tv Varney Company FOX Business January 11, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST
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hi, i'm darlene and i lost 40 pounds with golo in just eight months. i gained an enormous amount of weight due to a medication i was put on. when i started the golo plan and taking release, i was surprised at how easy it was for the weight to come off. i've never done anything better in my life. stuart: good morning, it is 10:00 eastern.
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we will get to the markets in a moment. flights were grounded nationwide earlier today due to a system outage. it prevented pilots from loading flight maps before they took off. that ground stop has been lifted, flights are gradually resuming. we don't know what caused the outage but airline stocks were down at first but have rebounded, most are slightly higher. cancellations and delays running really strong. now to the markets. overall plenty of green, dow industrials up 85 points, s&p is up, nasdaq is up 2 thirds of 1%. 10 year treasury yield moving down 3.7% and look at big tech, across the board we see modest gains though apple is down a
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fraction, meta is down a fraction, amazon, alphabetic to microsoft are up. now this. just as we were reporting, possible ban on gas stoves nationwide, another attack on the natural gas business, the climate crowd is in full cry, starting in 2025, governor hochul creed new yorkers will not be able to install natural gas appliances or heating systems in new small buildings. the ban extends to big buildings by 2028 and in 2030, no natural gas heating systems will be slowed anywhere in the state, they have to go to electricity to cook and heat. where does the electricity come from? we will need a lot of it. does the governor believe wind and solar can meet demand? new york close to a new plant and there is no way we would be allowed to build another. your utility bill has nowhere to go but up. suppose for a brief shining
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moment that new york goes fully electric. you realize how much centralized control that gives the government, they could turn off the keys just like that to anyone or any region they please. i am not a conspiracy theorist, but when the government takes control of your ability to cook, heat, travel and eat, the alarm bells really start to ring. the excuse, this is climate change, the result will be another exodus, people fleeing to florida, texas, tennessee, the carolinas, why stick around when public schools are a disaster, crime is rampant, cities in disarray, you can't heat your home with cheap natural gas, you can't buy a gas stove. second hour of varney just getting started. lauren: bumped biden off the front page.
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stuart: just chatting with liz. democrat joe manchin says the natural gas attack is a disaster and i think you agree. liz: it is sowing readily stupid. it is cheap energy, it is pretty green. the reason the united states emissions are down and almost no developed country other than the united states posted a decline in overall greenhouse emissions is we switched to natural gas from coal and oil. in new york state are electricity bills are below the national average. in california they are 8% above the national average. wise that? california has been pushing electrification and they don't have the capacity to create it. remember the kerfuffle when the governor had to say don't charge your cars at this hour because we don't have enough electricity. we have 30% of our energy from renewables but you know where that comes from? hydroelectric. solar and wind, i think it is
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less than 5% of our energy grid. you think we will go from there to what is she effecting? 60%, 70%? won't going to happen. something no one will report on. the reason she's doing this is we can't get natural gas to new york, they banned pipeline construction. we don't have enough natural gas now, don't have it for the growth of the state, if these idiotic policies lead to any growth in the state which i wonder. i will pack my bags after your rent. stuart: i am trying to calm down. you've got an op-ed. it says republicans should cheer that biden is talking about running again in 2024. why should republicans be cheering? liz: because i don't think -- stuart: i know the answer. will be the candidate. anyone else is going to walk over biden.
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imagine ron desantis debating president biden. it will be a bloodbath. the second thing people should be thinking about, the democrat alternatives, amy klobuchar, gavin newsom, are sitting on the bench, can't get anything going, can't make a decision whether they want to run. after the midterms, we don't want to insult the president. he did such a good job. he did a good job in the midterms. there were problems in the midterm starting with abortion. that has nothing on president biden. my view is this is good news for 2024 and republicans taking back the white house. stuart: i calmed down and so did you. liz: i've got to go pack. stuart: thanks a lot. back to the markets. we are in the green, one hundred one points, the nasdaq is up 70. s&p is up 20. i call that fairly solid. the market watcher of the moment, welcome back to the
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show. i'm not hearing much talk of a deep recession. the consumer seems to be okay, reasonably so. why not get into stocks? >> great question. a pleasure to be with you. everything was fairly priced until the fed showed up last year and raised rates at a faster pace than we have ever seen before. this is caused great disruption. 2,022, we got to get used to these new rate hikes and new inflation reality. we will see a lot more of this as the ripple effect shows up in 2023. as we look at where we are going, the fed has a mandate to reduce its balance sheet. that the opposite of the approach they took in 2,008. we did quantitative easing. now they say we've got to get money out of our system. that's not great for our economy. the housing market today, the
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error coming out of it, volumes are slow. in 2023 we will see prices start to drop. i'm not rooting for that, just declaring the reality of the economics we had, borrowing essentially doubled over the last 12 months. the consumer is in trouble with higher credit card debt and higher rates. stuart: it sounds like you think the stock market will bumble along at this level, may be down a little bit but no big rally, no big recovery at any point this year. is that your forecast? >> we will see a sideways market by the end of the year. a big down, possibly a big up. i'm rooting it to go up forever and we find our legs again. we have a lot of challenges today we've not been addressing. we have been curbing demand by making of the fed raise rates but we've not been doing supply-side economics like making more jobs at home specifically the oil and gas
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industry. saving is phenomenon natural gas and talking about how this is important for us to understand as a nation, we are the policies, what are we doing? supply-side economics is the only thing we can do to get out of the mess we got ourselves in. stuart: thanks for joining us, see you again soon. looking at the movers, we started with a 30% gain on bed, bath, and beyond. a $2 stock, oversee bankruptcy and they are closing 62 more stores which doesn't by any recent strain, bed, bath is a name popular in the retail crowd, one of the most popular names in the us exchanges. stuart: a rebound of 30 one%. then we have intuitive surgical down significantly.
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lauren: their quarters sales will miss, they are blaming covid and china. they are pulling back on i procedures and other surgeries. we one levi strauss, he awoke kind of company down today. lauren: they make jeans. we are buying fewer genes. they are downgraded to neutral. they cite deteriorating trends in denim. it continued into christmas. stuart: we get back to our conversation how many pairs of jeans we have. several. the producer said let's move on. lauren: there is no trend for genes. it was the mom jeans, stovepipe. stuart: give me back my bellbottoms. lauren: bellbottoms came back for a little bit. we need a new trend. stuart: we are really telling us to move on. tesla applying for big expansion at the factory in texas. lauren: it is huge, a mile long.
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they filed for $717 million expansion of that factory in austin. they want to add space for the cyber truck production as well as humanoid robot and semitruck. construction will start this year. blue one tesla stock has come nicely back. last week. lauren: this factory and indonesia. neil: it is a 20% gain in a week. not bad. last one. one reporter is threatening legal action against democrat congressman adam schiff. this is the twitter file. lauren: he was mentioned by matt taibbi. he was banned from twitter without explanation, tried over and over again. now he is laying the blame on adam schiff. he was on with brian kilmeade. >> my stories went viral on twitter, he tried to silence me
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and remove content which is outrageous censorship by a powerful government official. he was head of the house intelligence at the time and was sworn to protect the first amendment and free-speech and the press. we are exploring legal options including defamation. lauren: he said adam schiff interfered with his ability to do his job and amplified the story she was writing because he was blocked out of twitter. stuart: the governor of new jersey tried to lower back new york city commuters with new tax breaks. president biden finally visited the border for the first time. he didn't meet with any migrants and didn't invite tony gonzalez even though his district has to deal with the border all the time. i will speak to congressman gonzalez about biden's visit. the faa lifted their ground stop after a systemwide outage. grady trimble is live in
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stuart: still seeing green on the market especially the nasdaq which was 3 quarters of one%. congers when tony gonzalez from texas joins the now. great to have you back on the show. you are not invited to president biden's border visit even though you are a border congressman. is it because you are a republican? >> absolutely because i am a republican. it was clear words don't match up with actions. the administration is saying we want to work with republicans
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is anything but the truth, this was a political visit. i give the president some credit. he shows up at the border, waves a magic wand and all the migrants disappear. i'm grateful for that even if it was for one day. if we could keep him at the border maybe this crisis would go away. the real work, i got a call with senator cornyn, bipartisan group of senators at the border rolling up their sleeves coming to work. that's important. here in the house we have to make sure we tackle border security but also divide immigration. immigration and border security are two things with what democrats like to do is blame the two. i don't want republicans to fall in the same category. stuart: i have often expressed on this program my opinion that the president will not control or close the border because he wants it open and always wanted it open. it is deliberate. what do you say to that? >> exactly right.
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clearly it was such an easy win for them to invite me. they are saying i wasn't invited because there wasn't room on air force one when i didn't ask to fly with the president. i would have met the president on the ground and had a conversation there. they do not want to work with republicans because what we are seeing is what they want and it is dangerous to americans, all americans, not just those along the border. republicans can't just be the party of rhetoric. we have to be the party of action. we can't be the party of anti-immigrants. we've got to be the party of this is america, we believe in america but we also believe in the rule of law. we can have both but it takes the right message and the right messenger. stuart: if you had the power, how would you control and close the border? if you had the power to do it, what would you do? >> pre-simple. all these people want to come up with all these plans. all you have to do is reemployment for policies of the trump administration that worked. that is it. that is the plan.
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tackle immigration separately. i think you focus on work visas but you tackle it separately. are you got to do is read the plans that were already there. remain in mexico is one of them and you work with other countries. i talk about the president of guatemala. guatemalans are jumping up and down to have a partnership, let us to be your most southern border, work with us. you have an administration that wants to cut the foreign budget, not work with other partners. stuart: republican congressman pat fallon filed articles of impeachment against alejandra mayorkas. do you think we can get him removed from office? >> impeachment is a difficult process and i understand that. many of us have come to our wits he end with what is happening with the department of homeland security. my philosophy is different. my philosophy is run through the fire and force the administration to engage with us, not just beat them over the head but force them to sit down and have a conversation.
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what it does is they can say yes or no. when they say no like donald trump denying me to be part of this visit, it exposes them so they don't want to work with it. the impeachment process is a long process. the people in my district, we need help today. i try to find solutions that are more timely. stuart: last one. you were the only republican to vote no on a new house rules package. why did you vote against it? >> it is no fun being on an island and no interest in going against the party and all these things but i am worried the direction we are headed. i voted no for a couple reasons. one, any cuts to defense spending without reforms, reforms is the key. without reforms, is cutting off our nose to spite our face and that is dangerous. the other thing is the vacate the chair. as much fun as last week was i don't want to see last week happen every two months.
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we have to get to work. energy independence, securing the border, inflation, these are the things america put house republicans into leaders majority, not the circus we saw previously. stuart: fair enough. congress when tony gonzalez, thank you for joining us. the governor of new jersey is trying to lure residents who commute to new york, lure them back to the garden state. skeptical. how is he going to do it? lauren: he is proposing incentives for employers who that employees work from home. listen. >> the post pandemic business environment, not every job created for a new jersey and will be housed in a physical office in new jersey. for many new jerseyans working remotely is here to stay. let's take this moment to focus on in scenting jobs in new jersey wherever they are regardless whether they are in
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an office building in newark or at a kitchen table in cherry hill. >> new jersey residents, 400,000 people, in new york taxes or $20,000 each when you add in commuting, no details on corporate incentives. the old policy was any company no matter the size or type, give them an incentive to come to new jersey or stay in new jersey but hybrid work has changed that. is figuring out a way to be popular in new jersey. stuart: i could tell you had to be popular. could you do that? become pro business and encourage people to move and stay there. stuart: i would like my taxes to be cut. the top story of the day was,
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the faa suffered a systemwide outage earlier. thousands of flights have been delayed. right now it is going to rise 5,417. grady trimble in chicago, what is the latest? >> like you mentioned, flights from o'hare and midway and chicago are taking off once again. this side of the terminal everything looks normal. all morning people have been checking in, checking their bags hand going through security. the problems are on the other side where for several hours this morning here and across the country, for the first time since 9/11, no planes were allowed to take off by order of the faa. because flights are now taking off again doesn't mean things are back to normal, anything but. look at the departures here at o'hare. all of the orange you see up there is a delayed flight. it says the new time and it is blaming air traffic control,
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which i think is their way of placing the blame on the faa for this system outage. as far as what causes outage, we still don't know. the president has been briefed on the situation, says they are looking into it. pete buttigieg says he will have the faa look into it. as of right now, even though everything is back up and running, still a lot of problems and a lot of questions. stuart: grady trimble at o'hare. almost call you grady oh trimble, but that is not right. then there is this. prince harry denies he posted about killing caliban fighters in his tell all memoir. >> it is a lie. they ripped that section away and said here it is, he is boasting and that is dangerous. my words are not dangerous. they are spending my words, very dangerous. blue when he is saying the media is dangerous. martha maccallum has covered
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stuart: update on the markets, up 90 points but look at the nasdaq, solid gain, up 1%. the nasdaq has been doing very well, up 110 points. lauren is back. amazon, focus on that, it is up 4%. lauren: one of the reasons the nasdaq is outperforming. bad news, lower the price target to one hundred 40, still decent, because of slower growth for their business but very bullish on their ad business. they say that will gain market share, that has been recently beaten up, they are cutting jobs. everything looks promising. stuart: 84%, that is a big gain.
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how about chewy? i presume they are up this morning nicely, 5%. lauren: a top pick for this year. it is called autoship, retain subscribers by continuing to send them petfood. we put you on autopilot. they like that and also think they are in a good position because people love their pets. stuart: vast expansion of pet ownership after the pandemic. you should come and see hoboken. how about revian and? stock is up 5%. lauren: they missed production targets over the past year and the wall street journal said two executive's in particular have left, the head of their body and in teary engineering and their parts purchasing meaning the thinking is some people made bad decisions which is why they can't crank these
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luxury suvs out fast enough. stuart: a are gone at the stock goes up. thanks. the governor of florida, ron desantis looking to strip disney world of its self-governing status and replace it with a state run board. ashley webster is in orlando. give me the latest. ashley: he is doubling down, governor ron desantis, remember last april, he signed a bill that actually eliminated the reedy creek improvement district, the tax district disney has been operating for 50 years. it is an area of 25,000 acres, 39 square miles but desantis says no more. 's office sent this statement when we asked for comment that says the corporate kingdom has come to a end. under the proposed legislation, disney will no longer control its own government but will live under the same laws as everyone else, will be
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responsible for their outstanding debts and will pay their fair share of taxes. the gauntlet is laid down. this all began when then disney ceo got into a dispute with the governor over florida's parental rights and education legislation. critics called it the don't say gay bill. he is gone now, bob iger back in charge, he reportedly apologized to disney employees for the company getting involved in a political fight. could that mean a reversal or compromise in the dispute? desantis's office says the governor doesn't make u-turns but state lawmakers say the original deal with disney is outdated and needs to be changed. take a listen. >> the idea of a private corporation being able to effectively secede from the state and run itself however it wants and issue debt that is owed by taxpayers, that is a
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bad idea, whether you are a republican or a democrat, it is not a good idea. ashley: just not a good idea says that republican lawmaker. the question is, can bob iger, who is more politically deaf, can meet with ron desantis and find common ground, some sort of compromise but republicans hold solid majorities in this state in the house and senate. governor desantis has no problems pushing through his priorities but is doubling down and not backing off. stuart: he really does. thanks a lot. the new college of florida's school board used be made of progressives but governor to santos pointed six new conservatives to the board. rob smith joins me now. this is going to be a complete hostile takeover of the new school. it will be a complete reversal from progressive to
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conservative. you've got a smile on your face. do you approve? >> absolutely. when you look at what is going on this is another example of governor ron desantis playing offense. he played offense when it came to covid policies, he played offense when it comes to weaning woke stuff out of k-12 educational system and he is doing it with the college and university system. conservatives buried their heads in the sand over the last 30 to 40 years and ignored the college and university system which allowed liberals and radical leftists to take over this entire system to promote their agenda. the craziest thing to me is conservative and republican parents would shell out tens of thousands of dollars to these institutions to send their children to be indoctrinated and this is a good first step at conservatives taking back some of that. and so when you look at people
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who were on this board like chris rufo who was a conservative, a well respected academic who does good work so the idea that that person who was very achieved and sending a college student, it is absolutely ridiculous. stuart: i want to talk about that. the liberal students at the new college are in meltdown mode. one student says, quote, our safety is at risk, we are concerned about potential consequences, becoming a battleground, which could mean violence. people who show up to intimidate us and start violence. is your safety at risk in a conservative environment? you are a black gay male. do you feel at risk in a conservative environment? >> i do not feel at risk in any conservative environment.
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when you hear younger people, especially this person in the story, that person was trans, when you hear young people acting in this way, being so uncomfortable, literally shaking good because they may be exposed to ideas that are different from their own, it does speak to the fact there are a lot of young americans being coddled in these safe spaces and the dangerous part of this is these people graduate from these colleges and universities, take that woke ideology into corporate culture which we are having to route out of corporate culture. my last point here is the people that are enemies of this country, thinking about china, they look at stuff like this, how fundamentally week young people coming up in this university system are right now and they laugh at it. so these young people do need to be exposed to different
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belief systems, different ways of thinking and does not put their safety at risk. that is ridiculous and it is emotionally manipulative argument these people make to shut down any conversations. stuart: rob smith, founder and president of the douglas society, thanks for being with us. the pentagon reverses course and drops the covid vaccine mandate. we will tell you where that leaves service members who are discharged for refusing the jab. the covid public health emergency is set to expire today, but president biden is expected to extend it for the eleventh time. hillary vaughan has a report on that next. ♪
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stuart: the covid public health emergency is set to expire today, but president biden is expected to extend it, maybe for the eleventh time. extended it until when? >> we don't know. we expect them to extend it. we don't know how long they will continue to extend it but if they decide not not to ultimate, this could be the beginning of the end of the pandemic in the administration's eyes. politico is reporting officials looking to end the emergency designation for covid as soon as this spring. something they thought about last summer and put it a. the president did hint last month in remarks that covid is not what it used to be. >> president biden: things are getting better. covid no longer control our lives. our kids are back in school. people are back to work. more people are working than
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ever before. americans are building again, innovating again, dreaming again. >> reporter: hhs telling politico it hasn't decided whether to end the public health emergency saying, quote, as hhs committed to earlier, we will provide a 60 day notice to state before any possible termination or expiration. even if the president is ready to move on republicans on capitol hill say not so fast. at the top of their to do list is getting to the bottom of where covid came from and how all the money the federal government spent in emergency aid was spent. >> our first committee hearing will be on the covid funds. we spend trillions of dollars in the name of covid. there has not been a single hearing to oversee those funds during the entire covid pandemic. that shows democrats weren't concerned about wasteful spending. >> reporter: there are two key policies the white house has to
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consider before ending this public health emergency. you have title 42, which the courts have ordered to stay in place until spring, that is based on the public health emergency. you have the student loan payment pause that is expected to expire at the end of june which is also based on reasoning from the administration that because of the pandemic, public health emergency, people cannot make those loan payments at this time. stuart: when is an emergency not an emergency? that is a political question. thanks for joining us. see you soon. the department of defense has officially ended its covid vaccine mandate for servicemembers. what happens to all those people who were discharged because they wouldn't get the jab? >> they won't be reinstated. no back pain, no benefits. the good news is discharge records will be cleared or removed of flags. this is the number we are dealing with, 8400 members were
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discharged because of the vaccine mandate. republicans pushed for more for the unvaccinated, they didn't get it. the department of defense just removed the mandate and only did that to get the national defense authorization act over the finish line to the president's desk. that provides $800 billion. stuart: that is why they did it. the emergency room visits on the rise in california where recreational marijuana. 's lauren: this is from the american geriatric society. 360 people over 65 went to the er for cannabis related issue. that swelled to 12,000 in 2019. why older americans are hospitalized, because of marijuana?
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it can slow reaction times, if you mix it with another drug, a huge number of er visits. stuart: tom brady, the biggest equityholders in ftx, the former stake won't get wiped out. he we have details in the next hour. the governor of new york announces a plan to ban natural gas, by 2,025. we will deal with it next. ♪ ♪
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mostly because they don't want to their choice to be taken away. like you said in new jersey the vast majority use gas stoves like this one, not just the new jersey issue but across the country, 39% of homes in america use gas for cooking. take a listen. >> my preference would be gas because you cook better on them. go to any nice restaurants, look in the kitchen they have gas appliances. >> i paid extra to switch to gas. >> in the end, if i can save money, yes, if there are incentives, sure, absolutely. if not i will stick with whichever option is cheaper. >> reporter: within the industry people were concerned when they heard banning gas stoves, the concerned about got consumer product safety
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commission is the length between that and childhood asthma. those in the industry say that's not a problem. the cessation of home appliance manufacturers which represent gas and electric stoves they say it's not about what you cook on but what you breathe in and you can see the smoke coming off of these eggs and that is the real concern. if you breathe that and whether it is a gas or electric stove, that's the concern. the commission looks into ventilation and doesn't jump to any conclusions. take a listen. >> where does that leave consumers? go out to stores to purchase an entirely new appliance to convert and electric panel to have a product, we need to let the data and science speak about gas products. >> reporter: you mentioned before the break some states are already taking a step in
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new york, they already banned gas appliances in new buildings in the next couple years so i am assuming that another strike against new york. that is why we are in new jersey. back to you. stuart: thanks very much. look who is here now. mike taylor has joined us before. he is the owner of combined energy services company. what do you think of governor hochul wanting to ban natural gas in new homes by 2025? >> this is a big issue and complete lunacy. new york state, we had 700,000 people move out of our state in the last two years alone. we have $220 billion budget and $150 million deficit this year, and we could be $6.2 billion deficit. we will force electric everything on consumers, i told you last time that new
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construction can't have any new fossil fuels let alone cooking stoves, heating, whether it be heating oil, propane or natural gas, illegal in two years, 2030 we are laminating the choice for all consumers when your heating system or appliances in your home, forcing you to switch to electric. estimates are it be $20-$50,000 to put heat pumps in the average home if your electric service can handle it. the national -- national grid, the amount of electricity we consume in the summertime they use four to five times as much in the winter, how are we going to accomplish this in new york state? we don't have the electric to do it. of the when we will electricity come from? this is all about climate change. the climate warriors insist no fossil fuels, no natural gas no matter what and at some point, i hope, we have a vote on this because at the moment our freedom is being taken away
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from us, no vote. >> don't think consumers realize we are on the same trajectory as california, cars, trucks, boats, all gone. electrification in new york, we have to do something. i tell everybody, smarter energy.org, tell your elected officials we have to stop the bleeding, people are leaving new york state, unaffordable. stuart: good stuff, thanks for joining us. here is what we have just ahead. martha maccallum, tom fitton, border guy arthur sweatgo. ron desantis launched a hostile takeover of a college known for its progressive policies. he appointed new conservative members to the board in the sarasota. they will run the place very differently. students are apoplectic. that is "my take" and it is
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