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tv   Bulls Bears  FOX Business  February 14, 2020 5:00pm-6:00pm EST

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you get out there and try it. that is very cool, i've never seen anything like it. thank you. happy valentine's day to everyone out there. "bulls & bears" starts right now ♪. david: president trump touting his success of the border wall and stemming the flow of illegal immigrants at the white house, the president of the national border control counsel brandon judd is going to be her to join us. but first. >> nevada, south carolina, go home early. david: that is tough, no love for presidential candidate joe biden on this valentine's day. protesters chanting dropout joe last night as the former vp attended back to back fundraisers in manhattan. he ended up not raising the money his campaign was hoping
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for. hi, everybody this is "bulls & bears", thank you so much for joining. happy valentines, i'm david as my pre-joining me on the panel jackie deangelis, jonas ferris, capri cafaro and gary b smith. charlie gasparino is reporting behind the scenes that they want biden to drop out in favor of michael bloomberg. he even said he feels sorry for biden but he has no chance. joe is not letting go telling the ladies on the view that he still has the edge on bloomberg. >> i don't think you can buy an election. everybody thinks that. one of the advantages and disadvantage, i've been only got to the process who has been totally vetted. i've had a target on my back since i got in, i'm still standing. and i will get a chance to debate their bluebird, get a chance to debate him from redlining to stop and frisk and whole list of other things.
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david: does joe biden have enough political mojo left to reverse the mode known to him of sanders and bloomberg. >> i think that the wall street folks are onto something. i put into context, wall street likes to invest in what they are seeing, joe biden is not necessarily a good investment. he has performed poorly in the last two contest and i will caucus in the new hampshire primary. i guess joe biden's defense, he has been looking towards performing stronger in states with more of a diverse population, more african-americans, latino communities for example. i think is hoping to fare better in nevada and in south carolina. however, if he does not have the money to compete and get his message, his campaign may be over before it has an opportunity to restart. >> i agree, although, david it's
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interesting you started off the segment, does he have enough mojo left. i'm not sure joe biden ever had mojo. it's nothing personal, obviously i've never met him, i'm sure he's a decent enough guy, but he's a perennial non-winner. look at the election history, other than the senate which he has had for 50 years, the last general election he won was the newcastle city council. this guy when he ran for president has come in behind guys like richard stallings and john glenn. and john glenn is a great guy. but listen, he has not cracked .1%, for whatever the reason he just doesn't illicit anyone that wants to vote for him. he should really not be running for president. the democrats are pinning their hopes on him, they gotta look elsewhere. >> i think it's interesting, the
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truth is and what capri is saying what gary is saying. you saw joe not do very well in iowa or new hampshire and nevada is a very good state to look at what it comes to joe biden. i thought he might get the support of the culinary union after they said no, we do not want bernie sanders because we do not want medicare for all. they did not choose to back a candidate because they don't want to get behind somebody who is not going to get the nomination and i'm afraid that's where joe biden stands. >> he said you cannot buy an election, i thought the democrats say the russians bought the last election. >> that's true. >> i think he is bringing 10-dollar bills to a 100-dollar bill fight, is not that you have to have a lot of money to win an election because trump did not have as much as hillary andy one but the less dynamic a candidate the last money you need to counter that, and that's why think bloomberg -- he has it and
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i think it could work in this case, biden does not have the charisma or the bank, you cannot have both. >> i've been reporting on what he spending in terms of his ads, he spends $350 million so far and we haven't even gotten into the spring a large portion of that 282 million is television and a small portion of that about 57 million is online and social media because he saw how powerful it was for president trump. >> i got asked about bloomberg and all the old tapes coming up about his defense that the african-american community hates at least often frisk or they appear to. and the question whether bloomberg has done enough to erase the stain from his histo history. >> stop and frisk, redlining are two things that are gonna be difficult hurdles for mike bloomberg to explain or explain away. he tried to apologize, you can make your own determination of whether or not.
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i'm hearing from folks in south carolina and african-american communities were reporting joe biden and now looking to michael bloomberg because the goal is to be donald trump. so they are willing to forgo and look past some of the issues that they do not support and they are critical of in hopes they will be able to be donald trump. by all accounts michael bloomberg is not only spending money on targeted ads and importance states but investing on staff on the ground and will he has not been on the debate stage yet, he is showing up and campaigning in person like north carolina, not south carolina but north carolina and ohio up to this point. he is out there you can't just say he's hiding. david: we have a debate coming up in biden has not been stellar in the previous debates but he's used to them, he's accustomed to them. bloomberg is not and you know that biden is going to be humoring him hard on the african-american issue. >> it is interesting, jonas made
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an excellent point, the next debate is going to be between biden and bloomberg, it's the battle of two stiffs. they are both are charisma free. and the point jonas was making, if you are charisma free like bloomberg, the guy is vanilla, nothing in my opinion. but he does have a lot of money. a guy like bernie sanders has attended charisma, i don't agree with anything he says. andrew yang had attended charisma but did not have a bankroll. so jonas has a good point, if bloomberg with his money can overcome everyone else even though i cannot see anyone getting behind him because he is a dynamic leader, he really has a chance. >> bloomberg's execution and operation of a city with a budget is very good on like bernie sanders although the charisma for an election, his execution is good and is not running for mayor of san
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francisco, he's up against the order because it. in a general election for sure. >> in a general election he is a billionaire who is going to have a lot of problems with one third of the democrat party that socialist or at least very far to the left. >> i think he you would really have to drill down on those numbers, who the bernie supporters, some of the folks did vote for donald trump last time. obviously trump has proven that there is a whole bunch of people across the united states including individuals that are lower income are blue-collar workers that don't care whether or not he lives in a guilty place like mar-a-lago, forget things like relatability billionaires, i don't think it's as big of an issue as people are making out to be. so i think those folks, if they want to choose between somebody who cares about climate change and guns, which is mike bloomberg versus donald trump
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who has tried to get on the court, i'm just talking about the progressively as a party, there is no contest between mike bloomberg on climate change and donald trump -- >> bloomberg gets it and goes head-to-head with donald trump, you can see where this is going with the battle on twitter. trump keeps claiming him saying he has no charisma, no presence, he short, he needs to stand that's mike. >> and then he came back with a childish exchange. but i don't think he can really stand up the trump. >> president trump speaking at the national border control counsel, how the effectiveness of the border wall. brandon judd was at the event today and he joins us next. >> i had the opportunity to speak with president trump on many occasions about border security, both before and after his election.
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he is always concerned about securing the border and he is constantly asked, what do we need to do better. >> i was not supposed to be here but i heard brandon was here so i said where he is speaking i better get there. right. ♪ ♪ don't just plan to retire. plan to live. an annuity helps cover your essential monthly expenses, so you're free to live the life you want. find out how an annuity can give you lifetime income at protectedincome.org hi with the world'se cafirst invisible trailer.me invisible trailer? and it's not the trailer right next to us? this guy? you don't believe me? hop in. good lookin' pickup, i will say that. oh wow. silverado offers an optional technology package with up to 15 different views -
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>> it's been almost 100% effective in the areas that it's been built, we built 122 miles so were able to see. and all of those areas where the wall has been put up, is virtually 100% effective. but don't worry, we will not take your job the way. [laughter] from day one we have given border patrol the tools and resources you need on your job, the results of been nothing short of extruder. david: also get that, president trump counting the success of the border wall in the construction of the border
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patrol agent to the national border patrol council, this is the pentagon plans to treat her repointing billion dollars from the general budget to secure our southern border. let's bring in a man who is with the president today and was called on by the president, that was nice to hear. brandon judd, the national border patrol president. brandon it is so good to see you. i was telling you in the break, i was so pleased that finally after all the derision that was thrown in your way by the democrats, let's face it, the democrats who were saying, the work you were doing was not effective or anti-immigrant. finally you are being recognized for the work that's put your lives are risk. >> first off, it's great to be with you. you are absolutely correct. president trump said it better than anybody could upset it. any time we are recognized by the president of the united states for doing our job and doing a good job, morale is going to be sky high, right now
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morale against border patrol agents is skyhigh because we are being recognized for the job that we do, the dangerous job that we do, and the important job that we do with the safety and security of this country. we love her job and we love to be recognized for doing a good job. >> i commend you for the work that you do, i'm not discounting you by asking you this question, where are in election year, the democrats are going to attack because they said you did fulfill your promise in terms of building a structure, maybe we won't call it a wall, but you did say that mexico, meaning the president, was going to pay and you shifted funds from various programs to be able to fund it, what your rebuttal to that and what you want people to know about the construction of the wall that is so important regardless of where the funds came from. >> part of that rebuttal with anybody would come up with, any time you drop illegal immigration, anytime you drop the amount of drugs flowing into the country, you have caused
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mexico to pay for what they were not paying for before. the amount of money that we spent on illegal immigration and drug control is exponential. when it goes down, we done a good job in a piece for itself. >> brandon, this is ferris, a beacon shed some light on this, i'm still in clear from various reports including the website, the trust program did a lot of attention lately because my question is, i've been waiting almost six months to get mine renewed, have a florida license, is that because they moved staff to the mortar or because the applications have gone up, how much of the application. david: before you into that, let me play a soundbite if i can because we had the dhs secretary chad wolf, maria bartiromo was talking to him, he talked about this and about new york's failure to share information with dhs about illegal immigrants in the state. let me play the soundbite and you can answer jonas' question.
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>> new york is the only state that restricts dhs information sharing of a cdp and ice, other states have similar bands but not as extensive of new york. in a state like new york, the birthplace of 9/11, we should be tearing down silos to information sharing and building them up. david: what to make of all of that. >> i think we have to put the blame where the blame belongs. anytime you will not allow dhs to bet the information that we need in order to issue proper document, it will take a lot longer because we have to do a lot more work to get the information. if newark would give us the information, time will go faster. were not shifting any resources from dhs to the border as far as personnel. we still have the same personnel, but new york is not given us the information, we cannot do her job without the information. >> thank you very much. i want to continue on the point
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about the travel program, capri cafaro here, thank you to the service for this country. i come a much like jonas have an active trusted traveler, global entry and i have gone through the process we have to get fingerprinted, interviewed by federal agents and you have to disclose the amount of countries you have been to in the last five years. if you have to do a face-to-face interview and get fingerprinted, wouldn't that deter any kind of issue -- first of all why would an undocumented individual want to participate when they expose himself. and secondly, wouldn't that process curb the concerns you have in regards to information sharing between new york and custom and border patrol in dhs? >> in the large case, yes, but there still betting process that we have to go to as a border patrol agent, i have to go through a vetting process that
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is every single five years, any individual going to apply for documentation from dhs if we cannot get the information it makes it much more difficult to go through the application -- to the vetting process to get the documents. >> a renewal from not in new york state, like florida, why is the six months backed up. >> that i cannot answer. as a border patrol agent i am a dhs employee but i don't work in that particular area. so i cannot tell you why that is taking so long. >> let me go back to the wall for a second period already democrats are calling it a vanity project particularly moving the $3.8 billion from the pentagon over to build the wall. they actually call that a theft of defense funding. what is your response to them? >> that's a topic i can speak to. 22 years as a border patrol agent i can tell you that walls
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work. when i worked in narco arizona patrolling the border, 58-mile stretch, we were arresting pre-wall, 100,000 illegal border crossings per year. once we built the walls, those numbers drop to 10000 per year. every single place that we have built physical barriers, illegal immigration has gone down but not just illegal immigration, the number of drug seizures have gone down. that is extremely important because we have to keep the opioids out of suburban america, their killing her children and coming across the border from the southwest. >> brandon, i was skeptical of the wall until i was reading an article about how the wall transformed tijuana of all places, it made the cost -- people can still get there, obviously you know that better than i but it made the cost of smuggling which was tijuana's number one industry. it made is so expensive but had
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to turn to other things. it transformed the city of 1 million people around and made a wonderful place. that is the other benefit of the wall that i don't think is being told properly. >> el paso in san diego, that is the poster child of why physical barriers work. el paso used to be out of control in the early '90s, san diego was the same way. once we built the physical barriers they count el paso as a safest city in the united states. beto o'rourke was running around saying that but not given a credit that was due because we built the physical barrier. >> i am so happy you're getting the credit that was long overdue. you have done tremendous work and thank goodness you are getting the support that you need. we appreciate you coming on. good to see you. phase one of the china trade deal may be an effect but will china honor their part of the bargain or use growing fears to back out.
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we will ask the former senior trade advisor, curtis ellis. he is with us next. he is with us next. ♪ cut. he is with us next. liberty biberty- cut. we'll dub it. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ she is on her way to our house. what? i got it. alexa, start roomba. the lexus es. eagerly prepared for the unexpected. lease the 2020 es 350 for $389 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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age is just an illusion. how you show up for the world, that's what's real. what's your idea? i put it out there with a godaddy website. make the world you want. david: u.s. home prices increasing 6.7% year-over-year in january. metro areas have traditionally been the most affordable are continuing to experience the biggest gains in home prices. memphis, tennessee, dayton, ohio and rochester, new york among the oc the largest year-over-year spikes even though well below the national medium of $306,000. so gary, is it good or bad sign for the economy, the spike? >> i think it's a good sign, when you say spike, some of
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those cities you talked about, rochester, dayton was so depressed for good reason, old and industrial, they had nowhere to go, but up at ten, 20% increase starts to make people feel whole again. i think that's a positive, the other thing all the housing, the affordable housing is really starting to take off, that is good, people have the money on pricing, the only part that we talked about that is really still suffering and worrisome as luxury housing. but maybe people that live in one, two million-dollar houses you cannot feel sorry for them. that is a concern. >> they did remove the tax break for having a joint mortgage. >> it is good that the stock prices go up, and housing prices, i think it's directly related to rates coming down over the last year which makes the price of the house go up, the mortgage payment does not stay the same. there's a downside, it can bring the rate up and make it
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unaffordable so people could not get a mortgage in the first place. it also creates a risk situation where if they go back up no one can afford the houses, they crash. i don't want to say it's bad because it's definitely good but too high of stock market can lead to potential danger if things go right. >> i'm going to agree what jonah says, slow and steady wins the race. you don't want home prices to be in the gutter but you don't want them to go too far too fast. so we want to monitor this. >> in less you are selling. i do think tax changes, the rules have changed in certain areas they've shifted buyers to other areas in changed the dynamic. >> it is also about jobs, if you have a steady job and a jobs market like we have now, you feel more comfortable about buying the place. >> absolutely, you mention the communities like dayton that are similar to a community i'm from. some of the impacts of increased property values have to do with
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increased property taxes, on one hand taking more money out of your pocket but on the other hand it does have an impact, potentially a positive one on programs like school, libraries and other social programs and community programs that rely heavily on property taxes. when the property values go up, the community resources actually do get a shot in the arm as we well. >> smart fixes to the tax cut. we did not need tax breaks like that. >> another reason why the inventory is low you cannot find enough workers to build houses. >> 's are tax cut 2.0, the president's plan from the administration to directly coming up. stay tuned. ♪
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david: the highly anticipated phase one of the china trade deal is in effect and starts today, growing fears of the coronavirus spreading in china are weighing in on the markets as you can see with the dow. how can the virus impact this trade deal. here is former trump campaign senior trade advisor curtis ellis per great to see you. they clearly, the factories have not been open for weeks in china, they are slowing down and they do not have the income they used to. are they going to be able to fulfill the requirements of phase one a buying the u.s. goods? >> the agreement says they have two years to buy the 200 big and
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200 billion-dollar increase over two years. clearly the chinese government is setting the stage for saying we will not do it right away, the global times which is the propaganda of the chinese communist party has already said that the coronavirus means we may not be able to fulfill our obligation right away. and there have been other noises coming out of the chinese government to that effect. we also see on the ground the chinese government has tried to invoke, that is an act of god national disaster that prohibits us from taking liquefied natural gas, they do not have their work under workers to offload the ships from overseas, natural gas happens to be one of the products that is specifically mentioned in the phase i deal and i've written about this article 7.6 in the deal it has a
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clause in there, article 7.6 says if there is a natural disaster or other unforeseeable circumstances which prevents the parties from complying with the deal we will consult on this. of course they signed the deal january 15, they are ready new have the coronavirus outbreak so you cannot say it was an unforeseeable circumstance. [crowd boos] one of the points that you made thursday, the market dropped because the chinese were looking at the number of people invested and they were looking at it in a different way, the number jumped tenfold all of a sudden, do you think one thing has to do the other? >> i think that the markets ought to be looking at this fa fact, i know they have spoken about, right now we heard that gm plants in flint, michigan in arlington texas could be forced to shut down because they cannot get auto parts from china. that is really the case in south
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korea. so much of our sourcing and subcomponents are coming from china that there could be a ripple effect. while we are looking at sales to china, all the apple stores are closed in china, that accounts for 50% of the retail sales, 10% of the shipments of iphones globally are going to be delayed or cut because the fox contractor in china have no workers. where else is showing up, when you see the real estate market in china collapse because nobody can get out to buy apartments, how is that going to affect the banking sector in china. how far will the ripples spread and what will be the effect. these are serious questions that we need to reconsider the whole architectural of the global economy where were dependent on china as a sole source supplier for pharmaceuticals, if we ever need facemasks in this country at from a big outbreak, they're
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all coming from china -- >> i have to throw this in, i know capri you want to get in here but my wife about a month and a half ago ordered facemasks, we ordered them through amazon we did not know where they were coming, we got a note from amazon same because the communist government of china has requisitioned all the facemasks, we cannot send you yours, will give you your money back. sorry i had to throw that in. >> that's a very good point. kind of an interesting segway, to flip the thing on the head, earlier you mentioned that flint, michigan for example has to cease operation because of the supply chain and parts coming from china that may not happen. have we given any thought to how we can actually utilize the crisis to improve production and increase production of some of the parts in the supply chain domestically in the united states, maybe it's a blessing in disguise to help the manufacturing sector
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domestically which is saying it's going to be under production to 2020 from 2% to about 1.3% in gdp growth in the muni fracturing sector. >> capri, i cannot agree with you more, i have been saying for decades, we need to bring the supply chain back to the united states. supply chain sound so airy fairy, we need to make in the united states, there is no reason why we cannot, why we shouldn't and even david ricardo, one of the architects in 1817 wrote that the owners of capital should have a natural tendency to invest in their home country even if it means making a little less profit but you will have control of your capital. we now see the dangers of investing in a faraway country, strange governments, new laws, no control and a direct effect on the bottom line when you have a disruption like this. >> i want to bring it back home, larry kudlow is giving fox
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business more details on the presidents tax cut 2.0 playing, let's play the soundbite. >> are you working on another tax cut? >> yes we are coming tax cut 2.0, a meeting in the oval two days ago, he looked at me and said let's get it out by september, we would love to have a 10% middle-class tax cut and we would love to strengthen and make permanent some of the other tax cuts. >> curtis, every single democrat running for president has a plan to raise taxes, will they have a tax-cut plan before the elected. >> he certainly will and let's bring this all together, in addition to making a middle-class tax cut permanent, we saw in the first tax-cut, 1.0, 100% right off her new investment for plant and equipment, let's put that in the 2.0 and that will be further for
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companies to bring the supply chain back to the united states. you get 100% right off to build auto parts factory in the united states. >> we have to leave it at that. good to see you. thank you very much. don't miss maria bartiromo's full interview with larry kudlow tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern only right here on fox business. bad news for bernie, the front runner faces major hurdles in nevada. wavering support from his own party, will he have to say goodbye to one of his signature economic socialist plans, more on all of that coming up next. ♪ ♪ do you recall, not long ago ♪ we would walk on the sidewalk ♪ ♪ all around the wind blows ♪ we would only hold on to let go ♪
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david: bernie sanders is used to republican saying he's unfit, but getting a lot of the same from a lot of democrats, james carbo calling him a communist and many other establishment democrats are openly saying the senator is to outside the mainstream to get elected but remember a lot of establishment
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said donald trump could never be elected before the 2016 and look what happened. spock's new spiky manual is on capitol hill following at all. a lot of democrats on the swing districts are getting mighty nervous about the seniors ticket. >> there is plenty of alarms, joe cunningham saying south carolina and don't want socialism, we want to know how you're going to get things done and how you're going to pay for them. bernie's proposal, it's not something the country wants and not something i would ever support. others are expecting concern, anthony of new york telling syracuse, he won't support sanders or elizabeth warren, scott peters of california warning sanders is the democratic nominee would be electoral disaster backup at the house majority at risk and dean phillips of minnesota says he has serious doubts that sanders or warren could be president trump and midwestern swing states, nancy pelosi is trying to downplay the heartburn.
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>> i wither to remind you how it was when republicans have their primary in the last election four years ago and how messy that was. we are, cool, collected and we have faith in the american people. >> bernie sanders is well known on the senate side of the capital where he has served since being elected 14 years ago. democrats in the united states senate or hoping to regain the majority in november and republicans have a 53 - 47 hedge but one candidate says sanders is a tough sell in key swing states. >> i think he could be challenging parts of the country that we have to win to win the presidency in the majority in the senate. i think we should be running on an agenda that could get us 55 votes in the senate. >> other democrats are hoping michael bloomberg search can ease the bernie sanders concerns. >> mike emanuel, thank you very
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much. sanders is facing new pressure over medicare for all plan, the very big influential culinary workers union in a van about a says they will not endorse them, netted under medicare for all would wipe out the union plans even radical bernie supporter alexandria ocasio-cortez admitting the senator may have to scrap his socialized healthcare plan if elected because they probably will not get past, will we see bernie bail on socialized medicine? >> the short answer is no, bernie sanders is known for one thing, being consistent in his commitment for the last 40 plus years that he has been in elected and i think he goes down with the ship, he's a revolution, i think he will forgo will to stay true to his principles. there you have it. >> he's a career politician. while i agree with capri, he's
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going down with the ship, i think he will suddenly all the sudden beer because he wants to be the president of the united states, he's gonna do whatever he has to but i think the democrats are panicking right now. and all of the polls i have seen, sanders beats head-to-head. but you know who has the biggest lead is bloomberg. that is why i think, we talked about bloomberg at the top of the show even though he has no charisma but a ton of money, at this point he looks like the most viable candidate. i am with capri, i think sanders could be out of the race sooner rather than later. >> let's mention all the customers of the bloomberg healthcare. i'm not kidding about that. by the way healthcare will sink the bernie sanders campaign. it's a little piece from obamacare with 30 grand, they still cannot get that trade with
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the hedge fund employees, unions have negotiated that in good faith with their bosses or whatever and they cannot just switch to medicare for all, it will never be a 30000-dollar plus family plan, it's taken a major benefit plu cut. it is not executable because of the current tax that led to the inflated healthcare plan in america in the first place. >> not to mention other bernie plan would ruin healthcare in america. meanwhile andrew yang ending his presidential bid that setting sg his sights for the big apple next. ♪ ♪ don't just plan to retire. plan to live. an annuity helps cover your essential monthly expenses,
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>> proposal of the freedom
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dividend of $1000 a month for every american adult starting at age 18, this would create millions of jobs, maker children and family stronger and give all americans a better chance to transition in the economy of the 21st century. david: andrew yang could not make the sale on that one, the former candidate dropped out this week, he may have found a softer crowd in new york city, he will run for mayor here, no doubt highlighting the universal income, he told the new york times, i think new york city should do a universal basic income, to me that seems obvious. no doubt new york is already superhigh tax rate would skyrocket to pay for his free money. so with this increase your tax. >> it would make the city in polk, i did not think there is anybody worse than mayor de
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blasio but the proposal of amir yang is really scary. the city has enough problems that it does not have funding for. we cannot be taxed more to start the universal income program as an experiment and see what happens. this is preposterous. >> it is interesting milton freedman was behind a universal income but with one important caveat he said i think there should be a universal income as long as we get rid of the rest of the entitlements. all of the entitlements are put into the thousand dollar month or whatever it is and that is fine, it's kinda like a flat payment, we get rid of social security and all the other jobs, that would not happen in new york, it would probably not happen here it's like another sales tax if you will, all the other taxes do not go away. jackie is right, people walking out of new york, hopefully to florida, by the way we already have people flocking out, new
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york is the biggest tax state in the union. >> they could all the people coming. >> that is right. >> but there's people who can pay for it. >> it would be a tremendous luer for the homeless who are already a problem. >> i think andrew yang would be a better man than de blasio but that's a side story. i think there is ways to make it work in a way nationally, i don't know if the local area can do it because of the migration, i don't think it would work that well. >> it would be a robin hood -- >> new york city benefit is so much higher than $1000 per person when you add up all the housing. >> quickly capri go-ahead. >> it's a robin hood situation where you have the upper eastside paying taxes for bernie rose in the outer boroughs, it
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might be attracted to some of the bernie boroughs but i don't think it's welcome. >> it's not an income, it means you get paid for doing work i hate to use that word. >> a popular online dating site is encouraging single to find love based on political views. we went out on the busy street of new york to ask if love is more powerful than partisanship, we have very surprising answers and wait until you see what our panel says coming up. ♪
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>> would you be able to be in a relationship with the different political party. >> no,. >> y. >> we would argue all the time. >> i would not be invited to her parents house very often that's for sure. >> oh you are married to somebody with a different political party. >> how does that work. >> not well. [laughter]
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>> i love the honesty. as most profiles now mention political beliefs right at the top of the profile, we are asking our panel, would you or have you ever crossed party lines for love. >> i'm going to keep this brief, i haven't have a long dating history that went nowhere until i met my fiancé on the same side of the aisle as me and he put a ring on it. >> congratulations. >> same moral same value. >> i'll be brief and say have had more success with the gentleman on the opposite side of the aisle. i'm a little more bipartisan then i set myself up. >> i would like to hear more. >> let me tell you on mine, your gonna fight with your spouse about something anyway, it might as well be politics, because the other thing like money and drinking are going to mess up your marriage more. [laughter] >> david you and i are probably the same, i'm not even sure i knew how my wife voted until
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five or ten years into her marriage, it did not come up, it was not important and it's still not important. maybe the new generation. david: my beautiful wife and i have been married for 31 years, tomorrow is our wedding anniversary and she is a refugee from a communist country, from socialist nicaragua, she ran away from and she had a 7-year-old boy and nothing, she had to run out because the police were after her, we got married and i don't think we've had one disagreement about politics, but i knew where she was coming from, i'm just amazed if you ever met somebody who is totally opposite in politics, you do it for living how do you get along. >> sometimes you argue but i always try to find the common ground and if all else fails, you make a good meal and feed them and then they shut up. david: i love that, that's a perfect way. once again very happy
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anniversary to my wife, we love each other very much, 31 years by the way. >> that is it for "bulls & bears". thank you for watching we will see you next time. ♪ >> the trump administration is ramping up pressure on sanctuary cities for the public safety threat, this new push could mark a dramatic change, we have the news on that, also tonight the growing debate over president trump saying he has legal right to weigh in on justice department cases, we have that in the update on the attorney general pushback in this debate, the president's frustration over the probe into the james comey fbi spying on the trim campaign, news on that front, also senate judiciary chair lindsey graham is demanding more from micha

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