tv Varney Company FOX Business September 23, 2022 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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ings that last a lifetime like happiness, love and confidence... you can't buy those. but you can invest in them. we believe that your investments should work harder for the future you imagine. and that's where our strategic investing approach can help. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. stuart: good morning. it is 10:00 eastern time. straight to the money. it is not doing well. we have lost 400 points on the dow industrials, the dow below 30,000, we lost 215 points from the nasdaq putting it below the 11,000 mark, this is a selloff
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this friday morning. the 10 year treasury has moved up 3.72%, and that is upsetting the stock market, the dow is down $78 a barrel. the whole world looking at recession, down goes the price of oil, bitcoin $18,600 per coin, everything down today. that's the markets, now three miles from the studio, new york is building a huge tent city, thousands of migrants arriving every week, the city, under the law must find more. homeless shelters are already full, 6000 hotel rooms have been rented but migrants keep coming so they will keep putting up tents, look what is happening to the city. pour migrants are coming in, the money is moving out. why is this happening? new york is a sanctuary city,
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an invitation, the democrats opened the border, 2 million have come in, 20% say new york is the preferred destination, it is the flood. just as this is happening the money is moving out. there's no state income tax in florida, south on i-95 and you save big, stay in the city and you pay federal, state and city income tax. the new york post reports 41,800 new yorkers switched to florida driver's licenses just this year. new york stand as a warning, a city that has been run down by its own disastrous policies and is being run down by biden's open border, who pays for the tent cities? new york taxpayers? what will they do? i think they will keep leaving, second hour of varney just getting started. ♪
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stuart: fortunately tammy bruce is with us this friday morning. you better weigh in on this. >> i have no opinion. i do. i have something. stuart: tammy bruce, state it. >> new york would not be having a crisis if they had decent policies leading up to this, the reason this is overwhelming is so many new yorkers are going. so many other people are in new york who after covid, the mishandling at the absurdity of what they did with shutting down businesses people were working for a living and now living on the street, you have this piling up, one unforced error after another because what government is for is when there's an unexpected crisis they are there to handle the surprise, every homeowner understands, every parent understands you can't be living paycheck to paycheck, this is what the government has forced many americans to do because you want to be prepared if
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there is an earthquake or some kind of horrible hurricane that you are ready for these things, the government is never ready. they are always behind the 8 ball and then use those tragedies to take more of your money and get more behind. stuart: terrible situation, real decline is happening and i want to talk about republican senator roger marshall who introduced legislation that would force a vote to end the emergency declaration for covid. biden declared the pandemic over so will this bill passed? stop calling it an emergency, stop handing out the money but will it pass? >> after his comments on 60 minutes or difficult to say we've got to do this especially with it becomes clear that november is going to be a major problem for democrats mostly everywhere so republicans finally grow a spine, thank
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goodness for marshall for putting this through but it should have been done before. why they want it to remain an emergency, gives the president special emergency powers when it comes to executive orders. that is why you see this crazy spending, states like new york want to maintain the emergency because it allows them to go beyond congress, beyond the normal process of spending money and making decisions and they like it because inevitably i don't care whether it is monkeypox or some other event there will always be an emergency and if we allow this to continue it will never end so this is like a dictatorship right now, there has been no say in this and that is why you have the new york situation, new yorkers saying we've not approved this, don't want this to happen and your monologue was right that this is a dynamic where there is an invitation for this and i argue they like the emergency.
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they like the chaos. they want there to be some panic because it seems a perpetual emergency. stuart: for someone who has no opinion you've got a lot of opinion. >> i hope the republicans, always up to them, they can move some of these democrat voters and it is time they do so, it has always been fuels like hands off, time for them to take charge of this dynamic and they can do it. stuart: tell us how you see it. former advisers to donald trump launched a new super pac. what we know about this? >> to support trump backed candidates for the midterm elections and it is called maga inc. flush with cash, $100 million but the former president has used little of it to help his fellow republican candidates. there's no money will help in this final push. it serves as campaign apparatus
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for potential 2024 run. stuart: rapper kanye west is weighing in on his future in politics. what is he doing? lauren: a strange response. he said god said 2020 wasn't his time, he had to pull from the race, maybe 2,024 is his time. >> do you have future political aspirations? >> yes, absolutely. lauren: he didn't elaborate but got into a god discussion ahead of that. what would our platform look like? he is focused on coparenting with kim kardashian, strong family, build a new school, focuses on carpentry, god, self-reliance, after he pulled his partnership and cut ties with gap. is there interest in what he offers? who would he support if he doesn't run or if he fails? stuart: i cannot answer any of your questions, no idea what he's going to do in politics,
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no clue. >> everyone should have aspirations. the voters said no in 2020, thank god but god is busy and i want everyone to run for every office everywhere. stuart: another opinion and a good one. i like it. thank you. thanks very much. i've got to make way for the markets, a selloff for the market. stuart: dow is down 400, nasdaq is down, 250 points, david is here, looks bad, doesn't it? inflation is high. you know i read your stuff. housing is going to crash. you are looking at a bleak year for the economy and the stock market, aren't you? >> yes and jerome powell is as well. if he was a first-time buyer he would not be purchasing right now. things are not looking as
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peachy as they were in june and july, having conversations in early august. powell told us it needs to come down are applicants need to come down to a 1-to-1 ratio so we are not out of the woods yet. if we look at what robert shiller tells us we are overinflated, overvalued by 48% relatively speaking. stuart: are you saying housing prices are overinflated by 48% or stock prices overinflated? which is it? >> that was the stock price, housing price, you can say they are overinflated by 30% and we've seen a considerable rate increase over the last 6 months on 30 year mortgage, 3% now, above 6, 6.5 and -- we go up,
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10% down. stuart: if you've got some investable cash, not necessarily selling stuff where do you put it? >> cash is king. the tenure treasury, to your treasury looking like better options today. i'm a big fan of metals. metals have a nice run into 2,023 because the us dollar has been too strong for too long, and we will see equity markets have challenges. stuart: finally i've got someone to agree that the one or 2 year treasury held to maturity is a good safe bet, finally you agree with me? >> yes, i think that is really smart and got to have dry powders ready to deploy when we get back in so it gives the dynamic as part of the portfolio. b1 watch out for the dow today if it drops 500 points, then it is below the june lows and dow
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theory suggests if it breaks below those lows it is below the lows. that's not a very good outlook. >> robert shiller would tell us over the next decade based on elevated levels we will see negative returns on the stock market or 0 returns so that is really important thing to be watching because we might be entering another lost decade like we saw through 2,013. that is a scary reality, global recession. we got a lot of headlines, and it is not a time for the faint of heart. stuart: i hope you have a great weekend. the best i can say, have a good weekend. look at the movers, credit suisse down 10%.
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lauren: they were forced to deny a report they were leaving the united states, there is concern they need to raise money with the share sale, credit suisse reported three straight quarterly losses and they are refocusing investment saying here are new strategies. stuart: going through gigantic management shakeups. boeing will pay out a ton of money to study for what? lauren: $200 million to settle allegations, misleading investors after the fail 737 max crashes that killed 346. stuart: 200 million. lauren: the former ceo has to play million as well, but pizza business, domino's pizza. lauren: they are now bush, they raise them to outperform, why they have delivery drivers. trends improving and remember we did the story of pizza, you
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didn't want to eat pizza as much, completely not true and it is friday and i bet you every family is ordering pizza tonight including the. stuart: domino's pizza up 4%. the mayor of chicago fires back at the ceo of mcdonald's, not happy after he said businesses are fleeing her city because of crime, grady trimble has the report coming up. fox and friends cohost steve doocy just visited the villages where he spoke to voters, he will tell us what the issues are that are most important to the people of the villages. whether you are dining out or shopping at the grocery store, inflation is eating into your wallet. ashley webster is in savannah, georgia talking how diners are dealing with soaring food prices after this. ♪
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stuart: do you think rod stewart -- looks nice. coming up in the midterms, vote on that one. you are looking at morehaven, florida where it is 82 degrees. if you like the music follow us on spot is about f a mac, search "varney and company" or search the qr code right now. check the markets please. red ink all over the place, the dow was down 400 and the nasdaq down 2%, 200 points lower, oil hitting its lowest level since january, presumably gasoline prices will come down a little
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more in the immediate future, looking at $78 a barrel because of a global recession coming, the latest cpi data shows restaurant menu prices are going up at a slower rate than grocery store prices. ashley webster is a popular eatery in savannah, georgia. you are people blaming for this? ashley: the government and i will get to that in a minute. i want to pick up on something you said, look at the latest cpi numbers for august, food and home index up 13. 5%, the food away from home up 8%, the old adage was it was cheaper to eat at home, not right now and that is interesting. let me bring in the general manager of this café in savannah. casey, how have prices affected your business? talking all the ingredients more extensive these days. >> definitely the prices have
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affected us quite a bit but we are doing our best to reach out and go to our resources and get the best quality of our products looking around and making sure we are making the right decisions. >> reporter: how is business? what is happening today. >> as the owner, we do great all the time even when food prices go up, we are superbusy and super blessed, hope everyone works as a team. ashley: let me bring in charles taylor. you are a local contractor, who do you blame for this? >> i don't blame the democrats or the republicans, but the government, they are in our away, trying to manipulate things too much, they would let us have a free market, i think the economy would be better. the economy is good but the problems behind the economy of labor shortages, supply chain is affecting us.
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ashley: big government never very efficient. i want to bring in kenneth, you work with local hotels and you say finding workers is impossible. >> the workforce is not available anymore and my personal feeling is we are incentivizing to not work. maybe we need to bring it back to the roots of working, the pride of work, the good old days of working for living. instead of having someone else give you freebies. there you have it, put my order in, big government getting in the way, regulations and so on, always a big problem whether it is here in savannah or anywhere else. stuart: tip big on behalf of all of us, do the right thing. i will send some money. i've got a surprise for you. sitting next to me is a man you see all over fox news but never before on fox business, on this
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particular show. this is steve doocy on set. this is the first time you have ever been on i am going to call it my set. i've been on your step 2 or 3000 times. >> 1800 for sure. you are always talking about stuff and i know you were curious about yesterday, my travels down to the villages. just as ashley was reporting from the front lines of the restaurant world we went to see how people living on fixed income are getting by. when you plan to retire you are still going to retire but as folks in the villages are living themselves, they retired but having to cut back on stuff because inflation is eating them alive. stuart: is that a big concern? inflation capitalist? >> without a doubt as we talked to a couple business owners,
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one woman has a coffee shop cakes and stuff, she said the regulars are still regulars but they used to come in 5 days a week, now maybe two or three. stuart: what you did in the villages was drove to someone's house, knocked on the door and said here i am to make you breakfast, did you set it up? >> we did not, did you know they were home? >> we talked to a guy who is one of the big shots, who will be at home until 9:00? we are going to knock on the door at 8:30 and we did and the guy's wife, we went to the home of al and marsha butler. we knocked on the door and i could see her moving through the glass but she didn't come out. she is watching on the doorbell. >> she was cleaning the kitchen ahead of time. >> that is what she was doing when we were outside live camera.
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stuart: she knew the thing was coming and so she cleans the kitchen. in front of you, is that the best-selling cookbook? >> i went to make them breakfast. this cookbook is the number one cookbook in america. life is too complicated. look at these numbers, don't look at that, think about dinner and if you are going to have dinner make it something delicious, simple ingredients, simple processes, so stuart: up. stuart: you've got 20 seconds to tell us your favorite recipe. >> we saw a video on fox nation, we came up with you love lasagna. do you love cheese? put the two together, make lasagna grilled cheese from yesterday what i was making,
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the red velvet waffles. all my kids when they would visit me would go across the street to magnolia, get red velvet cupcakes and one of them got a red velvet wedding cake so right there i am with peter and fox business's hillary vaughan and we are mentioning -- making the lasagna grilled cheese sandwiches and -- lauren: did you test that? >> when it comes to lasagna we are all italian. we one very good. >> it is delicious. if you like lasagna you will like this, one hundred recipes and simply happy. stuart: you must not not be such a stranger to the set, you're welcome back anytime anytime you want to extend your working day. >> i enjoyed it completely. stuart: i will fix that. >> i will come on a date is green rather than red. next case, major shipping
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stuart: where are we at the moment, the down sharply 400 points, the nasdaq down 200 points. a lot of selling. lauren is looking at the movers and top of the list is jetblue. >> workers are seeking a union vote, the international association of machinists, they will file an application over 3000 members. stuart: we've got the royal caribbean cruise line. >> recession fear locking demand. some of the cruise lines are having to divert cruises to bermuda as a result of this is another headache. stuart: we saw oil prices,
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natural gas prices, the energy sector showing serious losses. lauren: all energy, schlumberger is number one, oil is down for the quarter. the first quarterly decline but they are optimistic, bullish forecasts, goldman sachs sees brent, european oil, one hundred $25 so maybe it will go back up. . blue one when? put a time on it. lauren: a supply issue. blue one fedex raising rates for packages. madison allworth, is this increase going to be on all shipping rates? >> all shipping offers will see an increase in the rate so they will be increasing in january. the rate will jump by 6. 9%. to put that in context, fedex lifted shipping rates by 5.9%,
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that was the first time in twee 8 years the increase had been above 4. 9%. 9%. you look at another sector, freight shipping expecting to increase to 7.9%. the company wants to make up losses. other ways they are trying to cut spending is by suspending sunday deliveries, closing some offices and grounding planes. the company says they expect to generate 2.2 $22.7 billion in 2023 by doing this and they are itching to turn things around as i mentioned. q1 earnings showed profits fell by 20% from a year earlier and operating income, faster delivery service, 69%. when you look at that it shows americans are opting for longer shipping times rather than paying for speed because they have less dollars to work with. at the same time you see
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shoppers taking advantage of membership shall stores like costco by buying them in bulk. costco bested wall street estimates thanks to strong demand for fresh food, candy and gasoline. gasoline being a popular item through the summer when prices jumped above $5 a gallon. costco benefits from loyal members who can budget to spend more money at the store by buying in bulk but they might be feeling inflation soon, those membership fees could be going up. stuart: everything is going up and the stock market is going down. thank you very much indeed. look who is here, gerald storch, our retail guy. is the consumer beginning to stall out just in advance of the holidays? >> they absolutely are. they are spending because they have money but the money is going to run out and fed policy is only addressing monetary policy.
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we are not addressing fundamental structural issues that are behind the problems we have, inflation and the economy, government spending, labor availability, supply chain problems and energy policy so we have these funds mental issues and all we are doing is raising the cost of money. it won't and the consumer will eventually see problems with credit availability with default. and you will see this come to a screeching halt. stuart: those are strong words. there has been a huge buildup of inventories at many stores. i would expect some discounts coming, sales coming. is that not going to give the consumer buying advantage or buying power? >> absolutely right in the sense that all the goods
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consumers were buying when things were better last fall and they bought lots of apparel because people said the pandemic is over. they were buying home goods and electronics and rounded the corner and started this year as things slow down, the consumer wasn't buying those things anymore. with inflation they were spending money on necessitys, huge growth in sales at grocery stores, huge inflation in food prices and stop spending on other things meaning a huge chunk of inventory built up the supply chain of all varese retailers they have to get rid of and the only way to do that is lower-priced. there will be deals on those products but it will keep getting more expensive to buy food for rent, mortgage and those necessities the keep eating up. stuart: from where you stand looking at the retail sector and what you are seeing in that sector, any doubt in your mind we are headed for a nasty recession? >> i think we have been in one. i said that on your show a
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couple months ago. i believe that is where we are and it is only going to get worse. i am generally a huge optimist saying it will be a great christmas, i don't see that in the numbers this time or the actions we are taking. doesn't mean there won't be good retailers like costco, we talk about that all-time. if all time. if only you bought costco and forgot the rest of the stock market you would be happy then. stuart: you have a great weekend despite the forecast for this holiday season. see you next week. video shows president biden appearing lost on stage after giving a speech in new york as speaker pelosi sidesteps questions on a biden 2024 run. >> i'm not going into politics about what the president should or should not do. stuart: we will give you more on that. the white house keeps pushing americans to buy pricey
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electric cars as part of the green agenda. automakers struggling to keep up including tesla, they just recalled more than a million cars. that report is next. ♪ thinkorswim® by td ameritrade is more than a trading platform. it's an entire trading experience. with innovation that lets you customize interfaces, charts and orders to your style of trading. personalized education to expand your perspective. and a dedicated trade desk of expert-level support. that will push you to be even better. and just might change how you trade—forever.
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kelly o'grady in los angeles, seems hesitant about the e the push, how will this help? >> i don't think so. the most recognizable brand, these hiccups can be damaging to consumer adoption talking to driver, the national highway traffic safety administration says they failed to comply with federal safety standards, but without any physical callback, software update like you get on an iphone and elon musk criticized, you recall, the terminology is outdated and inaccurate. this is over the air software update, there are no injuries but no challenge facing tesla. they've been in that is frequent leader to many department have trouble adjusting wishing them. one meg are packed caught fire earlier at a california energy storage facility and a car
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battery caught fire in the stanford, firefighters you 600 gallons of water per minute. 328000 gallons and where residents can only by evs, with the massive drought the state is experiencing, we spoke to a number of experts, less than 0.001% but there are challenges as they don't always train on how to manage the disaster and emits toxic gas as well but there is trepidation about evs. we pile on safety issues and folks are feeling backed into a corner, doesn't inspire a lot of confidence. blue one despite the problems with evs expert say we will
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sell more this year. more than last year but last year was a low base anyway. lauren: 6.6 million were sold last year. the international energy agency says now sales are going to rise to be 13% of the overall car market. any percentage over 10% indicates penetration but you have issues with adoption. it is a struggle in developing nations for infrastructure to charge and not to mention the price of electric vehicles but if you have a 13% rate of ownership. we won by when? in this calendar year of 2,022 by the end of this year 13% of all cars sold will bevs. that is quite a statement. you believe it? >> i do. when gas prices shot up to $5 people got scared and said it might be expensive to buy and ev now but we will see in the
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long run and what states are doing, automakers, there's a big pivot. stuart: which country has the most evs? norway. lauren: that was -- stuart: highest proportion in the market. our gore issued a stark warning about climate change. what did he say? lauren: in san francisco, he said civilization is in danger, within the next half-century certain parts of the world could become uninhabitable because of extreme heat adding the next we 8 years will be crucial so we can pass legislation and commit to fighting climate change and went on to praise the inflation reduction act. stuart: i wonder what al gore has to say about china and india, germany going back to call. lauren: in the beginning we stifle to make this green
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transition and they are allowed free range without making it. stuart: our sacrifice is meaningless. lauren: i don't mean to be that pessimistic but i see your point. stuart: let's get to california. the governor, gavin newsom, being slammed for putting up pro-abortion billboards about jesus. steve hilton on that shortly. democrat candidates shifting away from the defund the police movement, now promoting pro-police messaging in new campaign ads. >> tim ryan knows defunding the police is are to give us. i trust tim ryan to keep our communities safe. >> i will protect florida from defunding the police, that is just crazy. stuart: okay, south carolina congresswoman nancy mase will be on the show. i will ask voters will by the democrats's shift. ♪
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improvement in the market and not seeing a, the dow down 466 points, one. 5%, the nasdaq down 200, the red ink keeps flowing this morning. the mayor of chicago lori lightfoot firing back at the ceo of mcdonald's who criticized the city's soaring crime rates, graded from. in chicago. the mayor wants the ceo to educate himself. >> reporter: those were her exact words even though mcdonald's's ceo had a lot of good things to say about chicago and announced the company is moving 100 jobs from the suburbs here today are very noisy downtown headquarters but what drew supersized critters him for mayor lori lightfoot where the comments about the city's crime problem. >> we need to face facts. the fact haven't been especially kind to the city of chicago of late. everywhere i go, i'm confronted by the same questions. what is going on in chicago?
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it may wounded our civic pride to hear it but there's a general sense that the city is in crisis. >> reporter: in the past few weeks in this neighborhood was an attempted kidnapping and the video on your screen shows an employee at a bar who was shot in a random drive-by shooting a few blocks from here. violent crime across chicago is up 37% in the last year, mayor lloyd lightfoot is dismissing the concerns. >> i think what would have been helpful would be further mcdonald's ceo to educate himself, i will look at productive engagement and not the rearview mirror. >> reporter: mcdonald's's ceo at a luncheon with the economic club of chicago.
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he was worried about the city crime, moving it to south florida. stuart: we will see you later. there are many democrat candidates switching to a pro police message ahead of the midterms. >> tim ryan knows defunding the police is ridiculous. he brought back $466 million to put good cops on the street. i trust tim ryan to keep our community safe. >> when i hear people talking about defunding the police i know they are wrong, police officers put their lives on the line to keep us safe. it is our job to make sure they have what they need to do it and that is a job i take personally. >> in the senate i will protect florida from bad ideas like defunding the police, that is just crazy. stuart: it's quite a turnaround, isn't it?
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congresswoman nancy mase is a republican from south carolina and joins me in new york city. they are ditching the defund the police message. will voters by the switch? >> i highly doubt it. democrat sound like republicans from 2020 but you cannot rewrite history. if you were aligned with black lives matter you were aligned with organizations that want to defend the police include in my opponent in the general election, these are extreme views the majority of americans just are not part of, crime is up 30%, nationally and crime up in every city, small and enormous over the last two years. blue when you can't just vault over that, can't walk past it and say that was a bad idea, try this one, that doesn't work. >> it is dishonest. they are trying to make a pivot because crime is an issue republicans are running on and looks like president biden has been on the wrong side of every
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issue since the swearingen in 2021 and we support our police whereas democrat in the far left have not over the last couple years. stuart: we have been talking about a commitment to agenda, agenda released by the republican party, their tactic for winning in november. can you give us a brief run of what is in the commitment to america? >> we want to make our economy stronger. inflation at record highs, employment issues getting employees in the door. keep our communities safe and that includes immigration in the border and the fentanyl crisis, two kilograms of fentanyl that could kill 1 million people on the street. we want to protect freedom and democracy and make sure there is accountability in the government and that is what the commitment to america is about. kevin mccarthy and steve
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scalise for their leadership. stuart: are these specific proposals or is it a general blanket? this is our strategy, these are the issues? >> it is our strategy but there are specific policy proposals we will be rolling out in the weeks and months ahead, got to address the supply-chain, there's another way to address the economy and comprehend legislation rolling out of these bills, not enough to say the other side is bad, we have to be solution driven and this is a step in that direction. blue one if you retake the house this is what you are going to do. >> exactly, your viewers, nancymase.org, read about that rollout today. stuart: appreciate it. still had, pennsylvania congressman, four times general jack keane and steve hilton and there is this, britain's finance chief just announced the most radical taxcutting plan in decades. and also reversing blanket opposition to fossil fuels, the brits are going to for a for gas and drill for oil, you won't get anything like that from president biden, that is "my take" next.
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>> from what i hear from the republicans this will all be about the economy, we are talking inflation, we know americans all over have been hurting. >> it is more about immigration, crime and even election security. >> every american deserves a safe community and what this commitment to america does focuses on that. >> you can see these snap back quic
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