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tv   The Evening Edit  FOX Business  April 19, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT

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by the end of the day. that will do it for us on "fox business tonight." "the evening edit" is going to start now. ♪. elizabeth: happening now the white house may appeal the court ruling striking down biden's mask mandates on airplanes and public transit. they want to keep it. airline passengers flight attendants across america erupted in applause, cheering the tsa decision to drop it. democrats already broke the rules. they already made mask wearing optional. we have got that. more on how biden is losing not just in the polls or in congress but now in court too. with us tonight congressman michael mack cloud, beth van
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duyne, mariannette miller-meeks, and french hill. former nypd lieutenant darren porcher, "fox nation" host, tomi lahren. fox news contributor tom homan. this jaw dropper, twitter cofounder jack dorsey slams the media, he certainly saw cnn, quote, try to create conflict and film it in ferguson, missouri. the big story. is jack dorsey siding with elon musk against big media divisiveness? president biden told barack obama he is running again but obama's team reportedly doesn't want that. the polls show biden could be a one-term president because of inflation. history doesn't look good here. plus the black murder rate soaring across the country after the democrats defunded police. and more on george soros and his daughter getting called out for bankrolling political candidate who want to drain cash from cops. a new twist in the durham probe. hillary clinton's campaign lawyer tries to block evidence
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in his court case coming to trial next month. why this move seems desperate. it is about covering up how hillary and her team cooked up the false trump-russia collusion story. tonight, questions mounting over the whereabouts of 23 terrorists caught at the border in the last fiscal year. this report coming in. that number is much higher. i'm elizabeth macdonald. "the evening edit" starts right now. ♪. elizabeth: welcome to the show. you're watching the fox business network. look at that, stocks rallying, corporate earnings coming in strong. 10 year treasury yield did top 2.9% for the first time in three years. goldman sachs is forecasting a more than one in three chance of recession. we've got this. update on russia. it is offensive to seize eastern ukraine has begun. russia bombing ukrainian positions along a 300-mile
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front. we'll cover that story, stay on it. to this story. airline passengers, flight attendants, across the nation applauded, cheered mid-flight. even had tears of joy it was announced tsa dropped biden's mask mandate for air flights and public transit. not everybody is happy about this. this came after a florida judge struck it down. there are concerns about variants too. we're also learning the white house may appeal the learning. grady trimble has more. grady. reporter: liz, jubilation was the initial response from passengers on board flights when they found out they didn't have to wear their masks anymore but then the confusion followed because at some airports in the united states, in the airports themselves you still have to wear a mask, like in new york and philly. that was the case here at o'hare until about an hour ago, when they dropped the mask requirement for airports in the state of illinois. here is some reaction from, well, some confused flyers
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today. >> reactionary and it's, to everybody it is frustrating but i get it. >> kind of like things are getting back to the way they were. >> there needs to be some sort of definite decision to eliminate that confusion. reporter: president biden didn't help clear up that confusion. he said it is up to travelers whether they should keep wearing masks while flying. when asked if his administration is going to appeal the judge's decision to strike down the mask mandate, president biden said, he hasn't spoken to the cdc about it yet. press secretary jen psaki said separately that it is still a possibility. and take a look at travel numbers for easter monday. that's yesterday, when about 2.3 million people went through tsa checkpoints across the country. compare that to before the pandemic. it is almost back to pre-pandemic levels but not quite. liz, i did talk to people at the airport today, who told me
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they're more inclined to travel now that they don't have to wear a mask while they're flying t was already going to be a busy summer travel season. could be more so now that the mask mandate is gone. >> grady trimble thanks for your journalism there. joining us mariannette miller-meeks from the house gop doctors caucus and congresswoman beth van duyne from house transportation. watch what mapped to airplanes after the announcement was made after the tsa dropped the mask mandate after the a judge blocked it. watch this. >> judge overturned the mask mandate. >> yes. >> [inaudible]. if you choose to, you may remove your mask the. >> whoo. >> immediately. congratulations. [applause] >> the company's position is, delta's position masks will be optional this evening for all crew and passengers as well. so it is cause to celebrate --
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>> always abide by what the airlines has requested by i think it is just time to, like with counties and cities, they're choosing to take the mask mandate off. so it is about time. >> i love it. i love the change of not wearing a mask. elizabeth: what do you say, congresswoman miller meeks? what do you think of that reaction? >> well i would have the same reaction. many of us were a little despondent when they would continue the mask mandate on airlines despite already having continued it when it was ended in cities, when it was found unconstitutional. so you know i think the biden administration has been behind the curve on the science and they have been behind the curve on where the public is on this issue. this could have been a win for the administration. they were, when they came into office they campaigned on shutting down the virus, not shutting down the country but they want to keep the country shut down. elizabeth: to congressman miller meeks point, congressman van duyne, the judge ruled the mask
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mandate was quote, unlawful. were we being forced to do something unlawful? they trump's surgeon general said we should keep wearing masks. dr. fauci said the same thing. >> the fact the cdc never had authority. it was not constitutional for the cdc to enforce it to begin with. i'm in a lawsuit with the state of texas, claiming that. we want precedent set we don't see this con inin the future. this mask mandate was supposed to be lifted last year, last september. it was extended again in march, it was extended again in april. they tried to get another extension. at some point in time people want their lives back. of course people were happy. wouldn't you be? we don't want to wear them at restaurants or work. you stuck on a airport, already uncomfortable place to be. stuck on a plane, there for hours, especially the flight
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delayed. you have to wear masks. people are bringing huge bottles of water, drinking not having to wear a mask. cdc never had the authority to be able to do this, that is set in precedent, set in law they can't trample on individual rights. elizabeth: congressman miller-meeks, cdc said masks are ineffective. we have seen studies from jav -- "jama," that masks don't work. kamala harris, made mask wearing optional. they were breaking the ruse. >> it always been, not okay for me to do it but it is okay for them to do it. this is politicians talking out of both sides of their mouths and we have a president who wants to extend title 42, say the pandemic is over but wants to continue masks on planes. i think it is valid to say they haven't had the authority. whether they challenge this in court or not i think the most important thing is that we have
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to learn to live with this virus. we know there will be variants. but omicron variant proved not to be very serious. so we'll continue to respond to this and, adapt accordingly but people should be able to make that decision on their own. elizabeth: yes. >> whether or not they want to wear a mask. i would be gleeful. i'm delighted to fly tomorrow without wearing a mask. elizabeth: that is the point, it is optional, congresswoman van duyne to what the congressman is saying? you can wear a mask on airplanes. you can't force people to wear one. the white house is losing a lot in court. eviction moratorium. public lands. mask mandates for large private businesses. are they going to lose on title 42, the pandemic trump border policy. >> we sure hope so. elizabeth: go ahead, congressman van duyne, go ahead. >> it is not in the best interest of the country because they're losing, every single time this is not about safety. this is not about protecting americans.
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this is about increased government control. decrease individual freedoms. so yeah, they're losing in court because they just keep trying to control more and more. it's not constitutional. the science is not there. it is about time. i mean it has been over two years that we've been dealing with this. you know, dealing with covid -- pandemic. we're shooting down on businesses. we're making people unemployed at a time we're trying to hire people. having mask mandates, other vaccine mandates are hurting the very people they came to be trying to help. elizabeth: congresswoman miller-meeks, you wanted to weigh in on that. go ahead. >> think about it. last year they passed a massive spending 1.9 trillion covid relief package a lot of money was to go to schools to improve ventilation. airplanes, which have excellent ventilation systems, hepa filters. if you google and try to find a documents case that they have traced back to airline travel,
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please show me that. i've asked this question of the cdc. you have no documented cases transmitted on airline travel. you have excellent hepa filters and ventilation systems which is part of what their spending package was for. there has been testimony that the mask mandate should be lifted in airlines. so as i said, president biden has been behind, behind the curve, both on the science and where the public has moved to. it was far beyond time to have ended the mask mandate on air travel. elizabeth: thank you congresswoman miller-meeks and van duyne, good to have you on. come back soon. thanks for spending time with us tonight. next up, questions are mounting over the whereabouts of 23 terrorists caught at the border. we'll do this later in the show. reports that actually 42 terrorists on the watch list were caught at u.s. ports of entry. we'll stay on it. this jaw-dropping story. twitter's cofounder jack dorsey
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saw cnn try to create conflict and film it in ferguson, missouri. is jack dorsey siding with elon musk against big media divisiveness? the story next. >> everyone is so excited that elon musk is trying to buy twitter. he is concerned about censorship. freedom of speech is someone you don't like saying something you don't want to hear ♪ we believe there's an innovator in all of us. ♪ that's why we build technology that makes it possible for every business... and every person... to come to the table and do more incredible things. ♪ we could walk forever ♪ ( ♪♪ )
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♪. elizabeth: joining us now congressman michael cloud from house oversight. great to have you on, sir. urn a member of the big tech data censorship task force. >> yes. elizabeth: take this on. never seen twitter cofounder, ceo, jack dorsey rip into the media and doing it on tweets, tweeting this. he claims, quote, watched cnn tried to create conflict and film it during the protests at ferguson, missouri. we've never seen jack dorsey talk like this before. he is slamming big media divisiveness, going after cnn brian stelter, media, social media platforms. when you heard about this, what was your reaction? >> certainly odd hearing that come from him. it started under his tenure. i don't know if he is late to the game coming out on this. important message he needs to
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get out. i'm glad somebody is talking about it. another voice talking about what is going on. it definitely needs to be addressed. elizabeth: we don't have any comment. we're watching for cnn to weigh in here. the big comment, whether jack dorsey is siding with elon musk at this point against twitter and the media for divisiveness and censorship of voices they didn't agree with. doors say lashed out at the twitter board saying it is consistently dysfunctional. we hear elon musk may use $15 billion of his own money to take over twitter. what would you think if you saw that happen? what would your reaction be? >> i can tell you by judging from the reaction seeing people say it will be the end of democracy if elon takes over twitter, that is unbelievable to see it. it certainly has been welcome news i think. you have seen the reaction among the populace, people are excited about the idea of having somebody at the helm of twitter
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who believes in free speech. who doesn't believe in censorship. it has become the watercooler of society so to speak in many ways. to have somebody leading that charge would be great. in a sense elon already won because he really pulled back the curtain and called twitter's bluff in a sense because they have been trying in spite of everything they have been trying to do behind the scenes, the ban, shadow ban, other things, they put forward a face as a legitimate company who is acting socially responsible or whatever but, elon really pulled the curtain back on that and we're beginning to see -- elizabeth: from where you sit, from where you sit, from your perch in congress what are you seeing and hearing about censorship of conservatives? because you know, others out there saying they're just doing content moderation and there is that. there is also, isis, al qaeda, iran's ayatollahs are still tweeting. >> exactly.
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elizabeth: from where you sit what do you see about this issue? >> well we've seen time and time again where ideas that go against the left's narrative, banned or content moderated, or even almost scarier sense what they do without telling people, throttling, changing the algorithm in such a way you don't know your voices are not being heard. these are dangerous practices they kind of adopted as standard operating procedures. you know it is refreshing to see the opportunity at least for to us go forward maybe and restoring, really what the platform was meant to be and, something that you know, a company that espouses first amendment principles and free speech. these things that our republic was built upon. elizabeth: it is one thing to you know, alex jones, widely condemned as appalling. falsely claimed the sandy hook
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elementary shooting as a hoax. three of his companies filed for bankruptcy protection. found liable for damages in several defamation lawsuits. there is that. there is what is allowed and what is not allowed on twitter and the issue is they get protection, federal protection from lawsuits. >> exactly. 230 protection. elizabeth: other people don't get that, newspapers, magazines, radio. that is behind what is driving this issue. your final word? >> a lot of that was under the awe pa sis, they will not edit content. they're a free platform to for people to share ideas. we know that is not the case. they have not upheld that at all. it is refreshing see somebody taking them head on in the private sphere. we'll keep look at from it oversight perspective going forward. elizabeth: congressman cloud, thanks for coming on. this new report, president biden telling barack obama he is running again. the obama team reportedly not
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happy about that. the polls showing biden is toast because of inflation. could he be a one-term president? history doesn't look good here. this report, democrats are losing key voting blocs. we'll dig in next on "the evening edit." >> we have to ask ourself what really are we accomplishing -- [inaudible]. options at disposal he has not yet exercised. ♪
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elizabeth: welcome to the show arkansas congressman french hill. congressman, good to see you. first let's show what happened with the white house easter egg roll. watch what happened there. you will see the president getting pushed aside by a bunny as he answered a reporter's question about afghanistan, pakistan, much more happened. watch this. president biden: welcome to the south lawn. thank you, and happy, happy easter. [cheering] all right. afghanistan and -- [inaudible]. >> oh, the easter bunny. >> whoa. >> okay. you know "the hill," your reaction to that? you saw the images. what was your reaction? because "the hill" is reporting that the president is telling obama he is running again. what do you think of all this? >> i think of alice in wonderland where the mad hatter is back to the rescue. i don't know what to say. it was not a great day.
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great day for the kids and easter egg roll. this administration just related from one crisis of its own making after another. whether we're talking about the border which was secure in january of 2021 and now it's the most open it has ever been. crime was not a serious issue. now it is the top issue on any community around our country with murders skyrocketing, to inflation. which is a thief. which is the number one issue facing hard-working american families. elizabeth: that is what could make him a one-term president. history doesn't look good here when you think of ford and carter. what if inflation comes down. is that enough to keep biden in the white house? trump is keeping them guessing at potential 2024 run. president trump talk is floating out about his health with the "washington post." that is unclear. you know how trump is. he talks and as he goes along. he always has to talk about
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health. you look like in good health. tomorrow you get a letter doctor saying come see me again. that is not when they use the word again. we don't know if trump will run again, what do you think if inflation comes down that might help biden, that possible? >> joe biden's track record on each of these issues is disqualifying for another term. he is dispointing american families on community safety by his party calling for defunding the police, producing a record number of homicides. he wants a secure border but he has done nothing to secure the border. which means we have record amounts of fentanyl coming across the border, record amounts of human trafficking coming across the border. inflation, you say it might modify and it might. elizabeth: i'm saying might. i'm saying what if it does? it looks like it's not. it is white hot right now. to your point, the white house messaging, i mean, we see it all the time. from where you sit we see the
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polls, it is white house messaging that's really alienating middle and working class voters. that it will be inflation is transitory or an upper class concern or putin price hike or it is greedy corporations. i mean this white house thinks you're a fool. it talks down to people. it is cynical. he is losing support with young people faster than any other age demographic. so from where you sit in congress, what are you hearing about this? >> well i'm hearing people looking at the actual statistics where there is a disconnect between the biden administration and the rest of the country. they're not taking seriously challenging or proposing real solutions to them. their ideas of containing inflation is blaming putin. blaming the kid who said the dog ate their homework. they want a serious president with serious solution for safer border, safer communities and lower prices.
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unleashing american energy would be a big step toward lowering the prices for the energy supply chain that goes into every aspect of what we buy. elizabeth: that is key, right? let's show byron york on why inflation could make biden a one-term president. >> there is nothing to the putin price hike. it doesn't work. everybody knew from their own experience that inflation had begun last year. it is very reminiscent of what some defenders, democrats said about the last democratic one-term president, jimmy carter in the late 1970s. there wasn't much he could do about inflation. there wasn't much he could do about an energy crisis. there wasn't much he could do about the iranian hostage crisis. elizabeth: did you hear all that? emergency crisis, inflation crisis, geopolitical crises. there a is a lot more going on. your final word, congressman. >> every morning he gets up jimmy carter wakes up and eats
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breakfast and thanks god there was a worse president than he was. republicans have solutions to fighting challenges. we look forward to a majority in the fall, taking that fight next year in the last two years of the first and only term of joe biden. elizabeth: congressman hill, fighting words there. good to have you on. okay. new reports of the black murder rate across the country is soaring after the democrats defunded police. we have more on how george soros and his daughter are getting called out for funding political candidates who want to drain cash from cops. that's ahead on "the evening edit." >> the victims of these murders that we're seeing are members of our black and brown communities. disproportionately so. stop treating violent criminals with a velvet glove and we'll start to get this stuff under control. at liberty butchemel— cut. liberty biberty— cut. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for whatchya... line?
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elizabeth: okay, this is something black lives matters has been criticized about for not talking about, not covering.
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how blacks are getting murdered across the country. we've been covering this story. it's terrible. mike tobin in chicago with more. mike? reporter: elizabeth the data shows on years when there were high-profile police-involved deaths there were spikes in violent crimes and gun crimes disproportionately black people were the victims. now you have experts say you can indeed connect the spikes to what is known as the ferguson effect. police officers reluctant to get involved. the year mike brown was killed in ferguson missouri murders of black people increased 15%. in 2020, boring floyd killed under the knee of a police officer. think jumped 43% over the 10-year average. hannah myers at the manhattan institute, demonstrations, defund movement from city leaders caughted police to pull back and criminals to run wild. >> after the violent incidents, there is tangible, measurable police pullback. that is not even controversial
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at this point where police, maybe unconsciously are reticent to step in. they know there is a big blowback for their involvement in crimes. reporter: however jonathan simon at the berkeley school of law says that the pandemic was greater contributor to rise in violent crime. >> given this is nationwide phenomena. we've seen rise in homicide in every city in the country, not just those with the biggest demonstrations after george employed. i think we have put the pandemic at centerport port criminals with idle time and police officers out sick and less manpower. elizabeth. elizabeth: great reporting, mike tobin. great journalism there. joining former nypd lieutenant darren porcher. thankthank you for your serviceo our country. that is a disturbing report. what do you make of it? >> i understand it but i think it goes, far more deep rooted than that. i think you have a lot of the democratic politicians that
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receded police protections in these communities of color after the death of george floyd. they hold the greatest level of accountability because they failed to deploy police resources accordingly. we saw this meteoric rise of communities of color but i squarely put it on the shoulders of the elected officials for not taking the appropriate action. elizabeth: we hear you, lieutenant. murders, manslaughter, they were already on the rise before the pandemic hit in march 2020. it was something like a 15% increase, started to go hockey stick starting in january, really took off during the shutdowns. it's a toxic brew of a number of things. what do you think? defund the police, the shutdowns, the pandemic, and more. what else do you see went wrong? >> i think it's a brown anyone nation -- culmination of all the things you recommended, elizabeth but reliance on practitioners in law
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enforcement. no one knows better than police how to reduce crime. however you have politicians unwilling to relent to police to allow them to do their jobs. i think that is what created the great divide and we experienced this tremendous rise in crime. elizabeth: so you mentioned politicians, right? you have billionaire george soros, his family, him and his daughter are quietly bankrolling political fund-raising committees supporting a dozen defund the police far left candidates. it is to lead the way pacs. using his massive wealth to fund fringe groups that keep america on edge, divided, driving social unrest. that is what the critics are saying. he is pouring tens of millions of dollars into d.a. races, into groups focused on police, defund police. have you ever heard george soros ever speak about american greatness? >> never. george soros is a limousine liberal. he doesn't understand the dynamic of how crime is decimating these communities of color.
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he stands on a platform of doing what he can as per his perception in ad sissing these driving candidates for the defund the police movement. by the same token, george soros, nor members of his family have a clue what it takes to create more robust protection within the communities of color and this is a classic example when you look at the quantitative statistics that show the violent rise in crime. elizabeth: when you look at it, right? you take oregon, take portland, oregon, rite? they defunded police. the county sheriff says crime will get worse. violent offenses, murders, robberies soaring 30% of a port land defunded cops. seems like common sense stuff. the idea that you don't need money to train cops when they need more money, that is not working out very well, right? >> absolutely. when you read the tea leaves you
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will understand that police need to be employed with the necessary resources to bring crime down, however you have people that have no experience whatsoever in public safety and these individuals that have no experience are driving the machine politically and as a result the downside is these communities are experiencing the greatest amount of crime and we need to pull back and let the practitioners in law enforcement drive forward because that's who can navigate the machine towards being in a safer place. elizabeth: we know, you guys have been out there out front lines, you've been with the thin blue line, there are all sorts of problems. this is a great nation. america is terrific. we have a wonderful capitalist system but want to help everybody. we have too many homeless people on the street, we know that. inspector general for homeland security finds that homeland security wasted $17 million on unused hotels for migrants last
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year after hiring a politically connected contractor. didn't meet covid protocols. we see that we see what the democrats and far left have been doing inside of the u.s. government with things like that, throwing money around but not really helping people on the ground. >> you're absolutely right. there has been a clear disconnect between what's happening from a reality perspective on the ground, compared to what the politicians see. you see fraud, waste, abuse in connection with this radical expenditure of hotels for homeless population. it is just not working. now is the time to, to pivot the machine for what works best for us as americans. elizabeth: darren porcher, great to see you. come back soon. we have a new twist in the durham probe. hillary clinton's campaign lawyer trying to block evidence in his court case coming up next month showing that hillary and their team tout ad debunked russia collusion story they cooked up. fbi, cia, robert mueller shot it
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down. we'll break it down with tomi lahren next. is trying me.dia i'm trending so hard that “hashtag common sense” can't keep up. this is going to get tens and tens of views. ♪ ♪ ( car crashing ) ♪ ♪ but if you don't have the right auto insurance coverage, you could be left to pay for this... yourself. call a local agent or 1-888-allstate for a quote today.
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♪. elizabeth: let's welcome back to the show "fox nation" host tomi lahren. it is great to have you on. okay, michael sussman, he is going to trial. he is hillary's campaign lawyer. special counsel durham charges him with lying the to the fbi covering up he was working with hillary trying to get the fbi to probe trump with russia collusion with the russian alfa bank. now his team, this feels like desperation, tomi, he wants to block durham introducing into court hillary clinton's tweets, touting, pushing the false trump russia narrative they cooked up? does this smell like desperation to you? >> it certainly does, i bet sussman and hillary herself wished they could delete the tweets like they deleted emails. everything you're saying is exactly right. i smell a rat. they were so proud of the tweets
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when it they released them, to influence the election to further the collusion campaign between trump and russia and russian bank. they're so proud of it then, all of sudden they don't want something as little and public like that admitted to the trial on may 16th? boy sounds like they're getting awfully nervous. not just sussman. i think hillary clinton is getting nervous about the probe and investigation of the upcoming trial. elizabeth: hillary's team, right? the tweets durham wants to admit as evidence, let's show the viewers what they were. clinton tweeted in the fault of 2016, that trump has a secret server set up to communicate with a putin-tied russian bank. quotes, computer scientists uncover ad covid server linking the trump organization to russia alfa bank. hillary cooked that up. they knew all along they were cooking it up. they tried to get the fbi and cia, robert mueller says this is
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not planned. this is debunked. they were weren't going for it. >> the tweets are far more damaging than anything else. her team put that out there, talks about computer scientists apparently uncovered something, yeah, hillary, computer scientists allegedly worked for you. this was a witch-hunt from day one. if hillary was proud of those tweets then, her and her team should be proud of them now. sussman going and claiming he was a concerned citizen when he ran to the fbi with this information we now know he was not a concerned citizen. he was working for people that had direct interest in the story. it will be interesting how the trial plays out. if the media covers this accurately, as they should, substantially as they should. this could not only be the end of sussman but the end of candidate hillary clinton. i think she has her eyes on 2024. this could potentially sink her. elizabeth: that is an interesting take. to your point when you hear
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sussman's lawyers argue about the clinton tweets, they're hearsay, they are prejudicial, they will confuse and distract the jury from the false statement charge against sussman but when you look at what else they're saying, tomi, sussman's lawyers are saying real danger if the tweets were admitted the jury would believe hillary clinton herself was part of the special counsel's uncharged conspiracy allegations. even they are talking conspiracy on sussman and clinton side of the aisle. >> well of course the jury might believe that because that's what it is looking like, that is how it appears. that is probably the way it was. certainly seems so, if you look at the investigation and the durham probe but hillary is getting very nervous. sussman is getting very nervous. but they had no problem influencing american voter with hearsay they don't want to put in the trial. no problem with everybody on the public sphere to look at, speculate on.
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now they're afraid of it. as i saids be proud off your tweets then and be proud of your tweets now. because you could have influenced an election. luckily hillary was a bad candidate and it didn't. it tainted trump's firm. she and her team have to answer to at that. elizabeth: tomi lahren, good to have you on. come back soon. biden's border crisis questions mounting where are the 23 terrorists caught at the border. could be 42 caught at other ports of entry? what is happening with terrorists coming into the country? we have tom homan next. >> they're averaging 8 to 9,000 a day. that number is staggering. they have passed the last fiscal year. we have already encountered first six months of this fiscal year one million encounters and a million got-aways. the only one of its kind proven to help you live significantly longer when taken with fulvestrant, regardless of menopause status.
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joining us now, fox news contributor tom homan, always good to see you. what happened to the 23 tears on the chair watchlist, border patrol caught trying to illegally cross, what happened to them? with a released or deported? we have examiner saying 42 caught trying to get in to u.s. ports of entry, what is going on here, where are they?
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where they deported? >> no one knows and that's the question we need to ask the administration. bill melugin came up with 23, they told him 2338 hours ago but when they did a report they said it was 42. that should be concerning enough that they don't know how many terrace they've arrested. what's more concerning as you and i have talked, how many arrest out of the 700 got a ways. this clearly shows it's more than an immigration issue, more than a public safety issue, more than a public health issue, more than humanitarian, those are important things but this is national security issue, this country is in danger and with this many getaways and title 42 is lifted, the getaways are going to triple, it's a significant national security threat and we need to be concerned. i've said this on three shows in the keep saying it, after 9/11
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with put processes in place, you can't get a plane ticket or a visa to come into the country because we put processes in place to prevent terrorists from entering the country. those databases work great but they mean nothing if you simply walk across the border the same way 700,000 others did and not be arrested, this is concerning to everyone. elizabeth: let's watch the house press secretary not answering the questions about terrorists trying to come in. >> we have reporting at least 23 people apprehended of the southern border in 2021 are on the chair watchlist. why do you think someone on a terror watch list would want to get into the u.s. undetected? >> i can't make that assessment but what i can tell you is your data means border patrol was doing their job. they apprehended people at the border. elizabeth: okay, why the cavalier attitude in the white house? look at this, 90000 illegal
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immigrants were apprehended from other nations not central america, not from mexico, 90000 in march alone trying to cross. why cavalier response about a generation away from 9/11? >> it's disgusting. we say 9/11, don't forget, she forget or chose to forget. she is what she said, border patrol people from 157 countries and many or some of the countries songs are terrorists. do you think of the 700,000 getaways since joe biden became president, not one of them could have come from a country that sponsor terrorism? is a huge issue and for her to give the answer shows how this administration is not transparent, they are hiding the
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information, this won't come to light until bill melugin did a report and an inquiry, they are not sharing the information for the american people and one more thing, she said border patrol is doing their job, no they are not. they are overwhelmed, they can't handle the income and they said that. when the secretary, border patrol says you don't allow us to do our job so she's out of touch in reality. elizabeth: they keep saying title 42, it's also remain in mexico because since biden became president with title 42, about 2.4, 2.5 million have been arrested at the southern border. that's about kansas, even with title 42. now title 42 going away, you see the numbers explode, that is the concern. >> you made some great points,
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we got to remember the biden administration didn't take title 42 seriously. 85% of family units that came to the border were allowed in even though title 42 was in place, every alien child was allowed in despite title 42. many single adults who didn't speak spanish were allowed in despite 42. then title 42 during the trump administration crossing the border but you mentioned remain in mexico. the secretary said secretory mayorkas who has made no integrity, he says i don't control that. what they do control is remain in mexico. we should reach them at that. last month how many people remained in mexico? i was told like 61. sixty-one out of 122,000 apprehensions. that's ridiculous, federal court needs to call him back in and hold him in contempt of court because he's failing the orders to reinstate remain in mexico
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the way it was. thousand game changer for the trump administration and this administration next a joke out of it. elizabeth: thanks for coming on, good to see you. got fired up there, great insight. i'm elizabeth macdonald, you have been watching "the evening edit" on foxbusiness, that does it for us, we hope you have a good evening, thank you for watching and join us again tomorrow night. ♪♪ kennedy: vladimir putin claiming ukraine war is our fault and johnny depp gave a testimony in hollywood legal history. first up, masks are coming off if you've been on a plane. the confusion and liberal backlash is just beginning. federal judge yesterday struck down transportation mask mandate, same people cheer because we been wearing the stupid things on our faces for two years and it sucks and most of them don't even work. that's not me, that's

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