tv The Evening Edit FOX Business November 26, 2018 6:00pm-7:01pm EST
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if that continues, i think the stock goes higher and the shorts are going to be drinking a lot of booze going forward. i have been down on the company in the past because i worry about him. david: we wishes that very best. thanks, gang. president trump: we don't like it. i believe they will be opening up something else. i spoke with her when i heard they were closing. i said this company has done a lot for general motors. you better get back in ohio and you better get back in there soon. you have a lot of pressure. they say the chesy cruz isn't selling well. i said why can't you get a car that is selling well and put it back in. liz: president trump fighting to
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protect jobs. gm is going to lay off thousands of workers and close out multiple factories. a let's make a deal throwdown from gm on tariffs. facebook under historic pressure in the u.k. the brits say they do not believe mark zuckerberg anymore as the u.k. parliament seizes zuckerberg private and company emails. president trump was right about both facebook and google. nancy pelosi facing a raucous, contentious vote this week. a possible government shutdown over the border wall. and the big weekness in the
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democrat party that you can capitalize. the ukraine declared martial law after a russian ship fired on them. this after protesters swarmed the russian kunz that over -- the russian consulate over the weekend. maxine waters is trying to claim the border crisis is a political stunt by president trump. supporters say migrants purposely used women and children. we'll show you how bad the crime was pouring over the border during the obama years. republicans undercutting james comey. judge napolitano joins us to
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explain and the common sense solution to all that. thank you for joining us. thank you for watching. money, politics, we'll bring you the debate beyond tomorrow's headlines. "the evening edit" starts right now. gm said it melee off up to 18,000 jobs in north america including ohio. the u.a.w. agrees with trump. the u.a.w. labor contract with gm expires next year. gm does not want a union strike. the white house said it will
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give a waiver to save jobs for other companies. what do you say, edward? >> at gm cars haven't been selling as well as ford. labor unions and lawmakers have always been at odds. gm did not have a good deal for their investors. isn't it funny how some of these decisions bring political opponents together. i mention all of them supporting president trump to get back into ohio. president trump said he'll pressure gm to bring those jobs back to ohio. he says the told the ceo to get
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back into ohio. this is part of the pressure to get g new york reconsider closing seven plants. president trump: i spoke with her and i said' this one country has done a lot for gm. reporter: four factories in the u.s. and four in canada could be closed. it shocked ohio senator rob portman. >> general notes has let down those workers who have done so much for general motors. what i said several months ago to gm in meetings with their ceo and their executive is we need another product. >> ohio is crucial for you the
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2020 presidential race. the president is determined to help people there. liz: the question is can gm retool its factories to build suvs and trucks. members of the u.k. par almost urging companies to boycott advertising on facebook and google because they have not stopped google -- have not tomorrowed negative con' tent next their ads. let's bring in senator-elect marcia blackburn. what is your recan to the story? >> it seems there is know end to the number of messes you see with google and twitter and
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facebook. i know that they have the ability to do a little bit more policing of their networks than they are doing. but, liz, they are choosing not to do that. and i think the american people are getting wise to this. they are tired of the privacy breaches that you are seeing. the invasion of privacy. the data breaches. and people want to know that is the ability for they they selves to protect their virtual u. liz: facebook and other social media, they are collecting data on you that you don't know about. the u.k., the united kingdom is pushing back hard. they don't police facebook at all. they believe facebook purposely
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built a back door so companies like cambridge analytica could get in and take their data. >> what you saw in 2016 was the obama administration putting in privacy rules that would only affect your internet provider. now the u.k. moved forward with privacy regulation more stringent than anything we considered in the u.s. youd consumer should have the ability to protect your information and sensitive data and say you do or do not want that shared. for non-sensitive data, you should have the ability to say, i'm going to opt out and not allow you to gather this information on me. what we have seen some of these platforms do, and these are the
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apps basically that are not present, if you will, on your screen. they go in and scrape your data and pull all that information and then they sell that or use it for their advertisers. and you the consumer know nothing by the and you can't stop it. liz: jay wong reverse engineered apps. she discovered shock new information we didn't know about. these apps are tracking the cell tours and wi-fi networks near to you find out where you are located. now going. may track your bemay have high yoirn side your home' via going the devices. >> even if your device is turned off, the i am card pulled, that
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google operating system still tracks every single base station you are passing. soar in tracking you. then also if it is an in-home device, you can say google, play thisser. >play -- play this or do that. it's recording and storing the information. liz: we thought big brother was in government, it's in silicon valley. nor marcia blackburn, good to see you. is it time to break up big effect month moply? let's bring in robby you what vape and dock nick, what do you think? >> a surgical approach is necessary. i don't think these companies
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can be trusted. zuckerberg and cook are asking for regulation. liz: robby, what do you think? >> i'm concerned about privacy. but i'm also concerned about the government having access to this information. i don't trust congress to regulate these companies. facebook is crashing and burning because people don't like the in is a market check on their behavior. the on true monopoly is maintained by the government. liz: facebook does track you even if you unplug facebook. facebook still follows you around the internet even after you killed off your facebook. >> it's an overstatement to say
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facebook has crashed and burned. so i think it's time for regulation. but it should be surgical, measured, and very, very limited to start. liz: the u.k., britain, clearly not believing zuckerberg anymore. they say he may have known about privacy abuses way earlier than he said. according to emails the u.k. parliament has seized. >> the u.k. doesn't have a first amendment. you can be arrested for hate speech there. i think it will be quite difficult to put the genie back in the bottle with these privacy concerns. these are difficult questions. liz: this is a developing story. great to see you both. the supreme court appeared sceptical against apple in arguments over questions of
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whether customers can sue apple over its potential legal monopoly on app sales. look at this. mastercard projecting shoppers spent $23 billion on black friday alone. adope he said shoppers are on track to spend $8 billion. the mars insight lander successfully touched down on mars earlier this afternoon. this is the second u.s. robot to land on the red planet. the first was a curiosity rover in 2012. the brawl ended with running back leonard cornett and jack lawson getting ejected from the
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game. president trump holding two rallies tonight in mississippi. we are on the ground with the latest from the president. nancy pelosi is expected to win the democrat house speakership. we have all those fights, and we'll show you what is going on and what is going wrong with the democrat party behind the scenes. matt schlapp is here, fired up, ready to take it on next.
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the candidates he campaigned for earlier this month. he's helping with that same strategy and hoping lit work tomorrow in mississippi. this is a deep red state so you might think the republican candidate may not need any help. but she has come under a lot of heat. she was caught on camera praising a supporter saying if he invited me to a public hanging i would in the front row. her democratic opponent mike espy is trying to become the first black senator since reconstruction. but he has baggage from the clinton administration where he was indaughterred for accepting gifts. then his recent lobbying work
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for an african-american dictator currently on trial for crimes against humanity. it's going to come down to turnout like most of elections are. that's why president trump is coming here, and why he's going to biloxi in just a mew hours. he's hoping all the supporters who came out tonight will get out and vote for cindy hyde-smith. liz: kristen fisher in tupelo, mississippi. the clock is ticking on capitol hill over a potential government shutdown fort border wall. nancy pelosi is set to reclaim her role as house speaker. here is the problem with the democrats. massive leadership tee year
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yaition yaition. no fresh talent. big party losses over the last decade at all levels of government. joining me, matt schlapp. >> i democrats are in a world of hurt in the house. nancy pelosi was always considered the most of progressives of progressives. she has always been ought left on every major issue. now it seems she has lost the support of some of the upstarts that were just elected to her caucus majority. the democrats do not have that. so there is no other democrat running for democrat for speaker. >> the other thing is not only do they have the 70-year-olds who are want to go take all the leadership positions and these
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committee gavels. other issue is that you have a fair number of new democrats elected partially on the promise they wouldn't vote for nancy pelosi. nancy pelosi is armed with it. she is hammering it. she is pressuring them to vote for her. they won -- many of them won in districts previously republicans won. >> nancy pelosi hands out the plum committee assignments. then they need to meet-behind closed doors. we saw democrats quit the house at the first good opportunity because of this pore attic top- -- this sporadic top-down leadership from nancy pelosi.
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>> look at all the freshmen senators who ran for president. marco rubio and ted cruz running for president. rand fall o -- rand paul'. and barack obama on the democrat side. it seems like you have to go up to go on. the old phrase go along to get along. when you are the minority in the house, these republicans will realize there is not a whole thought do. liz: will the house republicans get more vocal and will the house democrats get more vocal? you do need electrifying leadership to take on a guy like trump. >> nancy pelosi is in a fight
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she may very well win. but she is about yesterday. there are democrats in the caucus. they elected a lot of new faces, some of them are interesting. some of them are not that impressive from my point of view. it's going to be interesting to see if they can reject a leader who were elected on both sides of the country. liz: what do taxes and republican suburban soccer moms have in common. lose be suburban soccer moms may be the republicans biggest fair. >> the ukraine is declaring martial law after russians fired on their ships.
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liz: the campfire in northern california contained but thousands are still homeless. the death toll statewide hitting 88. almost 19,000 buildings have been destroyed. the scorched land is the size of two rhode islands or one delaware. joining us is the vice mayor of paradise it's a world of pain. we have been talking about this at the fox business network. can you bring us up to date with what's going on? >> we have an army of people up there doing their best to get through the town and start putting power back in, get water
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up and running. our infrastructure is completely gone. they are just trying to get resources in there. i talked to someone today, they have 25-30 cranes in there removing trees that are damaged or destroyed and trying to get thing going again. it's a monumental task. but we have a lot of people who move it to make it happen. liz: what is the prognosis for going forward and make it happen? >> that's a great question. none of us have been here before. even the experts are saying this is new to them. right now it's one day at a time. the meeting i'm sitting in, they are happy with their progress. they are moving forward very fast. but the size of this thing, it
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will take time to get it to where people can move back in. even into home that did not get destroyed. liz: this is such a painful story. it's heartbreaking. we are showing images of the rescue effort. looking back years from now, vice mayor. what will stand out to you when it comes to what happened? >> we are here -- i'm at the disaster center in chico. we are meeting people, talking to them, answering what questions we can answer. every time we leave here i'm more encouraged than i was before, there is a sense' optimism, they want to move back and build their houses again and make paradise better than it was before. even though the shock is devastating. most of of us, including myself,
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lost everything they have. i live out of two bags right now. liz: you are living out of two bags? is that what you just said. this is sufficient a devastating situation that can drive people to their knees alone at night. you are living out of two bags? >> all my possessions are in two bags. we got what we could and got some pictures out. but most of of our possessions fit in our car. that's the way everybody is. we had to flee and get out of there and we didn't have time to wait. but that's everybody. but it's amazing to see the optimism. i just got done talking to a guy who is an elderly person who said i'm going back. they want to get back to
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paradise. that's home. >> when things break down, humanity steps up. >> praying for us. switching gears now, the republicans' biggest fear in 2020 may be losing the republican suburban soccer mom. they won't be happy about republicans capping a state and local deduction when they do their taxes next year. look who is here, democrat strategist scott bolton. five high tax states lost republican seats in the mid-terms. what is your prediction when it comes to the salt deductions. >> i think tax reform is a
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winning issue for republicans. if they figure out how to communicate, if we continue down this path of lowering taxes for every day americans and businesses to stimulate the economy, it will suit president trump very well. liz: everybody knows taxpayers have to fit the bill here. we are not learning about free college tuition. why is that? >> i'm trying to get he the form socialist democrats. the white working class aren't buying it. 6% of americans like the idea compared to 38%. it's not selling with that group
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that supported trump. liz where college tuition has experienced rampant price hikes. they know we nationalized student loans. taxpayers are on the hook for that. the more money you give them the more they raise tuition. >> college affordability is something we all are concerned about. liz: thank you so much. coming up. former fbi director james comey says he'll not agree to closed hearings before congress. he wants a public hearing instead. they have a commend sense fix to stop james i'm here. the ukraine declaring martial
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law after russia fires on ukraine navy vessels, injuring a number of sailors. that's coming up next. (roger) being a good father is important to me so being diagnosed with advanced non-small cell lung cancer made me think of all the things that i wanted to teach my kids. (avo) another tru story with keytruda. (roger) my doctor said i could start on keytruda so i did. with each scan things just got better. (avo) in a clinical study, keytruda offered patients a longer life than chemotherapy. and it could be your first treatment. keytruda is for adults with non-small cell lung cancer that has spread... ...who test positive for pd-l1 and whose tumors do not have an abnormal "egfr" or "alk" gene. it's the immunotherapy with the most fda-approved uses for advanced lung cancer. keytruda can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body
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fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions whether you do well or not. fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. liz: the ukraine declaring martial law. russia seized several you a cranian vessels and fired on others, leaving ukrainian sailors wound. ways your take on the situation? russia is trying to claim they were provoked by the ukraine
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navy. >> that's a balanced-faced lie -- a bald-faced lie. what this is about is putin's strategy. five years after he moved into crimea and the eastern part of ukraine, he's trying to squeeze ukraine even more economically. north of the kurt straight where this took place, there are two or three ports in ukraine that are used to bring out a lot of exports particularly steel. they move through the black sea into the global markets. putin is leading up to squeezing that as much as he can. he doesn't like the fact that ukraine looks to the west for economic support from the e.u. and the united states, and he's
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trying to discourage that. that's the strategic thing that's taken place on putin's part. liz: senator cardin said president trump is threatening the west by weakening nato. >> i was surprised by that. i agree that putin's strategy is to weaken the transatlantic alliance, nato, and i think eventually force its collapse. but he's dead wrong when he suggests president trump is weakening nato. quite the contrary. this is the first president in years who has gone to length to force them to increase the funding of the fence. that's absolutely taking place largely because of the criticism president trump unleashed against the nato members
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leaders. we are pushing troops into eastern europe as a deterrence against russian aggression. liz: he's suggesting trump is not confronting putin. >> i don't get that either because the facts don't support it. people overreact to the president want to go have a good relationship withed a ever ariel leaders. but the -- relationship with adversarial leaders. putin killed a russian cite next u.k. with a biological weapon.
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he provided iran with lethal aid. and twice he has struck the russian proxy in syria, the assad regime, with the use of chemical weapons. the policies that he is enacting are clearly pushing back on russian aggression. liz: thank you for your service to our country. great to see you, general. coming up next. former fbi director james comey is grandstanding, says republicans. comey says he'll resist any subpoena from republicans. that's next. the crisis at the border. migrants throwing rocks and other projectiles. the border patrol getting
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blasted. the migrants are actually pushing women and children to the front. and we'll have more on how bad the crime was pouring over the border under obama. he's up next. stay there. the hard work you put into lowering your very high triglycerides with diet and exercise deserves the hard work that went into the science behind vascepa. prescription vascepa. vascepa, along with diet and exercise, has proven results in multiple clinical trials. vascepa looks different because it is different. over a decade of extensive research and development achieved proven results. that's the prescription power of vascepa. vascepa is not right for everyone. do not take vascepa if you are allergic to icosapent ethyl or any inactive ingredient in vascepa.
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liz: former fbi director james comey says he'll stand up to any house subpoena to testify behind closed doors. trey gowdy said forget the public congressional testimony. why not just videotape comey's testimony, then make it public. >> when he was head of the fbi, a lot of my fbi buddies and i had a lot of admiration for him. he always supported the troops, the fbi agents in the field who risk their lives every day. i don't think he wants the public hearing for self-an gra
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self-aggrandisement. i think he wants to run out the clock. liz: is it valid when the democrats take volume? >> no. on the substance much it i agree with him. i think the secret hearings are terrible. the public has the right to watch the questioner and the witness and draw their own conclusions. if this hearing is held in secret, republicans will leak their version, democrats will leak their version. and the public are treated like children. liz: trey gowdy says a public hearing is worse because you only have 5 minutes with the guy. >> when only certain people know
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the questions and answers. liz: are they going to get this done? >> i don't know the answer to that. liz: why did it take so long? >> that's been a valid criticism of them. the republicans have controlled the white news and the' congress for the last two years. they could have done this a year and a half ago when he was fired. liz: the president has been upset tweeting about the mueller probe. are we going to get the results? >> i happen to believe the president is being advised not to tweet and not to temperature provoke the am gator. i have a feeling a lot will come down from bob mueller before
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christmas and some after democrats take control of the house after christmas. liz: we love the judge. varney says this is a spinoff show. >> barney is trying to take credit for your success. liz: yes, he is. liz: maxine waters is trying to say the crisis at the border is a trump ploy. >> this not one indictment, this not one conviction humaner has that has anything -- not one conviction mueller has that has anything to do with the russians in 2016.
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>> fast-moving developments at the border. border officials using teargas after 500 migrants rush the border. they said migrants are shoving women and children to the front. if they were really peaceful asylum-seekers that migrants would not be throwing rocks at border patrol officials. dozens of migrants were arrested on the u.s. side of the border for crossing illegally. maxine waters says the crisis is nothing but a political play by president trump.
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kevin joins us now. great to see you. >> what is your take on all of this? >> i think that congresswoman waters is missing the point. i'm surprised. if there's one thing the crisis at the border has shown us come it really should be a wake-up call for all of those who doubted the seriousness of the situation. to somehow suggest it is manufactured crisis when their 6000 people who walked all the way through mexico to come to our border and try to storm it, it's not a fabrication. those are real people. it deserves the scrutiny that our president is giving. >> it's hard to say it is not a crisis when there's a video showing what's happening. 5000 migrants camped in tijuana. information has been coming in that the government documents show that under obama there is more than 24000 serious incidents that occurred in 2014
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of crime and violence among illegal border crossers. how can maxine waters say this is a stone? >> because, maxine waters is doing the same thing she's accusing our president of doing. criticizing -- politicizing a crisis. a few weeks ago we voted in a divided government the message that i take away from that is they want two sides to get together and come up with solutions. i think there are solutions that should be acceptable to all sides as long as one side is willing to give the other side something. that's been the problem with the approach that the president had which i thought had winners all the way around. i think that's exactly what the borders are telling us they don't want in this next congress. >> here is brandon judd, here's
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what he said this morning about what's going on. >> our agents did not deploy teargas until they were hit with projectiles. rocks and bottles. that's when they deploy the teargas. if you look at what the caravan said, they push the women and children to the front. how monstranc monstrous is that? >> it clearly this is not the refugee crisis sponsored by your local church. they come through the legal process and they think he's exactly right. when you look at the video, when you think they can't possibly be peaceloving asylum-seekers who would do this to children and women nor were they storm a border illegally. in which case they would be met with the hospitality that significance and is our
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tradition. >> kevin kramer, great to see you. we welcome you back on soon. >> thank you for having us in your home. thank you for watching. lou dobbs is here next on the foxbusiness network. >> good evening. our top stories, president trump back on the campaign trail continuing his tireless efforts to repot elect republican parties in support of city heights smith in her reelection bid. the president wrapping up a rally at an airport less than an hour ago. two hours from now he's giving another speech at the mississippi coast coliseum in biloxi. we will break down the details h
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