almost 1 1/2%. alphabet parent of google. look at retailers, best buy shot up 22%, thanks to better-than-expected earnings and boost in its outlook. also pbh corp, owner of tommy hilfiger, calvin klein. guess, burlington coat factory.
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this is the best day for sears something like two years. shares up 13 1/2%. back to you. melissa: lori, thank you for that. phil, oil tanking after opec agrees to extend production cuts through the first quarter of next year. so what, sell the news? >> it was sell the news and they disappointed market because they teased the traders. never tease traders. they were kind of suggesting just a week ago maybe they could extend these production cuts for 12 months. there was even rumors they could do an additional production cut. when none of that came to prue wigs, this market got hammered, opec paid for it. we were down fivers on the price of oil. if you look at the big picture, is the market overdone? probably is but you don't want to step in front of it. gold broke a two-day losing streak. we have that going for us. melissa: phil thank you. david: stocks continuing to charge higher despite the battle inside the beltway over president trump's budget. it is kicking into overdrive.
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joining me scott martin, kingsview asset management, fox news contributor and scott, first to you, kills me all the talk inside of the beltway about cuts, how dress exly the president is going to be cutting programs like medicaid for example, and children are going to die as a result. in fact we looked at medicaid spending for this year it is $368 billion. in 2026, 10 years from now, $518 billion. that looks like an increase to me. what do you say? >> doesn't sound like, doesn't sound like a cut, does it, david. tomato, tomato, right-left thing. what they're trying to do cut off crazy increase in medicaid spending over the years. that is really the issue. a lot of these tax cuts david, they have to be revenue neutral, they have to be paid for. that lends itself to the debate, what if these tax cuts, oh, my goodness, actually work and create great economic growth
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this country deserves at 4, 5% of gdp and corporations reinvest in employees and r&d? that generation of revenue which the treasury department had record amounts of last year. david: they're getting all of our money. we're not getting stuff in return. the point, david, they keep getting huge increases from anybody's perspective and yetdid states is actually gone down during the obama administration, from january 2009 until december 2016, we saw an inflation adjusted decrease in median income at home. the individual folks are losing money while the government keeps getting our money. >> you know what, i think numbers could be skewed. that is my first gut reaction. our economy transformed from manufacturing into services. obviously trump wants to swing the pendulum to a more balanced
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equalibrium of manufacturing. people doing more service oriented jobs. they're renting more. different distribution b the wealth eect is real. david: why should the government get more money individuals are getting less? >> who seas individuals are getting less? if you invested one share in the stock market since the crash you've done extraordinarily well, i do not buy the idea in aggregate people are poorer. >> wealth numbers fell during the obama administration. melissa: new cbo announcement of republican health care bill means fresh outrage from democrats but paul ryan is he reminding americans about the current state of obamacare. >> first of all, if you look at the calculation that they made, it is very bizarre calculation, as i said to the republicans and the president over and over, if we find solutions and get results we have to stipulate to
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facts. >> new shoe drops every week on obamacare it seems. this is exactly why we are on a rescue mission. between premiums surging up he and choices going away obamacare is on an unsustainable path. melissa: scott, she said bizarre calculation what me meant. what she was looking at. whether she done any doubts. i have my doubts her ability to do math to be quite honest. back and forth, there is still a lot of things that the cbo score doesn't capture, for instance the state risk pools and how that would lower people's premiums. so i don't know what to make of it. what do you? >> i think a lot of things, melissa look bizarre to nancy pelosi. let's leave that there. melissa: that's true. >> you're right, there are certain things in the bill, if they work out. you think about the states, these risk pools, worries me a little bit to be honest. i live in illinois the state itself is in a litany of problems, let alone not health care related.
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there are things in the bill, if they work out they will work out well. one other thing in the report talking about all the uninsured because we'll drop the individual mandate which most people didn't want to get if they were forced to. there are things to work out here. the idea we'll provide more care, more choice to more people and give everybody lower premiums still doesn't exactly resonate very well with me. i don't see how that is possible. melissa: no. jason the math doesn't work on that. but what we're seeing a lot of people won't be forced to buy insurance. so they won't have insurance. they don't have it now, even with increasing the supply, really making it a true free market system the ideal should work. i think what it is running into now there is still red tape. the states still have to apply for waivers which at the end of
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the day doesn't fit trump's vision he promised everyone. that needs to be worked out. >> interesting. of the thanks, guys. go ahead, david. david: meanwhile as amazon pushes to 1000 bucks a share it is going brick-and-mortar. after selling books online for 20 years, it is going full circle, opening its 7th bookstore in new york city. our own tracee carrasco is live from the store with the latest. looks like a busy time. a lot of customers there, trace. reporter: david, it is busy. there have been many people all day long. we'll look inside. you can see one major difference, i want to show you the books are all arranged data driven by amazon. they're listed with high reviews. most of them have four stars or more. there are reviews from customers, recommendations. another interesting thing that i want to show you is when you check out, when you scan a book, you have to come over here to one of the scanners to see the price. amazon prime members paid 12.68
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for this book. if you're not a prime minister member, you pay 18.99. that is the list price through the app. no cash only credit cards. that is also interesting. we spoke with an amazon executive to think why she thinks this story succeeds. here is what she told us. >> we knew we could take 20 years of online book selling experience, we have lots of information why customers read, what they read, we wanted to bring that into a physical space, into a physical store to help customers discover books they would love. reporter: now the store also sells electronics. there are tech experts on hand to help customers out. one thing the bookstore only holds about 3,000 books. melissa, we asked employees about your book. they told us that we could find it online. we'll send it back to you. >> what? i'm so glad that they opened an actual bookstore and tell you to go look online. by the way i do have that many
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stars. "lessons from the prairie." go check it out. will consumers buy books actually in the store. we hit the street to find out. >> what is the last thing you bought on amazon? >> i think a book. >> usually books. >> success book. >> a book. >> i bought a gift card. >> boxes. >> handkerchief. >> a handkerchief, wow. would you consider going to the amazon bookstore? >> we love reading, yes, definitely. >> problemly, yeah. >> yes, i would love to. >> no. >> why not? >> because i buy online. melissa: i mean, scott there is something crazy about this. they're opening a a store, i buy everything from a pack of gum to toothpaste to whatever it is, i'm an amazon prime member. i buy everything. now that they don't have my book in the store i will rethink all of that traffic. but that is besides the point. what do you think about them opening a store? >> it is interesting. i love that reaction. come on, how can my book not be in there.
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that is major oversight. we need to talk to management. funny, melissa, that location was a former borders store who they pushed out of the business. that is obviously interesting imagery. funny thing with the amazon bookstores, there is one right by my house in chicago. melissa: really. >> this is gateway drug for people to get into the amazon prime area. you get people sign up for prime, stay on the website. melissa: you're so smart, scott, that is exactly what it is. >> that is what they get you with. melissa: they need more prime people. you are so smart. thanks to both of you. david, he is exactly right. they want more prime members. david: he is. how they can get up to thousand dollars a share to sell single handkerchiefs? the shipping cost must be four times. melissa: they have distribution. we're buying everything else. little margin on everything, yeah. david: market share.
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chilling new details about the aughter in manchester. authorities hunting the bombers and refusing to share intel because of leaks. melissa: president trump calling for an investigation. what led to the intel shutdown with one of our biggest allies next. judge andrew napolitano sounds off. david: plus the commander-in-chief putting the pressure on nato. why world leaders snickered while the president spoke earlier today. coming up charlie hurt from "the washington times," breaking it all down. how long can the euros keep this up? ♪ break through your allergies. try new flonase sensimist allergy relief instead of allergy pills. it delivers a gentle mist experience to help block six key inflammatory substances. most allergy pills only block one. new flonase sensimist changes everything. ♪ predictable. the comfort in knowing where things are headed. because as we live longer... and markets continue to rise and fall...
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as authorities continue to search for morances and networks of terrorists. rick leventhal is live in manchester with the latest details. rick, when we first heard about this we have no idea it would turn into a network such as it has, right? reporter: we have breaking news tonight, david. authorities were searching a home in a town of wigan, outside of manchester, possibly connected to the manchester bombing, and the bomb disposal unit is in wigan. they evacuated area because of suspicious items found inside of that home. whether or not this is where the bomb was assembled used in the arena attack we don't know. police on the scene in wigan where the bomb division postal unit has been called in because of suspicious items. there have been a number of raids around manchester and suburbs at past few days after the horrific bombing. they have taken into custody at least eight people in connection of the could be part, speculated being part of a terror network
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that may have supported the 22-year-old bomber, salman abedi. we know his older brother was among those arrested. we now know his younger brother hashim and father have been taken into custody in libya. hashim he knew about the plot and they were part of isis. the mother phoned hours before the attack saying forgive me. bomber's sister telling "wall street journal" that salman was angry by u.s. air strikes in syria, saying innocent children were being killed. many children among the victims in monday night's attack. manchester police very upset about leaks of information, including the name of the suspect. evidence photos of the bomb to some u.s. media. they have reportedly stopped sharing information with u.s. authority, prompting the british prime minister to weigh in on this subject. >> trust is knowing that intelligence can be shared confidentially and i will be
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making clear to president trump today that intelligence that is shared between law enforcement agencies must remain secure. >> president trump asked the justice department to launch a full review. this is critically important, sharing of information between the u.s. and uk. david: leaks have to be stopped. rick, thank you for breaking news. more breaking news on stock market. costco reporting third quarter results. lori rothman on floor of new york stock exchange. how does it look, lori? reporter: costco beats top and bottom line and much better than expected comparable store sales. shares of costco in the extended session are up better than 2%. $1.59s per share versus the street expectation of 1.31. that is easy beat in terms of eps. sales of $1.86 billion. the estimate was war a mere 28.54 billion.
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heavy% increase in this quarter versus quarter year ago. same-store sales up 5%. david: finally good retail news. thank you. melissa. melissa: information leaks continue, from the united states about the manchester bombing investigation are putting president trump in a tough spot. the president releasing a statement today saying alleged leaks coming out of government agencies are deeply troubling. i'm asking the department of justice and other relevant agencies to launch a complete review of this matter. here is judge andrew napolitano, fox news senior judicial analyst. i think it is really ironic people talking about theresa may giving president trump a hard time about the leaks that it reflects on him, but he is the one talking about how much leaking there has been going on over really serious, sensitive information. seems to prove his point, does it not judge? where am i wrong. >> you're not wrong but there is a little bit of a nuance i will
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get to in a minute. it proves his point and the point is significantly this. there are significant players in the trump administration, whether holdovers from president obama or part of government that never changes no matter who is in the white house regularly, consistently, systematically leaking information to separate him from other members of the administration. to separate him from allies or to frustrate or control him. this is the same mind-set that leaked a portion of the conversation between ambassador, the russian ambassador kislyak and lieutenant-general flynn. melissa: yeah. >> what is being leaked? it is not necessarily intel. intel is the means by which data is acquired. what is being leaked is evidence of the crime. something regularly consistently, systematically revealed by police in the united states to the press. we found this bullet. we found this detonator. that is not intel. that is evidence. who is doing the leaking?
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well, there is nypd on the ground. there is "the new york times" and "the washington post" talking to the nypd in manchester of the this may be entirely out of donald trump's control because the leakers are probably not people that are subject to him. melissa: okay. but going back to any leaking that is going on anywhere, i also find it confusing when he talks about somebody has got to get to the bottom of this. i'm thinking well, you know, you're the top guy in the country. you can't figure out who is doing leaking? is it that hard to figure out who is doing what? >> sometimes the leakers are so he sophisticated, they are using electronic device, holding up my iphone. they're using something more sophisticated than that, disguising their fingerprints. it can take months to find the fingerprints. sometimes as simple as a phone call. melissa: right. >> the justice department needs to find out who that is. these particular leaks are not even criminal because not state secrets being leaked.
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just information that the british government doesn't choose to give out as quickly as the nypd would if this horrible tragedy happened in new york. melissa: but it is their country and their investigation and they have the right to release it at the time they see fit. >> generally. yes. we have the right to dig for it. melissa: right, all those things. judge napolitano, thank you. david: airport security lines might start growing. melissa: what? come on! david: longer than they already on. could make your next airport visit even longer than it is. details coming up. a stunning turn of events just hours before voters head to the polls in monta it was a safe republican seat but a republican candidate has been charged with assaulting a reporter. one of fox news's own was right there on the scene. what if technology
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our 18 year old wase army in an accident.'98. when i call usaa it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. we're the rivera family, and we will be with usaa for life. melissa: the showdown continues on capitol hill. budget director mick mulvaney
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facing tough questions from democratic leaders over president trump's budget plan but he says the rhetoric on the left is not helping the debate. >> republicans care about poor people. republicans care about kids. republicans care about the elderly just like many democrats care about national defense. this rhetoric, this demagoguery just doesn't help the debate at all. melissa: bob cusack is is the hill editor-in-chief. wow, i mean, whether or not you agree with him, if you stand him next to other republicans, he is a really good way of articulating point of view for regular people, doesn't he? >> i think absolutely, melissa. i think mulvaney is one of trump's best surrogates. he was taking heat throughout this week from both sides of the aisle. listen, people for get that the president proposes a budget but congress has the power of the purse. they will be ones crafting it. they're looking at trump's budget. they will use stuff and discard
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a fair amount but mulvaney is respected. he is former member of the house, very conservative, so he is respected by a lot of members in the husband freedom caucus. melissa: but he has a great way of freezing it. we don't measure compassion about how many people are on food stamps. we measure how many people are lifted off program. these are good ideas. why is it hard to get republicans to say it so clearly. >> the party has had a problem in that area. wait a minute, throwing money at programs doesn't necessarily solve the problem. remember we're approaching $20 trillion in debt. that has to be factored in. this white house wants to balance the budget, it will be very difficult to do that within 10 years. melissa: let me turn you towards health care because where in the cbo do you see the smoking gun that will coincide all the left's rhetoric we keep hearing? what do you think? where is that? >> the cbo report got a lot of attention. it was newsworthy, if you think about it it wasn't much
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different than the first cbo report. if you talk to republican senators crafting a very different type of bill, bill cassidy called it today, yesterday's news because the senate bill will be very different. melissa: yeah. >> without a doubt something democrats are ratcheting on because of uninsured issue. at same time premiums on obamacare in many states, not all have gone up significantly. melissa: yeah. meanwhile new faces emerging at the white house as speculation grows president trump may shake up his team upon return from the nine-day trip. bob, what do you think about that? the buzz is, you haven't seen as much sean spicer. when you get back in the press room who will you really see. what are you hearing? >> there were a lot of rumors priebus was going to be gone. spicer would be gone. bannon would be gone. they're all still here. i think something is coming but unclear what. definitely what is changing how the white house communicates because the president himself gave the white house c/c plus
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how they're doing messaging. that is something, he needs to change. he sees the poll numbers. he is obsessed with polls. they're not great. definitely under 50% no matter what. you will see how this message is on tax reform and other initiatives. that is going to change. melissa: bob, you're wonderful. will you come back. >> absolutely. thank you, melissa. david: he is the best. we have more breaking news from inside the beltway. part of the ongoing senate select committee on intel investigation into russia's supposed interference in the 2016 elections, committee voted unanimously to grant the republican chairman, richard burr and democrat vice chairman, mark warner blanket authority to issue subpoenas however they deem necessary. interesting. melissa. melissa: so if you held on to the stocks you're making money today. new records on wall street. new closing highs for the s&p 500 and the nasdaq. it is s&p's 18th record close unpresident trump. we want to remind you of the good news. there is a lot of bad news. this is the good news.
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this is the 28th for nasdaq. nasdaq leads major averages this year. david: companies making more money. coming up a new scandal at veterans affairs office. this time involves bugs, actual bugs. the unbelievable story of how our veterans have been failed yet again. melissa: trump putting nato on notice, the president calling the organization to do their fair share when it comes to defense spending. "the washington times" opinion editor and fox news contributor charlie hurt is going to join us. that's next. ♪
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mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. ♪ melissa: president trump in brussels today addressing nato leaders and emphasizing the importance of members contributing their fair share for defense spending. this as the president meets with the heads of both france and germany. blake burman in sicily where president trump will head a meeting of the g7 nations. blake? reporter: president trump in brussels showed up at the doorstep of the brand new nato headquarters. leaders of nato members nations by his side, demanded alongside them they pay the fair share as it relates to nato. at issue is the previous commitment these nations made to spend 2% of their gdp towards defense.
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so far the overwhelming majority of these countries have yet to hit that market. the president demanded that they start doing so. >> this is not fair to the people and taxpayers of the united states and many of these nations owe massive amounts of money from past years and not paying. if nato countries made their full and complete contributions, nato would be even stronger than it is today, especially from the threat of terrorism. reporter: not everyone was thrilled with that rebuke. one of them being the top, one of the top democrats in the house, congressman adam schiff, who is leading the russia investigation into the house. he senout a stement moments ago, speaking of the president saying, i quote, he chose once again to scold our closest allies if they were deadbeats. our allies were certain to take little comfort in the president's remarks, even vladmir putin did. that from one democrat on this
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evening. melissa, it is 10:35 at night here in sicily. president trump expected to land here next 10 or 15 minutes for the g7 summit to take place tomorrow and saturday. the white house saying on this night, some big issues will be trade and terrorism of course. also one of the things many people looking at, whether or not, how big of a push rather there will be from some other countries as it relates to the paris climate agreement. the white house saying the president will make a decision on that end after the summit wraps up. melissa: blake, you are getting literally zero sleep. you're seeing best places in the world. david: i was going to say. he was getting sympathy for being in sicily. melissa: we love you, babe. david: you're eating italian food. melissa: wrong crowd. reporter: we've got the view. we've got the food. it is fine. david: enjoy, appreciate -- melissa: there you go, my friend. david: president trump as blake was telling us putting nato on
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notice when it comes to pulling its own weight coming to defense spending. >> over the last eight years the united states spent more on defense then all other nato countries combined. if all nato members had just spent 2% of their gdp, on defense last year, we would have had another $119 billion for our collective defense and for the financing of additional nato reserves. david: get those little smirks and side looks. somehow, our european leaders that adam schiff is so forthcoming about supporting, found all of this particularly amusing but few taxpayers here do. they are the ones who pay the bill. joining to us weigh in, "washington times" opinion editor and fox news contributor, charlie hurt. charlie, nato, let's face it, for the benefit of europe more than any other region of the world. we have footed a large part of that bill for a long time, for
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decades now. somehow these guys think it's funny when they're asked to pay up their fair share. how do you think that will go down with u.s. taxpayers? >> i think that, i think there is no doubt that u.s. taxpayers are probably more than smirking at them right now but you know, this is where donald trump is really sort of at his best, walking into an atmosphere like this where he is not particularly welcome. where he is not particularly surrounded by people who particularly like him and like the message that he offers. he delivers the message. politicians they like to be liked. they want to glad hand. this is guy likes that kind of thing but he is not afraid to walk into the sort of den of his enemies, deliver message, unpopular message they don't want to hear. all these people wanted to hear him talk about crimea, want to hear him talk about russia. want to hear him talk about all these other things, but trump, as he likes to remind us he is not president of russia. he is not president of crimea. he is president of the united
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states. that's the message, that is who he spoke for. david: charlie, amazes me, we gone out of our way, spent our lives and fortunes to defend europeans decade after decade and they have this imperious attitude, almost like we're still a colony of theirs. meanwhile by the way arabs with whom a lot of americans had skepticism about the president visiting, president seemed to have a lot more effect on changing their attitudes towards something very vital to all of our interests and that is terrorism. play a sound bite of how he spoke so directly to them and get your response. >> a better future is only possible if your nations drive out the terrorists and drive out the extremists. drive them out. drive them out! of your places of worship. drive them out of your communities. drive them out of your holy
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land. and drive them out of this earth. david: now i was watching that with my wife and we harkened back immediately to reagan's tear down this wall. this was a historic speech, was it not? >> i thought it was his finest foreign policy speech we ever heard. also a speech, david, if you think about it, how great and how powerful that message would have been from president obama, and, in 2008, president obama very much campaigned on that kind of stern rhetoric in terms of dealing with radical islamic terrorism. and doesn't even have to say that term since obviously that made him break out in hives he could never say it but you could still deliver that stern message to people. he had credibility that no other president we er had had, and he to hear president trump do this. it's a tough message in front of that crowd. it is not a message they want to hear. david: a tough crowd. >> but they respond to strength and i think that is also why
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that was such a particularly powerful and appealing address to those people. david: who would have thought we would have the strong alliance of arab leaders. i guess iran, when you have a common enemy like iran, that is what brings people together. charlie hurt, great to see you, thank you very my friend, their very much. appreciate it. >> thank you, david. melissa: montana voters heading to the polls following a altercation involving a leading candidate last night. coming up next. ♪
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david: montana house special election taking a turn. he was confronted by ben jacobs, a reporter for "the guardian" newspaper, the conversation ending with gianforte grabbing jacobs and body slamming him on the floor. giantforte issued a citation. he has to appear in court as
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voters heading to the polls. shelby holiday, 70% of the vote already in. may not have huge effect on election. pulling back, looking at incident, gee, greg looked so calm before. surprising but clearly stuff has been building, and reporters in this country have been more and more aggressive, not to excuse any action on the part of somebody who gets violent but, we may see more of this. >> there is a lot of news to cover, so reporters are out and about trying to get their stories what really happened last night, like falling on your face at the very end of a 100-yard dash. the election today i think you saying he snapped might be a good way to put it does this the night before an election. the big question will it matter? in general this guy walked in. he asked a question about the congressional budget office's score for health care bill. it was big news. lots of people wanted to know about it. greg giantforte really didn't want to answer. he didn't respect fully decline
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to answer. he body slammed the reporter. david: if you're running for politics you have to expect being confronted by very aggressive journalists these days. he was in the middle of setting up for an interview with alicia acuna who works for fox news. >> lovely fox news reporter. david: thinking about that, meanwhile this guy stick as mic or cell phone in front of his space and keeps shoving it in he despite attempts to move it away. he snapped. you have to be prepared running for office. >> you have to be prepared. you bring up a good point, there is so much national and global attention on these small local races right now, because a lot of people are wondering whether or not president donald trump will tip the balance what should be red districts, comfortably red districts. there is a lot of attention whether or not the pendulum is swinging. whether or not democrats are gaining ground. floods of reporters come to the local area. they have to get to the job done. david: they come with an ideology of their own.
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"the guardian" is left-wing newspaper. he has come out with anti-trump stuff in the past. he came with history. >> politicians get in trouble for answering every question. they get baited and shouldn't be answering questions and they do. there is easy ways to respectfully decline to answer. that is not what happened last night. it should be so easy. you never know what happens behind the scenes on campaigns, amount of stress these candidates are under. david: i'm surprised with all these cell phones. >> they have to get the story. david: all we had was a recording. no video. >> i'm shocked we don't have video. maybe one will show up. we have four eyewitnesses. not looking great. david: fox news reporter. melissa. melissa: big changes on the way to the airport. tsa looking to change weighings the way bags are screened. food and cell phones to be placed separately. jeff flock live at o'hare international airport in chicago with the latest. oh, making lines longer. reporter: that is not the half of it, melissa.
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chocolate, they make you take chocolate out of your bag, i can't believe it. anyway, new security procedures being tested across the country. they will require people to take a whole lot more out of their carry-on bags. take a look what they are targeting in terms of items. as we said, chocolate. apparently chocolate on the x-ray machine looks a little bit like a plastic explosive. so they have had a lot of problems screening those. also books required to take out, they are so thick x-ray machine can't see through them. anything bigger than a cell phone, ipads and tablets they're a no-go too. any food comes out of the bag under these new regulations. they're being tested at 10 airport across the country. if you fly through for example, detroit or lax or boston logan, some others you are likely going to come up against these new regulations. the good news, two pieces of good news. one, the tsa says it won't take
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longer to get through security. i don't know if that is believable or not. that's what they say. second piece of good news, tsa precheck, rules don't apply to you. you can walk through as normal, not taking anything out of your bag. that is the latest. melissa: jeff flock, thank you so much for that. david: we're not going anywhere this holiday season? melissa: not this weekend. but i will 4th of july. david: new york city on high alert. the big apple preparing for the first big concert since the manchester tragedy. we'll take you live to matson square garden coming next. my dell small business advisor has gott to kn our busess so well that is feels like he's a part of our team. with one phone call, he sets me up with tailored products and services. and when my advisor is focused on my tech, i can focus on my small business. ♪
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bill-- billy joel is set to perform in little over three hours. connell mcshane is at madison square garden with the latest. i imagine security is tight. reporter: always is here, melissa, maybe tighter than ever before. that is fair to say, madison square garden tell us they will work with local authorities to speed up security presence. for some of them that alone makes them feel better. >> having worked here for number of years, very, very tight security for events come around -- [inaudible] reporter: so if you look out where we are outside of the sign that says madison square garden, an inside by the staircases and escalators, this is where the crowd will make its way in and out. i have to tell you, melissa, speaking to security experts about this, this is the area
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they're most concerned about. they're not as concerned what happens up at top of those stairs. that is where metal detectors and wants are, they're doing what they are used to doing, securing arenas. in manchester you have and a rena tied to local train station. they're worried about people on the way in and people on the way out. the way they will secure it? manpower with as many police as possible. melissa, back to you. melissa: connell, thank you. david: in the wake of manchester attack, fans of justin bieber arbegging him to cans epupcoming tour dates in great britain. open-air concert in hyde park in july. social media flooded with concerns for the safety of concertgoers and for bieber himself. ariana grande and bieber are among the top grocers. grande grossed 25 million.
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while bieber raked in $163 million. >> ridiculous. disrespecting our nation's heroes, disturbing report about another shameful va facility that left our veterans in harms way. that is next. d of allergy pills. it delivers a gentle mist experience d of allergy pills. to help block six key inflammatory substances. most allergy pills only block one. new flonase sensimist changes everything.
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>> a disgusting report from the inspector general on the infess taiftion cockroaches at an illinois hospital. david: they found dead cockroaches on blue traps dispersed throughout the main kitchen. some patients received food
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trays with cockroaches on them. how can it go on for so long. they knew of it was happening, they couldn't stop it. tino cockroaches are hard to stop. >> "risk and reward" starts now. >> we have a special relationship with the u.s.a. its our deepest security partnership that we have and it's built on trust. and knowing that intelligence can be shared confidently, pill make it clear intelligence shared between intelligence agencies must reef main secure. reporter: the u.k. prime minister woke up to see sensitive

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