tv After the Bell FOX Business July 13, 2018 4:00pm-5:00pm EDT
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[closing bell rings] >> you know, up markets are always good for investors. better to be making money than losing money for sure. that is great thing for all of us. liz: that is nasdaq record close. have a great weekend from the "claman countdown." david: the dow ending up 91 points. it was just 100 a moment ago. it may settle a little higher. these are session highs. green for the s&p 500 and the nasdaq. it looks like it will close at a new record high for the second day in a row. happy friday. i'm david asman. melissa: i'm melissa francis this is "after the bell." we have more on big market movers. here is what else we're covering in this very busy hour. making waves in the uk. president trump just arriving in scotland after a very busy day, meeting the queen and talking tough to the media on trade, and his support for the prime minister theresa may. we're live in london with the
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latest. meanwhile unprecedented u.s. delegation is in mexico receipt now sitting down with the new president-elect. more on what they are hoping to accomplish. former fbi attorney lisa page is getting grilled on capitol hill, now as concerns grow over anti-trump bias following peter strzok's marathon hearing yesterday. former fbi assistant director chris swecker, what we could learn. how all of this is affecting the mood within the agency. also among our guests at this hour, we have good guests. former aid to margaret thatcher, nile gardiner. former reagan economist ben stein. david: bueller, bueller. susan li is on the floor of new york stock exchange. not bad for a friday the 13th, susan. >> definitely not bad. the dow closing above 25,000. the s&p also up the 28 level. we're trading at five month
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highs. a lot of positives, technical basis because we've broken through resistance as they call it through the market. we could bounce another leg up from here. talk about technology, you mentioned nasdaq, another record for the tech-heavy index. let's check in on some of these big tech names because it was a record day for amazon as well. we also saw facebook, microsoft booker he will about, big four tech names doing pretty good in the session. we got news in the past hour, looks like facebook, alphabet, twitter will testify at u.s. house judiciary hearing on july 17th. this has to do with social media filtering when it comes to elections that is something to watch next week. look at earnings season. it is about the banks today. we are kicking off heavier part of the earnings season. jpm, jpmorgan was the story this morning. they say this is the best to own in the banking sector since we had another 14th straight
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record that they have been record second quarter, even surprise when it comes to jump in trading revenue. not the case for citi. yes they beat on the bottom line when it comes to profit but this is because of lower taxes. looking ahead revenue growth is nascent at this point. they have some concerns of some revenue from the credit card business from citi. wells fargo a lot going wrong for the company in the quarter. they basically wrote off five times, five times they had to write off nine-digit figures. this comes with tax rebates and also some other issues with wells fargo. let's also talk about the markets on the week t was a week for the dow. we're up 2 1/2%. s&p gains of 1 1/2. nasdaq as i mentioned up close to 2%. nasdaq will be in focus on monday because we have a big one reporting and that is netflix, down today, sold down close to 4% because of a deutsche bank downgrade. this comes back to subscriber growth. whether or not they hit the targets on monday. as you know, guys, you never
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want to count out netflix. back to you. david: no. but i do like amazon. melissa. melissa: interesting. bring in today's market panel, carol watts, former investment banker. gary b. smith, kadena group. fox news contributor. netflix look like an opportunity there? >> i hope so. i own it. melissa: would you add to it? >> i will be talking to my book. didn't they get the most emmy nominations ever? certainly for netflix, they bumped out hbo. melissa: that usually means they're spending too much on content. >> but at this point they're no longer delivery platform. they're both content and delivery. i think the metric is very simple. when nine out of 10 people watching this show go home today sometime during the next day or so i bet they're going to use netflix. that is the metric you need. it is still growing. it is growing, melissa, because of added content.
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i think it's a buy. of course i own it. full disclosure. melissa: carol, i will be using netflix the next two hours. guarranty you three people at my home now using netflix. we're certainly deep into netflix. i should buy the stock to offset some of the price here. what do you think about that and market as a whole? >> i'm not sure that is a great tradeoff given where the stock is trading melissa. as financial advisor would not advise you to do that. melissa: okay. >> not my type of stock. it's a momentum name. not one where you can put your head around the valuation. i really understand what the market is going to do based on this factor, that factor. just the type of name i stay away from. certainly they are spending very heavily on content. all they need are couple good shows to keep people like you and me to watch it every time but it is not my type of -- melissa: tech names next. took is doing well. david: i'm amazon prime kind of guy. stay with us. china's monthly trade surplus
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with the u.s. reaching a record, coming in more than $28 billion in june, highlighting imbalance two nations face, escalating battle over trade. consumer sentiment dropping 1.1% in july due to tariff concerns. still at 97.1, gary b., which is incredibly good. i think tariffs are kind of a soft drag on the markets and economy. not enough to upset the apple court. not a game-changer sort of thing, softly holding things back a little. what do you think? >> totally agree, david. >> look. everyone is selling on headline, just run simple math. so trump wants to put, 10% tariff, he is all over the board, 10% on $200 billion worth of goods. that is .1% of our gdp that doesn't account for the fact, let's say they put it on refrigerators coming from china. on almost every good coming over
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from china they're replaceable with goods bought over here, goods bought over here. we saw in the oil crisis. people adapt to higher prices. they telecommute, take the bus. they will adapt to higher prices here, there is so much competition here, that is exactly, a very small drag which will be overcome. david: carol, i think that china's beginning to realize how much competition there is out there. they're getting squeezed terribly. our markets are holding steady. their markets are dropping like a stone. >> i want to put this in perspective. you have to remember that we are a service economy. we are not a manufacturing economy. david: that's true. that's a good point. >> 80% of our economies is service is based. the fact we might have some sort of a surplus, talking about some sort of a surplus, that makes sense. we've been very expensive wage base. they have a very low wage base. david: right. >> i think biggest issue as you
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mentioned, david, for china, they're not an emerging market country anymore. they're getting very expensive in terms of manufacturing. david: yes. >> certainly i think we would be better position focusing on making trade and investment in place like vietnam where we could have trade at a lower cost instead of focusing on things like tariffs. david: you think of all these things. i wonder, maybe china will be crying uncle pretty soon. have a great weekend. thanks for joining us, carol, gary appreciate it. melissa: protests taking over the streets of london today, following president trump's join news conference prime minister theresa may and his meeting with the queen. blake burman has been navigating his way through these protests all day instead of drinking tea. blake, what can you tell us about this trip? reporter: i did not have tea with the queen of the maybe next time, melissa. this day for president trump was set up by some comments actually he made yesterday in an interview with the "the sun" newspaper, one of the largest newspapers here in london which president trump was highly
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critical of british prime minister theresa may and her decision to lean toward a softer "brexit." they had a bilateral with their teams in the country side out of london. after that a press conference and during the president conference the president tried to soothe over publicly any sort of tensions, make it appear if there there was no tensions. here is the president. >> i said very good things about it. i think they didn't put it in. i wished they put that in the headline, that is one of those things. she is a total professional. i said i wanted to apologize i said such good things but. don't worry. it is only the press. i thought that was very professional. reporter: the president also mentioned in that sun interview there might not be bilateral trade deal with the uk. today though, he said that is a priority. you're looking now at the protests that took place on the streets of london today. that was occurring as the president had couple high-profile meetings.
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the president never made it into the city center because of those protests. we were with them three hours or so, largely non-violent, largely local, and largely anti-president trump. the president as you mentioned had very interesting side meeting here. about as cool as it can get. president and first lady having tea at windsor castle with queen elizabeth. lasted about an hour. that is the same location that the queen hosted the obamas, president george w. bush and laura, and reagans as well. she has meant 10 out of the last 11 presidents here in the uk. president trump is now in scotland. he will spend the weekend there gearing up for his meeting with vladmir putin on monday. he is staying at his resort in turnbury, one of the best golf courses in europe, also in the world. i have to imagine this weekend he might be breaking out the sticks there in scotland. david, melissa, back to you. melissa: we'll hear a few ad for
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turnbury. this is business channel. we always respect that blake, thank you for your time. hereto react nile gardiner, margaret thatcher center for freedom at the heritage foundation. good to have you. i almost fell off my chair this morning heard the president say, one the first things he said, the first thing i said is, i want to apologize. i don't know if i heard him say apologize before. he actually looked and sounded apologetic maybe for the first time that i've seen. what did you make from that? he was really trying to make things better. >> quite extraordinary and i think today president trump and theresa may had a very good meeting at chequers, the prime minister's residence and president went on to see the queen. i thought the president did very
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well by all accounts. i think he had very, very friendly, constructive interaction i think with the prime minister today. and also president trump made it very, very clear in his press conference with theresa may that britain and the u.s. not only shared a special relationship but the highest of the highest special relationships and so this was a reafter firmmation of the fact that the u.s. and the uk are the strongest bilateral partnership on earth and vitally important alliance for the defense of the free world. so i think all in all, it is a pretty good day for president trump. controversy overnight with his interview to "the sun" newspaper. but i think actually the president was right to say what he had to say in "the sun" newspaper, which is, if britain and u.s. are to sign a free-trade agreement, britain needs to be fully outside of the european union and that is not clear from theresa may's
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"brexit" proposal as it currently stand. melissa: no. i mean he did everything but kiss her today to make things seem better. >> yes. melissa: when you look back at "the sun" interview, it wasn't great but my understanding is, that they had hoped he would come over and support her resolution but he couldn't do that to be honest because you know, a lot of people perceive it as her ignoring the will of the people to a certain extent. >> yeah. melissa: they voted for "brexit." you know, i heard a lot of liberals say, well the people who voted for that didn't know what they were voting for. that is just an insult to voters. >> it is. it is outrageous. melissa: did he have a choice in he could have obviously been more delicate in the way he spoke to the sunbut he couldn't endorse what she did, could he? >> that is absolutely right. president trump i think spoke the truth in this interview to "the sun" and what he said, according to a snap poll earlier today on sky news, what he said
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was actually backed by over 50% of the british public. you know there is a lot of support for the president's view that theresa may's "brexit" proposal now in the form of white paper is really underwhelming and basically there are too many concessions to the european union. and britain will not be fully sovereign actually if this proposal goes forward and the british people knew exactly what they were voting for. they were voting for britain to leave the single market, leave customs union. be once again a great, free, sovereign nation. that is not what theresa may is offering. full credit to donald trump for pointing that out and that has given real strength and encouragement to the "brexiteers." melissa: can't be honest with your friend, who can you be honest with? >> best to be 100% honest. i think the president deserves a great deal of credit.
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melissa: nile gardiner, thank you for your time. have a great weekend. >> you too. thank you very much. david: meanwhile the president gearing up for a high-stakes meeting with russian president vladmir putin on monday. democrats demanding he cancel it in light of justice department indictment of 12 russian security officers accused of hacking into their servers. chris wecker, independent women forum foreign policy fellow, claudia rossette weighing in. melissa: wild week of monsoons and flooding in the southwest, forcing an evacuation from a campground near the grand canyon. details of a harrowing rescue effort of some 200 tourists. david: the president sending unprecedented high level delegation, you may not have heard of it, look who was there? the nation's new president elect down there will be talking with them on issues of immigration, border security, trade. famed economist ben stein what they may be able to accomplish.
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melissa: you are looking at new video just coming in showing a high level u.s. delegation meeting with mexico's new president-elect this afternoon. on the agenda, nafta, immigration and border security. edward lawrence with all the details. ed? reporter: melissa this is get to know you meeting for the secretary of state. it is also let's get nafta started again in terms of negotiations with a new press-elect, andres manuel lopez obrador. treasury secretary steve mnuchin joined this trip with secretary of state mike pompeo along with homeland security secretary
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chris tenille send and advisor jared kushner. the new foreign minister said the wall never came up in these meetings. going forward the new mexican administration will have a good relationship with the united states. in fact he says they want to work out a nafta deal. here is one of the reasons why. secretary or senator from south dakota, mike rounds, says farmers in south dakota are losing average $800 million since march 1st in corn, soybeans, also in wheat, because of the tit-for-tat tariffs. >> right now we have a trade war going on with canada and mexico. we don't have nafta complete. there is questions there. mexico now buys 30% of all the corn coming out. if you take a look, not only do we have that in question right now, but then along with that, you now have mexico saying i better look somewhere else to see where i can buy corn. reporter: he and other senators would like to see a nafta deal done quickly so that companies
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in their states can shift the trade to the nafta states, canada, mexico to cover some of their losses. the president dealt with other trade restrictions or tariff-related countries, the european union specifically this morning. look. >> they have barriers that are beyond belief. barriers they won't take our farm products, won't take many of our things, including our cars. they charge us tariffs on cars far greater than we charge them. as you know. you know all these things. last year, theresa, we lost $151 billion with the european union. we can't that. we'll not have that any longer. reporter: the president has been consistent to level the trade playing field across the globe and he is not afraid to take on all the countries at once. melissa. >> edward, thank you. david: famed economist, brilliant man if there ever was one, ben stein here to react. great to see you here, ben. let's talk about specifically about some imbalances. you and i are both free traders.
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you may be more so than i, but there are imbalances that need to be addressed particularly in the nafta countries. look at a map of canada, u.s., mexico. canada has the lowest tariff rates against goods. comes in at .8%. the united states 1.6%. but look at mexico, 4.4%. that is three times higher tariffs rates than we do. things have kind of slipped there since nafta started. >> yeah, but it is not really a problem for us because we're still selling them incredible amount of agricultural produce and the idea we'll gain by having a trade war is simply a mistake. there is a very famous saying, the most politicians are the servants of long dead economists. and long dead economists from the 18th century in france believed it was very, very important to not import, to not import more than you export. it doesn't matter. we could export all we want. we can import all we want.
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none of that matters in the long run it evens out and mexico is very valuable trading partner. we don't want to step on their toes. david: you're not alone, even among folks in the trump administration. we had larry kudlow said i don't like using metric of trade deficits in order to figure out what kind of trade policies we have. on the other hand he said you have got to do something about the way people are lying and cheating and stealing and you look at the theft that china is having in terms of our intellectual property. the lies that they -- nobody, you don't trust the stats that are coming out of china. of course they cheat. even though they're a member of word trade organization they cheat. if you're going to have free trade, you have to adhere to the rules of the trade. you have to have laws and rules, if rules are broken, it has to be addressed. the question is how. >> we're not talking about mexico breaking the rules. david: oh, they break rules too. ben, i covered as you know i covered mexico for 12 years.
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they break all kinds of rules. >> not technological issues. the ones you brought up. that is china's specialty. we need to sell to mexico every possible kernel of corn we possibly can. if they are violating technological treaties and laws, we need to address that too. david: well they do on drugs. >> well, they do on prescription drugs, yeah. the drug situation in mexico is so horrible it is beyond believe. that is a whole chapter. that is a whole another -- david: beyond legal drugs, they break them on prescription. >> yes. david: my point, you and i both don't really care for tariffs. i think they're a tax. you think they're a tax. you don't like them. they hurt the u.s. consumer. is there a way other than tariffs, for example, quotas to focus in on companies breaking the rules? >> why have any kind of restrictions at all? if we can sell to them, let's sell to them as much as we can. if they want to sell things
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cheap, fine, let's buy things cheap. david: if they're stealing our property we have to do something about it. >> if they are stealing intellectual property that is whole different matter f they're stealingent lex wall property, addressed through a court of law or international court of law. david: what about quotes instead of tariffs does it mach any difference to you. >> i don't think it makes any difference. quotas are difficult to figure out. we have huge surplus selling insurance. we wan not pick fights with them and nickel -- david: everybody agrees, nafta needs revisions. there will be some -- >> nafta needs revision but we love nafta. nafta has basically been a very good thing. it was basically republican idea in the first place. nafta is a great idea if we can get your point well-taken, get the technological issues taken care of. david: right. >> let's sell them everything we
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possibly can and buy their goods cheaply, inexpensively, get their fine labor force up here. not the criminals, not the drug dealerses but many, many fine people in the labor force. david: change immigration rules to one where we get people in who can actually help our economy. people who are good bricklayers, people good doctors. people who we really in need of, rather than this crazy lottery system that we have now. >> absolutely. look, i live in southern california. i think you're very familiar with the area yourself. we know, we could not live without mexican immigrants. we could not live without skilled mexican labor which we get much lower price than skilled american labor. let those people come in. let's of course vet all of the people coming in carefully as we possibly can but let's not put up a wall. let's not try to screen people out of -- david: that is whole another issue. ben stein. >> absolutely. borders make a country. david: they're giving me and you
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the hook. ben, great to see you, my friend. thank you very much. melissa: seeking answers. lawmakers grilling lisa page on capitol hill one page after peter strzok has his chance to defend his actions. the latest on the fireworks coming out of washington coming up president trump attempting to set the record straight with the media. we'll tell what you he is saying after the break. ♪ ♪ you shouldn't be rushed into booking a hotel. with expedia's add-on advantage, booking a flight unlocks discounts on select hotels until the day you leave for your trip. add-on advantage. only when you book with expedia.
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you stopped smoking. now start screening. no matter how much you smoked, early detection could save you. talk to your doctor or learn more at savedbythescan.org melissa: setting the record straight, president trump firing back at a reporter who questioned his tough stance on nato and potential ramifications. listen. >> are you giving russian president vladmir putin the upper hand heading into your talks given you're challenging alliances he seeks to break up and destroy? >> you see that is such dishonest reporting, that happens to be nbc which is possibly worse than cnn.
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$34 billion more was raised since i became president in nato. that means that the other 28 countries have put in $34 billion more into nato. do you think putin is happy about that? i don't think so. but we have a lot of false reporting in this country. melissa: ford o'connell, civic forum pack chairman, republican strategist. he joins me now. the real response to that was the thing that the president was giving nato a hard time about was an agreement to put a pipeline from russia to germany, and become completely dependent on german natural gas, funnel all of that money to russia. he was mad about them making a financial deal in light of the fact that the u.s. and everybody else is trying to be tough with sanctions. i mean do you think that that was a fair or stupid question from nbc? >> that was absolutely
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ridiculous question by nbc's holly jackson. he is trying to strengthen up nato. 1949, military security alliance designed to check russia. the fact that only five of 29 countries meet the defense pledge is embarrassing. it tells me about how serious every country in the serious about the defense of the group. as far as germany, he is right, they are in a lot of ways captive to russia, they get 60, to 70% of their energy from russia. they don't pay for the 2% pledge. that allows them to push latvia on their plans. melissa: i can't decide in halle jackson is stupid or intellectual dishonest, to ask a question, what he was pressing about trying to get together as a group, whether building up your defense or through not putting your former chancellor on the board of gazprom to
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personally profit from a deal that you have structured in order to, just pump money into russia. no matter how you look at what he brought to the allies, it was about standing stronger against rush that i against their response would be on the surface he should have talked nice? i don't know. does that hold up? >> let me say this i think halle jackson needs to basically crack a history book. this was a problem not brought up by president trump. this bedeviled presidents obama and bush. you have a pipeline, germany is playing both sides at the friends, screaming to u.s. they're not being tough on russia, when they have to take a look in the mirror. here is the thing about president trump, he may be blunt but he is pretty effective thus far in terms of international diplomacy, actually gotten nato members to have a emergency meeting to pump in more money,
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take seriously the defense pledge and the fact he wants to raise it to 4%, melissa is fantastic because when president trump realizes this is not only about russia, the world is a crazy place. tough worry about china. you have to worry about the middle east. we have to be 29 members strong. he is right to push it 4%. melissa: connell, thanks. we have breaking news. david: new york yankees dropping papa john's, releasing this statement that they are suspending relationship with the company. ceo see ritchie responded saying we want to regan trust. we need to earn it. diverse an inclusive culture exists at papa john's through our deeds and actions. melissa: here is another look at the markets, ending higher for the second week in a row with the dow seeing its best week in the past five. david: that is good jump, 2 1/2%. new developments in the
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robert mueller investigation, special counsel taking action against multiple russian operatives this afternoon. we'll tell you more about it. melissa: all of this is going down days before president trump sits down with russian president vladmir putin. so what impact will this have when the two leaders come face-to-face on monday? ♪ but i'm relentless too. mbc doesn't take a day off, and neither will i. and i treat my mbc with new everyday verzenio- the only one of its kind that can be taken every day. in fact, verzenio is a cdk4 & 6 inhibitor for postmenopausal women with hr+, her2- mbc, approved, with hormonal therapy, as an everyday treatment for a relentless disease. verzenio + an ai is proven to help women have significantly more time without disease progression, and more than half of women saw their tumors shrink vs an ai. diarrhea is common,
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david: a new list of indictments. deputy ag rod rosenstein announcing charges for 2007 russians today for hacking into the dnc and hillary clinton's campaign during the 2016 election, but, this is important point, rosenstein is making a very important point very clear. take a listen. >> there is no allegation in this indictment that any american citizen committed a crime. there is no allegation that the conspiracy changed the vote count or affected any election result. david: here now to react, chris swecker, former fbi assistant director. we'll talk about strzok as well. this is a message to the russians but also a message to all those conspiracy theorists keep talking about collusion between the trump campaign and russia. >> it is mainly a message to the russians. it is naming and shaming the gru which has been coming at us for a long time. when they find a food cyber criminal, they don't arrest
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them, they recruit them. they don't attack elections. they're prolific hackers in general. this is just one example of that. david: it kind of leads one to think about peter strzok because he was after all working with individuals who were trying to put together this case of collusion between trump and russia. i think partly if not mostly because of his tremendous bias against president trump. we heard more about that yesterday. in fact, let me just play a sound bite from the testimony, his testimony, yesterday, which was a big circus for the most part but there was some substantive stuff that came out of it. play the sound bite. get your reaction. >> mr. oer did not hand you the dossier? >> mr. orh did not hand me anything. mr. ohr provided fbi material everybody calling the dossier. >> say that again. mr. ohr provided what? >> he provided some elements of
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reporting that my understanding originated from mr. steele. >> bruce ohr gave the fbi information relative to the dossier? >> yes. david: chris just to remind folks, bruce ohr was very high up at the doj. his wife worked for fusion gps, which was the group paid for by the dnc, they put together the trump dossier, apparently, i guess her name is medical nellie ohr's husband, bruce, was passing information around the fbi. looks like one side of the presidential ticket, going into the election was generating an investigation at the fbi. that doesn't look good? >> yeah, that is the single-most important piece of information that came out of that wwe wrestling match yesterday we witnessed. that is a gem that was elicitedded by the congressman. because we now know that the
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dossier information, strzok was a little bit cagey about it, he didn't take it, but came into people worked under him, when finally got phrasing the question the right way, he gave that answer. i'm not so sure the fbi was not crawling out of their skin behind him, but they got the answer out anyway. david: they give me a wrap. i'm sorry. we're squeezed with breaking news. do you believe for a moment that in peter strzok's case that his bias never affected his work at the fbi? >> no. i think his actions matched up with his words very nicely. i don't mean nicely, but they matched up with his words. that is how you prove intent in court. i think yesterday, it was a big exercise in self-serving statements on his part, and all he did was show his arrogance and his smugness. david: chris schweikert, great to see you. >> thank you.
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melissa: deadly flash floods in parts of arizona. streets are turning into rivers. people trapped in cars underwater? hundreds of homes are facing destruction. the latest from the scene next. ♪ do with you. it's an emotional thing to watch your child grow up and especially get behind the wheel. i want to keep you know, stacking up the memories and the miles and the years. he's gonna get mine -but i'm gonna get a new one. -oh yeah when it's time for your old chevy truck to become their new chevy truck, there's truck month. get 18% of msrp cash back on all silverado 1500 crew cab lt pickups when you finance with gm financial. that's $9,000 on this silverado. plus, during truck month make no monthly payments for 90 days. money managers are pretty much the same. all but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees. fisher investments never does.
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melissa: it has been a wild week of weather in the southwest. almost 200 tourists were evacuated from an arizona canyon as floods continue to drench the area. adam housley has the details. reporter: recent monsoon storms in northern arizona caused two waves of flooding, first on wednesday. seven feet of floodwaters hit a reservation just before dark wednesday, sparking a rescue. a second wave hit 3:30 a.m. thursday. some 200 tourists visiting remote havasu false in grand canyon were taken out by helicopter. the area is remained closed
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seven to 10 days. the trailhead is closed. no one was reported missing. campers say it was a scary experience. >> the skies opening up. sheets of rain came down. one of our tents ended up in the river, in the stream right next to us. and then, there was water, the war levels are creeping towards our campsite. reporter: wasn't just in arizona. a family from denmark recorded this video as rain poured down in zion national park in utah. water came cascading down steep cliffs and mud and debris blocked the roadway. this video got a lot of attention. a 71-year-old woman went into a canal with her car. she was rescued by fire department personnel in phoenix. the woman was quickly pulled to the canal bank. she suffered minor injuries and is in stable condition.
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monsoon season runs late union into august, and increases risk of flash floods here and in southern california. back to you guys in new york. adam housley. melissa: adam housley, thank you. david: trump on the world stage continues. he will sit down with vladmir putin on monday. what can we expect when these two leaders come face-to-face? ♪ sweat the details. noticing what most will never notice. it's what you do. when the thing you're making... isn't a thing. it's your reputation. the all-new ram 1500. comfortably, the most luxurious truck in its class. and why more people are switching to ram than ever before.
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>> we will be talking about other things. i know you will ask will we be talking about meddling and i will absolutely bring that up. i don't think you will have any gee, i did it, i did it, you got me. there won't be a perry mason here i don't think. you never know what happens. but i will absolutely firmly ask
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what happened. david: i hope you all remember perry mason. president trump emphasized he will talk to president putin about elections meddling when meets with the former kgb agent on monday. claudia rossette, currently a foreign policy fellow with the independent women's forum. the president knew, knew the russian indictments were coming out today. he was trying to get ahead of the announcement which was made around noon before he said that. >> i actually love the timing of this. i think it's a wonderful thing for him to be going into that summit with this right in everybody's face, because this was outrageous. and, something does need to be done about it. david: what should he say to putin? what should demand that putin do, what consequence? >> i think he should threaten
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him, frankly. having worked in russia and. he did that at the nate know meeting basically what he was pushing for, nato needs to spend more on against. that is directly in the face of putin. russia was targeting that. i don't think he was splitting the alliance. he was wanting more skin in the game. this further offense by russia against the u.s. david, it will be very hard to protect against this cyber intrusion purely through technical means. that is an evolving game. what's really needed is a deinterpret threat. this is the 1980s calling to ask for american deterrents back. melissa: good point. >> for that i think president trump has to find some way, possibly in the nicest possible conversational style, to tell vladmir putin that if he does this further again, he is really going to hurt. and that will -- david: pull back a little bit, claudia. look at the overall style what
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happened between united states and russia since trump came president. for all the rhetoric president trump being a tool for russia, he has been a thorn in russia haste side. we actually attacked russian targets that led to russian deaths. you look in situations other parts of the globe. what i loved, is when he specifically took on this deal, this gas deal between russia and germany which i'm sure you would agree is crony capitalism. let's take a listen to what he said about that. >> to me, it is a tragedy. i think it's a horrific thing that's being done, where you're feeding billions and billions of dollars from germany primarily, and other countries, but primarily from germany, into the covers of russia, when we're trying to do something so that we have peace in the world. david: now this hits russia right in the pocketbook,
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claudia. >> yeah. which is what that was all about. while the european nato leaders were choking on their croissants, lovely breakfast in brussels, actually this is about money. what trump, president trump is absolutely on target, entirely right about that. i mean, he is, and he is saying something and pointing something out where, that is going to impress vladmir putin far more than any veneer of nato solidarity. david: think you're right. claudia, good to see you. thank you very much for being here. appreciate it. >> pleasure. melissa: democrats gushing with praise for peter strzok. >> i don't know where to start. if i could give you a purple heart i would. you deserve one. david: oh. melissa: what is an actual purple heart recipient have to say in response to this outrageous comment? that's next.
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(barry murrey) when you have a really traumatic injury, we have a short amount of time to get our patient to the hospital with good results. we call that the golden hour. evaluating patients remotely is where i think we have a potential to make a difference. (barry murrey) we would save a lot of lives if we could bring the doctor to the patient. verizon is racing to build the first
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>> i have a friend who lost half of his left farm and some of his internal organs in cambodia an didn't get a purple heart. you get a purple heart by putting your life on the line. that is the highest honor of a medal. it's ridiculous and disgusting. david: that's joey jones, reacting to the statement that peter strzok deserves a purple heart for facing congress yesterday. melissa: it's amazing to make that kind of comment. david: when you get a purple heart, you get it because you
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are being attacked by an enemy. congress has the right to figure out what's going on. melissa: and he hardly put his life on the line. david: and sergeant jones lost both his legs fighting for this country. president trump: i have a lot of respect for the prime minister. there was a story that was done that was generally fine, but it didn't put in what i said about the prime minister. she is a total professional. i said i want to apologize because i said such good things but. she said, don't worry, it's only the press. liz: the british pound went down, then it went up, all off of that story in "the
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