tv The Evening Edit FOX Business September 30, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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>> that's awesome. all right, that does it for us on fox business tonight, going to mcdonalds to get my toy. evening edit starts right now. elizabeth: more on tropical cyclone ian hitting south carolina hard now and twitter, social media in a new meltdown over house speaker nancy pelosi's revealing gaffe on florida. with us tonight is south carolina congresswoman nancy mace, former labor secretary, former utah congressman jason chaffetz, the former washington times and nicole neily from parents defending education. we have a jam packed show.
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this, why does florida and south carolina need government health. they need things like homeland security. we have new details on homeland security workers stealing millions of dollars in pandemic jobless benefits including fema workers. and more on this shock crime, a veteran paramedic with the new york city fire department, a 911 first responder stabbed to death in a random attack in broad daylight. nypd, fdny officials, we're in contact with them. they're saying this u.s. crime wave has got to stop and stop now. and the update on the story we broke last night, the white house cuts out millions of student loan borrowers from biden's arbitrary bailout amid growing lawsuits. a bailout even speaker pelosi had warned no president can do. the latest on house gop warning more than adonis fbi whistle blowers alleged the fbi is purging conservative fbi workers
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and is illegally retaliates against whistle blowers and the brom shell text that twitter's jack dorsey allegedly sent warning elon musk about the $44 billion takeover bid. i'm elizabeth macdonald, "the evening edit" starts right now. >> we begin with tropical storm ian hitting south carolina as a category 1. surreal before and after shots continue to pour in capturing the devastation to southwest florida. we've got 21 reported fatalities so far. fox weather's will nunly has been breaking stories in fort meyers, florida, with more. will, thank you so much for joining us. >> reporter: good evening. i have progress to report to you in terms of power restoration here tonight in the fort meyers area.
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these utility crews as you know working around the clock to try and bring the critical infrastructure back online in terms of medical facilities, fuel stations and ho tells and things like that -- hotels and things like that. as soon as gas stations are online, they're inundated of people trying to get fuel. a video of a place we found this afternoon and exterior canopies collapsed on the side of the fuel station. they said we're going to open up and continue to serve the customers as best we can as long as it's safe to do so, and they did. people showed up in lines around the block and the police were there having to do traffic control and that's how desperate people are for fuel and the fort meyers area and they've eva evacuated and fort meyers beach. it was hard hit by the storm surge in the wind in units here disappeared completely and i spoke to a woman named kitty that lived here and road out the
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storm. >> the storm was horrible. when the storm made that turn, all the wind shifted and that's when all the damage occurred. friends of ours here were in a hotel and they were kicked out of the hotel in the middle of the storm, you know, where do people go? i don't know. we did just get water, trickles, little trickles at our house. it'll be years till this comes back. >> reporter: never forgetting the experience of homes that fell apart under the force of the storm. elizabeth: will nunly, thank you for joining us. we're joined by south carolina nancy mace. congresswoman, what does your
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home state of south carolina need right now? we're seeing life threatening storm surges hitting the coast there. >> it may be some of the worst storm surges that south carolina has seen since hurricane hugo 33 years ago. i'm in charleston, south carolina, right now on poly's island south of myrtle beach. devastating images and video of homes under water, retail under water. it's going to be devastating cleanup for days and weeks to come. elizabeth: we hear florida needs energy and portable water. literally parts of the grid are totally offline still. >> fortunately, south carolina is no stranger to these kinds of storms much like florida and when ian hit, hurricane ian hit south carolina, it was a category 1. we have about 100,000 residents along the coast and fraction fls those that still do not have power and doesn't compare to the millions of people still out of power, that are stuck and aren't
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able to get out of their communities or cities or towns and then, you know, today you've got congress looking at continuing resolution sending $12 billion overseas to other countries when we have real needs in florida and in south carolina short term orientation rebuild those communities who were struck by hurricane ian today and yesterday. elizabeth: i mean, the images are just devastating and they're so traumatic. we hear what you're saying about dc. you know, speaker pelosi put twitter into a meltdown today with what's being called an indell cant letter. >> we have a shortage of workers in our country and you see even in florida some of the farmers and the growers said immigrants are up north and we need them to help down here. elizabeth: pick the crops? this is being called pretty eely
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dis-. >> it's not doubt that americans want to work and are trying to work and it's a situation and pelosi is no stranger to gaffes and neither is president biden, he had a major gaffe this well this week. it's kind of embarrassing what nancy pelosi and joe biden and kamala harris that they're the leaders on the world stage right now. elizabeth: congresswoman, let's get back to the hurricane. we have a curfew in lee county. cape coral, govern desantis has been scrumabling dozens of national -- scrambling dozens of national guard helicopters to search for survivors and what are you hearing what about happening now in south carolina? >> well, in south carolina unfortunately, governor mcmaster issued a emergency order like governor desantis and president biden to his credit also accepted that order. our counties also issued a emergency order that will give us an ability to set curfew ifs
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we have looting issues like in florida. we're very concerned about the areas north of charleston, polly's island, hitch field beach where we saw a pier float away and retail and st store and homes under water and that gives us the ability to do that and the ability to access resources at the federal level and we otherwise would not have after the storm. elizabeth: what's really concerning is reports that florida power and light, they're warning that parts of the system, their grid, will need to be rebuilt from the ground up. from the ground up. not just restored. go ahead, take that on. >> i was going to say, some of the images you saw yesterday, they were hit with flooding from the storm and today houses were burning to the ground. they have the electrical grid issue and you look at infrastructure bill that we did last year, i would much rather have us be able to have the ability to power our grid, secure our grid even more importantly than put no reason
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for government to compete and green new energy that's in the infrastructure arope rations we've been looking -- appropriations and looking at and voted on and that would rather be used on real infrastructure needs ladies and gentlemen roads and bridges particularly like in florida. it's devastating. elizabeth: that's the point; right. it's about common sense leadership in dc. it should be focusing on this nation getting hit by natural disasters and spending the money on that, on protecting the power grid and more instead of boondoggles. all this is coming as u.s. economy is struggling over inflation from way too much government spending. we need more, you know, supplies coming in that sense and not the government money printing and spending. watch larry summers and how the government did wartime spending without a war and now florida and south carolina need help. watch this. >> we basically had inflation
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under control for 40 years. we lost the thread with many other countries and policies relative to the size of the gep gap, fiscal stimulus was five times as large as it had been during the financial crisis. five times 2008. your word on this? >> you're right, liz, printing money by the federal reserve over $4 trillion a year and wages not keeping up with inflation and inflation at a 40-year record high and plies of everything going up including gas and it'll continue to go up and biden will blame the hurricane for that and that's not. it's all biden's policies and they've been wrong for america and i'm looking forward to republicans winning the house very soon. elizabeth: congresswoman, thank
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you very much and good luck with your home state of south carolina we'll be staying on top of the story. okay, to this shocking crime, a veteran paramedic with the new york city fire department, a 911 first responder, she ran into the world trade center, stabbed to death in a random attack in broad daylight. u.s. city officials -- new york city officials warn this wave has got to stop and stop now. this is the stuff hitting midterms. more on the news we broke last night, white house cuts out millions of student loan borrowers from biden's arbitrary bailout being called unfair and he did this after growing lawsuits against it. it's a bailout nancy pelosi warned no president can make. former utah congressman jason chaffetz, andy putzer is next on "the evening edit".
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president over the student loan bailout plan and the president declared in an interview that the pandemic is over. arkansas attorney generallessly rutledge is leading the group saying what they're doing is illegal and unfair. >> here and why we're suing is because it's a violation of the law. >> nonpartisan groups say even the limited student loan bailout biden signed is inflationary and not free. i asked congresswoman ayana presley pushing the president for more loan forgiveness if she's worried. >> any second thoughts about moving forward with this if lowering inflation is a top priority for the president and congress? >> i make no apologies for a victory that's going to unburden 43 million people. it was the right thing. >> but quietly the biden administration made some changes to their student loan forgiveness now borrowers with federal student loans but those loans are owned by private entities do not qualify for forgiveness. that means about 4 million
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people who originally thought their debt was being erased are now going to have to face it and pay it. liz. elizabeth: hillary vaughn, great reporting. joining us now former utah congressman jason chaffetz and former labor secretary andy pozer. thank you, gentlemen, for joining us this friday night. jason, what's your reaction to this report? >> it's disgusting. i think -- i don't think it's legal. i agree actually with nancy pelosi the whole idea that the president can unilaterally waive this away they can't do that legally. they could delay but to forgive them is wrong. it's further wrong to dismiss those and not forgive loans that are owned by private entities but this is so inflationary in the approach and fundamentally wrong at its core and shouldn't be done. why should i have to pay for somebody else's loan. there's no reason for that?
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elizabeth: andy, what jason is saying too, what about people that paid off their loans or joe plumber and people that went to trade schools and never got college tuition loans. this will be the biggest expenditure by any president in modern history on something like this. >> this is always pandering and buying. i think that the biden administration thought that they were going to be able to get all these young americans whose loans would be forgiven and vote for them in the upcoming election. if republicans challenged this loan write off, then all of these kids would be made at the republicans. well, it didn't work out that way. americans realize that as you said plumbers and truck drivers can barely afford food and gas and became unpopular and got to them and going to look bad and biden is backing off and i think that the best indicator this was political and turned out to be bad idea was nancy pelosi
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yesterday saying the president can't do this because of congress. if it was a good political idea, she'd have never said. elizabeth: watch nancy pelosi talk about that. watch. >> people think that the president of the united states has the power for debt forgiveness. he does not. he can postpone, he can delay, but he does not have that power. that has to be an act of congress. elizabeth: okay, there's all that. jason, there's also this, the inspector general of homeland security finds nearly 2,000 homeland security government workers, they're supposed to be keeping us safe, they got caught stealing millions in ban democratic job -- pandemic job benefits and people supposed to be overseeing the budget in homeland security. what's your reaction when you hear this? >> i want to see them prosecuted. if they're going to uphold the law, go out and prosecute those people. what about the front of the line
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and prosecute them first. elizabeth: to what jason is saying, you know, andy, it was a look at just about 2400 jobless claims and can be even bigger and found 2.6 million allegedly stolen and this was a sample. this was cases of identity fraud, homeland security workers claiming bogus jobless claims in the name of a fellow worker and nearly 3 dozen, look at this, workers even filed unemployment claims, bogus claims from their own homeland security systems they were working at showing they were on the job. >> you know, look, the government's not very good at handling other people's money and every dollar they have is actually other people's money. they're just -- private business, you couldn't get away with this. you go out of business, you'd be sued and in court, but it's the government. they're incompetent when it comes to managing money like this and this is one very good example of that incompetence. elizabeth: jason and andy,
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there's no -- we don't -- evening edit, we don't lose our sense of outreach over it. homeland security is supposed to be protecting us, protecting the homeland and now they're just stealing. >> the federal government also isn't good at prosecuting one of its own. if they were serious about this and making an example but they don't. you know, there are nearly 100,000 federal workers every year that don't pay their taxes. do they ever get prosecuted, do they ever get after them? no, they don't. it's sickening and the american people see it. that's why i think it's disgusting that nearly 25% of our gross domestic product, one out of every four dollars is spent by the federal government and we wonder why we're $40 trillion in debt. elizabeth: final word, you know, andy, seems like republicans got upset about this. you don't hear a lot of uproar from the other side. >> no, they want bigger government. government is too big, it's incompetent and we need to shrink it. it's not going to happen in the next two years with biden in the
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oval office but if we can get some republicans in congress, i think we can start to make some progress. this is a terrible situation. we are in trouble as a country. elizabeth: jason chaffetz and andy putzner, thank you for joining us tonight. dozens of whistle blowers allege the fbi is personalling, getting rid of -- purging and getting rid of conservative fbi agents and retaliating against whistle blowers and new york fdny veteran and 911 first responder stabbed to death in a random attack in broad daylight. officials say this u.s. crime wave has got to stop. joe gamaldi from the fraternal order of police is on "the evening edit" next. >> working to have safe on crime, smart on crime solutions that will help people like me. i don't know any woman personally who wants to defund the police.
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elizabeth: an emt veteran 24 years with the emergency fire department and emergency services fatally stabbed in a random unprovoked attack in broad daylight. the lieutenant russo eling was a 911 first responder at the trade center. she was just months away from retirement. fox news david lee miller has more.
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david. >> liz, 61-year-old fdny and 911 reigns leading responder was a 24 year veteran and set to retire and a world trade center first responder and lost her life in a barbaric and completely unprovoked attack and the suspect was arrested and charged with murder. the stabbing was caught on surveillance camera video we are not going to show. on it, lieutenant russo eling seen on a quiet street corner getting lunch not far from her station house and was talking to man out of frame and a man holding a knife approaches and lieutenant falls backwards and stabbed more than 20 times in a matter of seconds. the man knife in hand casually walks away and starts to run and cops say a good samaritan helped in his capture. >> there were two eyewitnesses who knew the perpetrator. one of whom gave chase. members of the hostage
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negotiating team and emergency service unit were able to talk this person out of the apartment. >> a woman that lived nearby called the alleged attacker a loaner and weird. loner and weird. a published report said he had a history of mental illness and black and purple bunting hang outside the station house where the lieutenant served and her colleagues say she loved helping people and are outraged by her death. >> this event has cut deep into our so souls and has rippled toe first responder communities across the nation. >> lieutenant russo eling is the 1,158th member of the fdny to die in the line of duty. she is survived by her parents and her daughter. liz. elizabeth: thank you, david lee miller. this is such a disturbing story. we got to bring in joe gamaldi with the fraternaller order of police. what's your reaction to this and when does everyone stand up and say enough? >> liz, this is absolutely heart
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breaking. this 25 year veteran of fdny was viciously murdered for no reason whatsoever and she was a responder to 911, she was a pillar in her community and deserved better from the leadership of new york city. the citizens say this is on the heels of 16 people being shot in one day on tuesday. new york and other urban communities and it's only getting worse. they're stand and you happen saying we're not going to take this anymore and we need to let our politicians now, this is unacceptable because they're sure as hell not going to stop and do it. the way we do that is by electing law and order candidates, we need to fund our police departments, we need to viremently produce criminals and hold them actable and let the dirt bag criminals know we're not going to tolerate this on our streets anymore. elizabeth: nearly eight out of ten are really worried about crime. it's hitting the midterms and hard and police department is
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having to offer bonuses to stop a cop shortage. we're hemorrhaging -- we're losing cops and democrats defund police and de-moralizing political tax and we're talking about this since 2020 and we've got this, we've got even criminal justice reformer alice rudy johnson is saying it's really hitting women. this is an issue about women and democrats are silent about the attacks on women after their defund police push. watch alice marie johnson with us last night. watch. >> as a woman, i do not want to defund the police. i think we need to fund the police and make sure they're focused on the things they need to be focused on and not just writing tickets and raise money and they've got enough to do their jobs. i want any poll cigs to go into the neighborhoods and go boots on the ground. ask the people living this daily. do you want us to defund the police? i think every answer would be
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no. elizabeth: fetterman said he'd free close to 1200 prisoners and now he's trying to walk that back. >> midterms get closer it's comical how fast people are running away from their soft on crime pollicis ask fetterman was running for lieutenant governor and it was a pillar of his campaign he was going to release violent criminals and murders from jail and event titles he wd with this and violent crime is through the roof and philadelphia is experiencing the highest murder rate in history and margin is paper thin. fedderman is cut from the same cloth as crafter and he had the
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audacity and arrogance that his crimes were reducing -- elizabeth: a thousand philens, a thousand people in philadelphia murdered in less than 24 months. listen to the da on your point. watch this. >> it needs to be defunded by which it's funding reduced, not ylem nated, but defunded in favor of things that works better. >> it is working. the reality is there's 1,000 people killed in 20 months. it is working. elizabeth: so just because you say it makes it so? i mean, even local media have had it in pennsylvania, joe. your final word? >> liz, imagine the arrogance and audacity to say this when philadelphia experienced higher murder rate in recorded history last year and they're on track to do it again. bravo to him because that is just next level gaslighting. it takes a special kind of degenerate to lie that clearly to someone but you know what, the american public is not
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stymed, liz. they're going to go to the polls in november and hold the woke politicians accountable. elizabeth: we're in touch with fdny and fire department officials, nypd, joe, i can't tell you the heart ache, how heart sick and how upset and outraged they are here in new york city about what happened to this lieutenant. they're just besides themselves and they've never heard them so upset. your final word, joe? >> liz, i've been a police officers for 17 years and never seen moral this bad. we're tired of being shot. we're tired of being murdered. we have brothers and sisters in the fire department being murdered as well and this lawlessness cannot continue in our country. it is just an absolute stain on our society and we all need to stand up and say, no more. elizabeth: joe, thank you so much. appreciate it. we've got bomb shell texts
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twitter jack dorsey sent to elon musk before the $44 billion takeover and we'll show you the sections and house gop warns more than a dozen whistle blowers that the fbi is illegally retaliating against the conservative whistle blowers. >> we know the doj is ideologically driven and we know that they are not behind when it comes to people who do things that they are ideologically aligned with. they do not go after them.
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and doing things like revoking security cleanser and indefinitely suspending them and illegally retaliates against whistle blowers. what's your reaction to this story? >> it's been obvious to anyone paying attention recently that the doj has thoroughly weaponnized the fbi and used it to go after the biden administration's political enemies but what's important about this and what jim jordan and other republicans in the house are and the senate are exposing right now are the fact that it goes far deeper than just what's obvious to us. the fbi on the inside is actually retaliating against agents who are speaking up about this kind of weaponnization of federal bureau of investigation, and it's crucial they do that.
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they can poult on true, deep, sincere investigations and get to the bottom of this stuff, root out these people who are weaponnizing the department, and hopefully make some people pay the price for what they're doing. elizabeth: the whistle blowers are protected under title 5 of u.s. code. but congressman jim jordan says these whistle blowers are saying they're being illegally retaliated against including whistle blower who spoke out to congress about doj's going after school board parents upset with what schools are doing. >> the reason we have proteprotections is people are
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ignoring the whistle blowers or not giving them the attention they deserve and don't agree with them politically and that's not the reason whistle blowers are prot prot protected and whie blowers are protected and in government agencies to make sure that very important in varying departments like the federal bureau of investigation or the department of justice doesn't get hijacked by a bunch of political hacks and turned into a weapon against the administration's political enemies, which is happening here. elizabeth: you had ag garland and he sent out a memo warning doj workers, do not speak to congress without going through what he deemed proper channels. is this what's muddying the waters here with what's going on behind the scenes? >> i think, liz, without a doubt. this is the kind of message that you're getting from the top of the department in order to silence people and to keep the truth from coming out.
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by the way, it goes even higher thanthan merrick garland when yu have the president of the united states accusing half of the country of being fascist and racest and calling them a threat to democracy and threat to the country. that's a real problem and when you have the president of the united states saying that kind of thing, you can't really be surprised. it's not an excuse and no surprise members of fbi and this is beyond political experience and no experience or patient paint with a broad brush or voter like that and it's distorting the conversation and house judiciary represent a letter saying preserve all documents and make yourself available for transcribed sit
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down interviewers and listen to jim george. >> what's happening is the people brave enough to take whistle blower status and cometous, they're coming after them and here are the rules and guidelines with a memo to fill their speech. since that we've learned of people's security clearances being revoked and now suspensions for fbi whistle blowers comingtous. if that's not retaliation, tell me what it is because it looks that way. elizabeth: final word, charlie. >> yeah, you know, fbi and doj they're part of the executive branch but congress pays the bills. they have oversight responsibilities and it's a clear effort to conceal what's going on at doj from congress. elizabeth: charlie hurt, thanks for spending time with us again. good to see you. house speaker pelosi today says the president is working still on a plan to secure the border 20 months after he took office and after the size of kansas is
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elizabeth: let's welcome back to the show joe concha, the hills media columnist and now author of a brand new book, come on, man, the truth about joe biden's terrible, horrible, no good very bad presidency. i hope i said that title to your liking, joe. joe, -- >> perfect. elizabeth: it's forfect, i know. listen, business inside service connected reporting that private text messages allegedly show jack dorsey was really trying to warn elon musk about twitter before musk's $44 billion takeover deal. it's revealing more and more that jack dorsey didn't like what was going on behind the scenes of twitter. he said it was completely stupid and backwards.
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>> amazing; right. it's fascinating to watch the two billionaires go back and forth and watch jack dorsey trash his own board of directors at the time and endorsing musk and his bid to take over twitter. liz, this has never been a well run company and tech companies and it is vastly underperformed from a stock value perspective and the whole issue that we've talked about on this show where musk has alleged and conservatives alleged and anybody staying sober allege that had twitter is actively jumping into the political game by being activists. we saw how they acted right before the 2020 election when they censored accounts, suppressed information regarding the hunter biden laptop story and censored the new york post report that turned out to be 100% correct and twitter to this point has been the democrats ultimate super pack along with facebook and you can absolutely count on them doing it again leading up to the 2024 election. elizabeth: are you worried about that because dorsey was texting
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musk. i quote "i trust you"and twitter board saw musk as a risk if he took it over. we kept hearing reports of conservatives and libertarians and people who were not democrat being de-platformed at twitter too. what are you concerned about going into the midterms here? >> if musk doesn't take over the company, then twitter will just go back to being twitter and no one will stop them from going -- from censoring accounts and suppressing like we talked about but going into the midterms, i don't know if they've been totally involved this time but if there's a presidential election and donald trump is the republican nominee, all bets are off and the activists at twitter will take it upon themselves to make sure that any negative information about whoever the democratic nominee is whether it's biden or whoever else back fills them and pushed to the side and all the focus will be on negative information towards the republican nominee and that's not like a theory. we saw it happen. we saw the movie play out in realtime before the 2020 election.
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elizabeth: joe, good to have you on. good luck with your book. have a good weekend. >> come on, liz. i appreciate it. elizabeth: good to see you, joe, concha. appreciate it. house speaker pelosi today said the president is working on a plan to secure the border 20 months after taking office and the size of kansas is crossing. plans that parents are upset now and they're the new powerful voting block and politicians are taking notice and parents defending education nicole neily next on "the evening edit".
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elizabeth: joining us now is the president of parents defepgd education, nicole neily. nicole, always a pleasure having you on. we've talked about school board parents now, one of the most powerful voting blocs in the country. it's now gotten so bad with lethal fentanyl pouring across the border, the cdc's advising parents to to carry around narcan. watch. >> k-12 schools now are taking matters into hair own hands -- their own hands, keeping narcan on hand. do you really think that parents should consider ca carrying it themselves? >> parents should consider carrying that lax zone -- no lax
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sewn around. with insulin, making sure you are always there to protect someone that might have an issue. somebody's got an overdose, you've got it that you can use. elizabeth: seriously? this is how bad fentanyl and the border crisis is, parents have to carry narcan? >> it's appalling. and honestly, i mean, the really simple things that most people expect is their child will be safe. and what we're hearing from the cdc when they say things like that is even when your child is9 at school, you will the no -- you will not be safe. elizabeth: we had two west virginia cops saved by an off-duty nurse because a suspect threw open yoidz, possibly fentanyl, in their faces. this happened on tuesday evening. nancy pelosi, the speaker, says the president's still working on a plan to secure the border. this is 20 months after he took office. besides the human trafficking and truck trafficking in
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fentanyl, watch this. >> i believe that we have to have a secure border, and if i think that we are trying to address it. the president has a plan to address that. elizabeth: what's the plan? if he's been in office for almost two years. >> it's a great question and, honestly, this administration's best is not good enough on this front. again, parents want their children to be safe, and we feel that schools are prioritizing absolutely everything except r except for keeping children safe. elizabeth: so should parents be concerned about their children going trick or treating this halloween? i mean, the government has been warning drug traffickers are targeting children to try to get them addicted to fentanyl with rainbow-colored, fake pills to look like candy. >> yes. it seems like they should. and, unfortunately, these are things that parents don't want to worry about. on top of what curriculum the children are learning, to worry about the candy, this brings to mind the panic of the '80s. for horrifying. elizabeth: so morn two-thirds of
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the 108,000 have died of drug overdoses, children -- that happened this year -- children, 18 to 45, rather, teenagers are now more likely to die from opioid than from anything else, so that's what's happening too. i want you to listen to bill clinton say we do have a problem going on at the border. watch this. >> there is a limit to how many migrants any society can take without severe disruption in assistance. and our system is based much more on an assumption that things would be more normal. elizabeth: so even bill clinton is saying that, nicole. we've seen parents at the border, you know, moving away. they're becoming either independent, libertarian or republican. what do you think? >> it is unconscionable, that this burden is being borne by border families in texas,
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arizona, new mexico and california and communities in del rio are not safe. families fear for their children's safety and, as you said, are moving. for democrats to turn a blind eye to this is appalling and, you know, it shows how hip critical they are at the end. elizabeth: you and i were talking about virginia governor glenn youngkin and what worked in his victory in virginia. let's take a listen to this. >> if you're against the guidelines, it means you're against having parents involved in students' lives, and i don't think that's where virginia is. virginia spoke loudly last year in our election that parents were really important to have involved in kids' lives. so i think this is a chance for us to are reflect, please read the guidelines and then work towards making sure that we do include parents in these fundamentally important decisions. elizabeth: your final world, nicole. >> children do better when parents are involved in their lives, period. and so the virginia governor is doing that, that's what families want. that's what we hear every day. elizabeth: nicole neily, hanks for joining us. "the evening edit" will be live
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from d.c. just over two weeks away. i'm elizabeth macdonald, you've been watching "the evening edit." have a good evening and have a good weekend and join us again monday night. manager. ♪ >> from the fox studios in new york city, this is maria bartiromo's "wall street." maria: and happy weekend to all. welcome to the program that analyzes the week that was and helps position you for the week ahead. i'm maria bartiromo. the bleeding continues on wall street. stocks slammed in the month of september as recession fears take hold. where to put your money now. and the wrath of ian, with the death toll climbing in florida, the massive storm is now battering the carolinas, leaving widespread flooding and devastation in its
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