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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  November 3, 2022 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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the phone. call today, and we'll also send this free guide. humana. a more human way to healthcare. ashley: all right, before the break we asked you this question, how many rooms are in buckingham palace? there are your choices. lauren, take a guess. >> i'm being conservative with a mere 575. ashley: all right. i will go with number three, 675. and the answer is, we're both wrong. 775. >> wow. i wouldn't want to -- ashley: 19 state rooms, i know. 52 royal and guest bedrooms. 188 staff bedrooms, 92 offices, 78 bath rooms. don't forget by the way before we say good-bye, send in "fan friday" videos. tell us your name, we'll put it on tomorrow. we're out of time. neil it is yours. neil: ashley i thought they were
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talking about your house. i was trying to check that there, thank you, my friend. >> no. neil: we have a lot going on noon eastern time in the eastern part of the united states. the dow was down a little bit. down a lot more. tug-of-war what jerome powell was talking about yesterday continues but more important what is happening five days from now the tiktok to that big moment. go to jackie heinrich, the president is going to places but sometimes he confounds ultimately where he goes, picking albuquerque, new mexico, jacqui. reporter: you wonder why he is not going somewhere like arizona or nevada, where congressional races a lot closer. he is coming to albuquerque to push for michelle lujan grisham for a second term. he is notably not going to the border while he is here. i still has not gone to the
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border. the governor's opponent is seizing on that. >> he is not here to discuss the biggest issues new mexicans scare about, a skyrocketing prices, a border where more fentanyl is pumping into our state and driving violent crime. he has not been to the border to address any issues. reporter: biden is making appeal to saving democracy after months of lagging polls showing americans are unhappy with his leadership might be too late. his presence as i mentioned before seen possibly hurting democrats in close races in other western states. now as reporting shows both biden and trump are moving closer to re-election bids the elephant in the room polls show vast swaths of americans may not want them. a centrist organization is stepping in look moderates, 2024 unity ticket with a republican and democrat. the group no labels began the
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effort in late 2021 after a lot of pushback from their members thinking they may face a situation in 2024 where the ticket, democrat and republican, is not desirable to a vast majority of the american people. labels insisted they're not actively looking for anyone in the unity ticket. they're not running a campaign, there are moderates being kicked around, joe manchin among them, republican governor massachusetts, charlie baker and larry hogan. their chief strategist, 2024, tens of millions of americans are clamoring to alternative two party nominees f no one has done the work to do infrastructure to make the run possible, it is too late. because i can't flip a switch to get ballot access. that is why we're starting now. this major group is laying ground work, tacitly acknowledging the president's work out here is not doing what it is supposed to be doing. it is hurting not ownly democrats up and down the ballot
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but also moderates on the other side. the president has been trying to make some comments about what's at stake here. listen to what he said last night. president biden: americans believe our democracy is at risk. that our democracy is under threat. i know there is a lot at stake in these midterm elections to our economy, safety of our streets, personal freedoms but there is something else at stake, democracy itself. reporter: president is scheduled to land here later on this afternoon. he will do a dnc-style rally like the ones he has been doing the past few days. neil: jacqui, albuquerque he would be 265 miles from the mexican border. could he really get away with never mentioning the border at all? reporter: get away with it, maybe not. but try. we expect him to. we got no inclination he will bring up those issues, neil.
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neil: that is a very tactful answer, jacqui. thank you very much. jacqui heinrich. that is odd. pretty close to the border, when you consider everything else going on in this country. so we'll see. bryan llenas continuing excellent reporting out of the keystone state. bryan, this is the first time i think we're getting surveys take into their entirety the postdebate reaction that fetterman had with dr. oz. what are we learning from that? reporter: yeah, neil, good afternoon. there have been three polls before ours that show that there was virtually no change after that one and only debate. this new "fox news poll" that has 1000 registered pennsylvania voters, shows the exact same thing, this race continues to be tight. it is virtually unchanged after the debate last week. fox news has democrat lieutenant governor john fetterman ahead of republican dr. mehmet oz by just three points. they're about even. this is all within the margin of error.
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fetterman's lead is significantly lower than his 11 point lead back in july. 8% of voters which is interesting remain undecided. 351% of voters say the debate was a fact in their vote decision between oz and fetterman more voters after the debate saying that they are concerned that fetterman is not healthy enough to carry out the job of senator effectively. that number is 39% say that they're concerned. that is up five points from september before the debate. now more voters say they are concerned though about dr. oz being a so-called carpetbagger from new jersey. that means you know, obviously not being from pennsylvania. 44% are concerned that he isn't familiar enough with pennsylvania. now the top three most important issues for pennsylvanians, well that continues to be inflation, abortion, and the issue of voter integrity which is something that we've continued to see on that front.
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finally we have this issue here about voter enthusiasm. fetterman continues to hold huge support in terms of enthusiastic support. i think it is about 57%. most of those though that are backing dr. oz, they are backing him but they have reservations about him or they support him because they dislike their other choices. finally, what we've been hearing from the candidates has really been about trying to reach out to that so-called moveable middle, those independent voters. take a listen at the tone from both of these candidates who are trying to paint the other as the most extreme choice. listen. >> we've got to have less extremism, more balance in washington that will allows to cope with the challenges this country faces. >> on saturday he will be rallying with trump and masstry ahn know. strange company for somebody that wants to reject extremism. reporter: bottom line, neil,
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with five days to go to election day this race remain asking toup. neil: bryan llenas in pennsylvania. griff jenkins following another big race where they bring out the big guns as in new york. typically what happens, the closer we get to election day the more party luminaries turn out, right? >> that's right, neil. pull out all the stops. you have to go back some 20 years the last time new yorkers elected a republican pataki, as governor. fox news power ranks moved between this race hochul and zeldin from solid democrat to likely democrat as crime emerged as dominant issue. the polls continue to tighten. most have it within 10 points or less. that is a far cry from this past summer. why hochul is calling in the big guns like vice president harris and new york attorney general letitia james and former secretary of state hillary clinton who this morning was blasting republicans on the ish you of crime.
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watch. >> when they talk about crime they're trying to gin up all kinds of fear and anxiety with people. they're not trying to deal with it. they're not trying to tackle it. i view its a effort to scare voters. reporter: some voters are scared. total violent crime in new york city, murder, rape, robbery, assault up 30% from last year. why lee zeldin who held a rally last night with house minority whip steve scalise is hammering governor hochul for being soft on crime. he says new yorkers have had enough. >> focus on issues that matter most to new yorkers. people are hitting the breaking point and fleeing the state because their wallets, their safety, the freedom, quality of their kids education is under attack. you have to wake up to video pictures and stories 6 people pushed in front of an oncoming subway car or green goblin gang. people are getting beaten on the street. it is not just inside the city.
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you are seeing story across the state. reporter: what the candidates plan to toughen crime, hochul toughen gun laws, zeldin says he will declare an emergency and get rid of cashless bail. neil: 20 years since a republican ran all the levers of power in the empire state. my next guest george pataki, not only once, twice, thrice. three terms of republican governor in the blue evident of blue states. back in those days it was even bluer. governor, i distinctly remember that race, covering it at the time. no one gave you a serious chance. earlier on you were trailing mario cuomo who was trying to make it a three-peat. very close to election day he
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was still up by double digits. you pulled it off, i'm wondering you seem to be the only guy who thought you could. are we missing -- the polls did not appreciate the magnitude whats going on. do you think the same thing is happening now? >> absolutely. i think the polls are way out of line. i'm out there talking to people. as you said, when i won the first term i honestly thought i was going to win. i would be at train stations, grocery stores, standing out front talking to people. i understood the desire to change things. you see that now in new york. not just republicans and independents, democrats overwhelmingly think the state is headed in the wrong direction. when you think things are headed in the wrong direction why do more of the same? i think lee zeldin has the best chance any republican had since i won the last time. neil: i was harkening to the race with my young staff, governor, who couldn't believe you were dismissed to the degree you were at the time. but you were, you pounded two
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themes that sound eerily familiar. crime and just the economy and this recession that was gripping and the inability of those in power to do anything about it. yet in new york it was thought, yeah, the thousand might change, maybe even the senate could change but the executive mansion in new york, that is not going to change. >> it was the same issues t was crime as overwhelming issue. when people have a sense they're not safe on the street or in their homes, they're going to look for an alternative. lee zeldin has hammered crime, correctly so for the last few months. it is out of control in new york. neil: you were up against a icon too, taking nothing away from kathy hochul you were up against the mario cuomo who passed up a run for the white house when it was his for the taking we were told. here this unknown new york mayor -- peekskill, new york,
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you had cachet, no name recognition. david up against goliath. what did you see in that race you reminded lie zeldin about this? >> there are two things the to win as republican no new york. voters, including the democrats think the state was headed wrong direction. that was the case when i ran. that is the case now. second thing they have to have incumbent governor they don't think they will do the job. if it was new democrat they could change everything. cuomo was in for 12 years. they may have liked him but they thought they were a poor governor and willing to give me a chance. neil: things turned south. >> we were the most dangerous state in america. we had the highest taxes in america. we were last in private sector jobs. today we're headed being towards one of the most dangerous states in america, our taxes are among the highest in the country and we lead the country people leaving a the state to go somewhere else. you have similar factors. you have incumbent governor,
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when you talk to people, you talk to democrats every day they have real doubts whether she is up to on the crime on issue of crime, do more about guns. no bill. prosecutors don't hold up the law. not standing behind the police. that is why crime is through the roof. people across the political spectrum know that. i think lee zelden has a very real chance on tuesday. neil: what i remember about that period, governor, cuomo camp thoroughly dismissed. they even ran ads who is this guy, can't remember pronounce his name. >> his camp did, the day i ran he was afraid to debate me. neil: let me ask you a little bit about that then. right now governor hochul who sort of ascended to 9 job, she didn't get it outright electorally. her inexperience might be showing here. that is something lee zeldin
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wants to capitalize on. new york, an odd situation, democrat normally racks up a huge win in the new york city metropolitan area, loses everywhere else. >> right. neil: you limit mario's cuomo in the metropolitan area. swamped him outside the state. you repeated that two more elections that blueprint seems to be lost on people. is it tougher to do today or was it tougher bark in your day? >> i think from a you demographic standpoint it is tougher today. but from issues standpoint it is every bit as easy today. lee zeldin the conventional wisdom needs 30% in new york city. i think he will exceed that. neil: do you really? >> i talk to democrats every day, we can't have anymore of this. this is not working. i go to my office there is nobody there. part of the reason is remnants of covid, part is fear of crime. people don't want to ride the subways, when you're afraid to ride the subways. neil: that could limit voter
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participation or enthusiasm in new york for hochul. >> for hochul. it would limit enthusiasm, also create support for zeldin. so i think he has, i think he will exceed what he needs to do in new york city. he will blow out long island. he is from long island. people there understand. neil: you were part of a wave. think about it, what an amazing year that was. >> it was. neil: your upset heard 'round the world but what republicans did with the house, taking over the house, gingrich revolution was on, taking the senate and sending a clear signal that times are going to change. yet only two years later you were still in power your way to having a 12 year run as governor, take nothing away from that, democrats regrouped. they, bill clinton won the white house for a second term. so any lessons or reminders you want to pass along to fellow republicans? >> i think we are going to see another wave. i just saw a poll, 17% of americans think we're headed in
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the right direction. neil: will it last for republicans? >> that is the question. we have to show we can govern. i got elected. it wasn't people say he is great. rejecting the stat discuss quote, i had to show i could change things, run things well. that is my message to republicans. don't just stop if you win on tuesday. you have to show the people of this country and this state that you can run the country and you can run the state well. i'm confident we can do that. that is what we have to do. not just a one month, one year, two year victory. it's a change in the direction of the country which is what we need. neil: you sell yourself short though talking about really resentment the incumbent governor. i thought it was very appealing about your campaign style, whether people agreed with you politically or not, you were the same way, you know, talking personally to supporters and your family as you were in the air talking to scmmos interviewing you. people don't appreciate how important that is. >> likability matters. neil: i built a career on that.
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>> i tried to. neil: i think it worked out all right. >> i think it is a factor. in this case, you know, i'm just highly optimistic about lee zeldin. neil: you think the polls are understating the zeldin support just like they understated conservative support in '94? >> i think they're understating conservative and republican support across the country. i think a great many voters on right of center who don't trust institutions in this country. look what is happening with the fbi, at the border, with the administration. neil: yeah. by the way on that, i keep interrupting you. >> no,. neil: my crew is getting angry at me. here is one thing i do remember, governor, you were, its with tight, the race but you were not expected to win but there clearly was momentum in the last couple of days, similar to what we saw in the house. similar to what we saw in the senate. are you getting a sense of the same thing now? >> i do. i do. i had enormous momentum the last
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four or five days because i needed it. neil: you did. >> rudy giuliani endorsed my opponent and campaigned around the state for him. nobody knew who i was. this republican saying he is an awful guy. my numbers cratered. we got our act together. we'll change the state. we'll not get incumbent powers regardless of power. continuing the decline of new york and we had a massive turnout and a massive surge in the last four or five days which is why i thought i was going to win. neil: i forgot about that. you never held a grudge. >> you look forward amounts opposed to joe biden who can't help looking back two years, what about tomorrow? that is what the voters want to hear. neil: governor, good to see you. just a reminder it can happen, it was remarkable folks going back to that time because i covered that race. it was seemingly unthinkable. i heard the consensus pollsters and experts telling me same thing, pataki nice guy doesn't
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have a chance. i hear it today about lee zeldin, nice guy, doesn't have a chance. one thing about history we don't necessarily have to repeat it but it sure does rhyme. now and then we might want to pick up the rhyme. we'll have more after this. dad, we got this. we got this. we got this. we got this. life is for living. we got this. let's partner for all of it. edward jones
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♪. >> so how big of a headwind is all the fiscal spending to what the federal reserve is trying to do to get inflation back to the 2% target? >> you know in theory it was a headwind this year but i do think the broader context is you have households that have these significant amounts of savings and can keep spending. neil: and that, was that comment from jerome powell among others talking if the resiliency of the consumer and the fact you know, employment is still good and the buying patterns are still strong had wall street worrying at the time. remember we reversed that, ended up down almost 500 points. kind of even money for the time-being, what he was getting at i'm not done folks, bottom line, i'm not done. michelle schneider joins us market gauge director, eddie ghabour. michelle you first on the signal you got from jerome powell?
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i'm not sure it was so much of a shocker that we have a ways to go but how did the market interpret it, overreact, what do you think? >> i think right now he really tried to be doveish and hawkish at the same time. it is an absolute reflection of the dilemma we're in. do we drive further into recession at the risk of reducing inflation, or do we worry about recession and let inflation run hotter. he didn't really answer that question which is why the market may have overreacted initially because today we had the ism numbers and the market started roaring back. so it is really going to be, i think right now two very important areas to look at in terms of forgetting about talk and what people are analyzing and saying. just look at what the long bonds do right here because if they start, when i say the long bonds, i mean the 20 plus year bonds.
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neil: right. >> if they start falling in yield with the shorter term still rising that shows that the market is worried about recession. which means they will expect the fed to do something more dovish. if the dollar starts falling it means from this high which i think it could, everybody is concerned no matter what policies go forth things are out of control. neil: you know on that point, eddie, i think michelle was referring to the sign that the services sector activity cooled a little bit more than was expected in october, and i'm just wondering, this is the battle we're going to be facing right? the data that supports the fed continuing to do what it is doing or data that hints of a pivot or change going forward. is there anything you get from the day after here, from the fed, that anything has changed? >> look i think one statement he made, that i thought was the most alarming, look, it shouldn't have come as a surprise to anyone they were
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hawkish. the one thing you have to get them credit for. they told us they would continue to stay hawkish, why everyone thought they would turn dovish was a big surprise to us. they were so worried about stopping early, have inflation reaccelerate, they would be okay with overtightening. they would rather overtighten than not tighten enough. they will continue the pedal to the metal until the data they look at shows something different. the problem the data they're looking at is rear view mirror data. when you forward look, look at rate ever change of things, they have not given in our opinion enough time for rate hikes to get into the system. at the end of the day we think we're going to be in recession next year. corporate profits and earnings in the fourth quarter, first quarter will be very, very challenged. this market will not bottom until the first half of next year because based on what we heard and read yesterday, they are going to overtighten in our
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opinion. neil: yeah we might already see the results of that. guys, thank you very, very much. i apologize for the truncated time here. the dow has turned into even money here. you know we're five days away from the midterm election. a number of safer blue seats are not so safe, possibly not so blue. the read out of colorado where the republican senate candidate is scoring some impressive gains. we're on top of that after this. ♪. as an independent financial advisor, i stand by these promises: i promise to be a careful steward of the things that matter to you most.
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neil: you know we were raising this with former new york governor pataki move away from blue in the empire state could see the first republican in charge of the governor's mansion in better part of 20 years. there is similar phenomenon all over the country, safe seats that looked like state as a tick seats including massachusetts right now. molly line from boston. neil: i apologize. reporter: we're covering the story, accused assailant coming out of the woodwork up in st. an seem manies college in new hampshire. taking a swipe, swing at republican contender there. that according to his campaign. also the republican candidate himself, republican don bolduc, retired brigadier general, he described what happened as he arrived on campus before his race with the incumbent senator maggie hassan.
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bolduc created supporters, the man was making derogatory gestures and using profane language. >> couldn't contain himself. charged from his side of the sidewalk from his side. i turned aside to reduce my profile he made slight contact with me, i call it a graze. as a result, but, my supporters surrounded me very, very quickly reporter: bolduc's campaign offering a few further details saying an individual in the crowd gathered outside attempted to punch of the general and quickly apprehended and arrested. we're grateful to the quick response from law enforcement on the scene. the hasan campaign responded with communications director kevin donahue tweeting quote. disgusting behavior. we saw this same libertarian party advocate get aggressive with our volunteers. bolduc was not hurt,
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participating in a full robust debate with senator hassan, they are locked in one of the tightest senate races in the country. neil? neil: you were covering new hampshire. i apologize for the confusion. molly line on that race. another race getting national attention, going on in colorado, safe to say one of the bluest of blue states, in last presidential election two years ago, biden won 13 points. hillary clinton by five or six points. the guy trying to disrupt that math is joe o'day. republican colorado senate candidate. we reached out to the guy whose job he is trying to take, incumbent democratic senator michael bennet. we have not heard back. thank you for joining us. >> i appreciate it. neil: this is remarkable race because you risked the wrath of donald trump, not only challenging his questioning of the accuracy of the election,
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saying if he would run for president you actively would stop that. that hasn't' nam mored you with him but that hasn't hurt you proportionally in the state. i think where you ultimately get your support? you're supported by ron desantis, other republican luminaries. i wonder where you see the momentum in the final few days? this election is a referendum on joe biden on the policies he put in place here. michael bennet voted 98% of the time. it is record inflation. i heard your show earlier. the fed boosting the rate again. that will shut down a lot of investment we have homebuilders, i'm a contractor. been a contractor for 35 years here in colorado and a lot of my clients, homebuilders they're putting subdivisions on hold right now because they know we're in recession and there will not be dollars out there to
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purchase new homes. they totally got this economy upside down. until we get rid of the war on energy and until we get quit the reckless spending, and until we get a handle on this crime, we're not going to get this economy back on track. that is why i got in this race. neil: i'm curious as well then where the support has grown? even a so-called number of maga republicans have sort of found you appealing because you are standing your ground, certainly on the former president but on trying to win them over on the issues that you think matter to them more than personalities. you outlined a couple of them, the economy itself and what has been happening and prices are up like crazy and your background as a pretty accomplished businessman and construction titan. i'm wondering then when you meet average folks and they see what is going on in colorado, which has enjoyed this boom in growth over the last 10 years, population essentially almost
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doubling in that time, is it there sense successful days are running out, they're nervous? how would you describe it? >> well i got to tell you we have built a huge coalition here across the state. i've been working hard. we've been all over, all four corners of the state. we're headed up to the northwest corner, meeker, craig today. people are all concerned with the economy and that coalition is trump supporters, it is gop supporters, it is independents, it is disgruntled democrats. they have gotten behind this race for one reason, i'm a contractor, not a politician. i call it like i see it. i'm going out there to do good things for america. my wife and i we have lived the american dream here in colorado i want to make sure our kids, our grand kids can have the same american dream. that is what people are talking about. we'll get across the finish line. i'm excited to be the next u.s. senator here november 8th in colorado. it is an exciting time. neil: so if you were to win this
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seat, you know, we've heard of many republicans talk about the idea they're going to try to make the trump tax cuts permanent. they're looking at ways to expand oil and energy production way beyond the measures that president biden stopped. are you for both of those? >> well i got to tell you look back 22 months those policies in place had the economy soaring. we had less than 2% inflation. the price of gas was 2.38 a gallon here in colorado. those policies are rock solid. we've got to get government out of the way. we got to do it in a big way. we got to do it to rescue the economy. i will be part of it. neil: we're following it closely. certainly got a good deal of attention across the country when people like gw bush, anti-maga candidate if you will, ron desantis, say what you will of his relationship with donald trump, pro-maga guy, they have both guys with you.
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that says something like there. joe o'day, thank you for joining us. >> i appreciate it. these polls are tightening. we have a great race ahead of us. neil: it looks very tight indeed. by the way we did reach out as i said to senator michael bennet. hope springs eternal he will to eventually join us. we'll have more after this. and lincoln financial solutions will help you get there. as you plan, protect and retire. ♪ what if there was a community of like minded people ready to support you when you need it most? christian health care ministries is an organization with over 40 years of trusted care who understands the importance of family. a group that sees you for who you are regardless of your health history. offering values-based affordable health care cost solutions for people just like you and me. learn more today at your chm.org about healthcare that puts you in control.
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reporter: welcome back to "cavuto: coast to coast." i'm lauren simonetti. pilots from the three major airlines in the u.s. are deadlocked in their labor negotiations. american, delta and united account for about half of all u.s. flights and they are trying to hammer out a deal with labor unions that represent their pilots. american, united unions denied their latest proposal that would give them double-digit pay raises. pilots at delta voted overwhelmingly to authorize a strike. when is everybody is asking. not before thanksgiving. there are many hurdles to jump
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through before any strike could actually happen, including a mandatory 30-day cooling-off period but pilots say they're fed up and they're tired. yes, they are willing to walk off the job. >> our goal is not a strike. our goal is an industry leading contract but we're ready and willing to strike today. reporter: so new labor deals will drive up the costs for the airlines. employee compensation, rivals fuel carrier's biggest expenses. those costs will likely be passed on to passengers when air fare is already up 43% from a year ago. thanksgiving air fare per hopper, 350. christmas air fare, 468. domestic on average, we still have some time to go. so the unions want higher wages but also better schedules since they're working overtime to compensate for the industry-wide staffing shortage. neil, back to you. always a problem when you fly. neil: right. timing is everything between
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american and delta, united, they're all having labor hassles to deal with here. reporter: there is the size of the seats. can't fit. neil: don't worry. we're not going there, lauren. we're not going there. reporter: if i'm complaining you know? neil: that's ridiculous. you're no grounds to complain. lauren following that, jeffries is joining us the association of american railroads president ceo. ian, very good to have you. this rail strike looks like it could be back on. your members rejecting it. what was it that toppled it? how soon could talks resume to prevent a strike? >> well, neil, good afternoon, thank you for having me. neil: thank you. >> i think it is important to note as we start our conversation that our rail employees across the industry expect and deserve our praise and our thank you and our, deserve immense amounts of
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credit for the good job they do every day delivering goods to customers and communities across the nation doing so safely. neil: there is apparently how good the compensation can be. they say it is not enough. what do you say? >> it is important to note that six of our 12 unions have ratified the tentative agreement so far. we have four out for ratification now. we have run into challenges with two votes that occurred. the agreements that have been ratified i'm very pleased to announce they include the highest wage increase in over five decades. continued best in class health care and improvements to quality of life that will allow our employees get the compensation they deserve that will keep them in the top 10% of any industry when it comes to compensation. and so for those two employees that haven't ratified, that did reject the initial ratifications, i'm certain we'll find a workable path forward.
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that is the goal right now. neil: i don't necessarily want to go into the weeds what you're negotiating. i'm sure you don't want to necessarily reveal those details. to a union, at least the ones that have sort of reservations about this deal they felt that they were being pushed into it. that the president was kind of strong-arming it. that it looked good on paper but the details concerning sick pay, overtime, time off from the job, were not nearly as generous as were build. i don't know if that is the again the case. that is hot unions presented it. those that rejected it to me. you say what? >> well the biden administration certainly deserves a lot of credit for keeping the parties at the table. the remaining few unions as we were coming down to the wire that we had not reached agreement with yet, the administration kept both parties at the table and worked out an agreement they're out working to ratify right now. one of the unions that did not ratify initially was not part of
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that group. we got an agreement much earlier on and we're disappointed that the initial ratification did not pass but i'm certain we'll find a path forward on that. neil: we'll watch very closely. thank you for taking the time sir. we do appreciate it. do you think, by the way if we do, real quickly avoid a, you know, a strike here, that it might not materialize until well after the midterms? if they do take action to strike they might wait until then? >> well i think all parties can agree a work stoppage of any kind is not in the best interests of our employees, our carriers, our customers, any stakeholders involved. so i'm confident that we can work effectively to avoid that happening. neil: got it. ian jeffers, association of railroads president. it is not a done deal but hope cooler heads would prevail over something wildly dislocating for the economy, supply chain, you name it. meantime the world series all knotted up at two games apiece.
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this one is getting to be a barn-burner, isn't it? after this. ♪. i earn 3% cash back at drugstores with chase freedom unlimited. so i got cards for birthdays, holidays, graduations, i'm covered for everything. which reminds me, thank you for driving me to the drugstore. earn big time with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours. it's walmart's black friday deals for days. every monday, huge deals will go live. join walmart+ and you can shop online 7 hours early! so the only question is... is it monday yet? that's walmart's black friday deals for days.
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neil: all right. just when you think the world series is going one way, just hold your horses. we have got three games to go. it is all tied up. nate foy what is at stake, who is at stake, things like no hitters, drama a go-go, nate? reporter: neil, yeah, in the history of major league baseball what we saw last night has negative happened before. that is a combined no hitting effort on the part of the houston astros. nobody worked harder than christian javier who worked six innings. he claims his parents predicted this would happen. the final out, ryan pressley in to clothes things out. 5-0 win, 2-2 tie, second no-hitter in world series after don larsen did it against the yankees in 1956. does at this baker talking about the historic moment. >> combined no-hitter, hard to do, somebody will usually give it up during the no-hitter.
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all our guys were poised and ready and strong. reporter: again four pitchers leading the way but, christian javier was the star of the game. he pitched six innings, had nine strikeouts, issued just two walks. struck out the side in the fourth inning, he need ad 5th inning worth of with alex bregman with a double bringing in two rounds. that is all they need. a touching moment that happened off the field, end of 5th inning, stand up for cancer. everybody in the ballpark came together who honored people previously fought cancer, currently doing sew. dr. jill biden was on hand. she honored three people including beau biden who lost his life to a tumor in 2013. there have been three no-hitters
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in the playoffs in history. two of them happened at citizens bank park. roy halliday through one in 2012 against the cincinnati reds. we have game 3. we'll see if there is any sort of dramatics tonight. neil: are you at the game tonight, nate? >> remains to be seen. waiting on word from everybody in new york. we were there last night t was an electric atmosphere. it was a really cool experience. neil: just asking. nate, great job my friend. nate foy. now best-of-three series, if you think about it. if you think about it we've over come heavy selling we had going on earlier right now. the dow jones industrials are up 24 points but the worries are still out there. we had a huge swing yesterday of more than 800 points. we ultimately ended down. they're trying to find stability here but where and how, they're not sure of that after this. ♪.
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>> show me the money! show me the money! >> show me the money!

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