tv Varney Company FOX Business May 12, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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stuart: i remember this. aretha franklin. no relation to any of the stories we are covering, just a good tune. it is 10:00 eastern time, straight to the money, the nasdaq is up 8, the s&p is up 6, not much movement this money but look at regional banks. i sense some recovery. we have the western alliance up a little. pat west is up one cent, not much movement but we are not in a slide with the regional banks, the 10 year treasury yield down to 3.40% on the 10 year and bitcoin is down 26,400 this morning. just got the latest read on consumer sentiment. the number?
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ashley: good morning. it might because it is disappointing, coming and it 67.7, nothing anybody would consider, the expectations was for 63.0. a drop-off on the expectation, down from 63. 5 which was the final reading in april, this is the pulmonary from may. not a massive reaction in the market, expectations for when you're inflation coming in at 4.5%, the estimate was 4.6% so pretty much on line but sentiment dropping. stuart: looking on the left-hand side of the screen, i see virtually no market reaction to that number. now this. donald trump appeared in a cnn town hall wednesday night. in my opinion he looked and sounded sharp the he was on his game. that's a problem for cnn.
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for years the network known as the clinton news network had been a showcase for trump hatred. when cnn gave they hated former president 70 minutes of airtime you could expect some opposition. what cnn got was open revolt from the inside and tirade of hostility from the outside. anderson cooper took to the airwaves last night to call trump's appearance disturbing. he told viewers, quote, you have every right to be outraged and angry and never watch this network again. why doesn't he resign? alexandria ocasio cortez said it was shameful and a profoundly irresponsible decision. they hated almost everything, the audience reaction and giving trump a platform but they chose to overlook a couple things. compared to president biden, trump looked really good, the left doesn't want to see that
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or admit it, trump did not slur his words or lose his train of thought, looks like he could have gone on for hours, how you look on television is important in politics. the left knows this, they are aware of trump's energy and biden's lack of it. another embarrassment, trump said i did finish the wall, built a wall for that they call him a liar. all they've got is quibbling how many miles of wall trump did or did not build. i was a founder of cnn in 1980, the network took a left turn in the 1990s when they became the clinton news network, they are trying to recover but i don't think the trump haters will never let them. second hour of varney just getting started. what is a friday morning on
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friday morning with tammy bruce? i want to play a little more from anderson cooper last night. >> many if you think cnn shouldn't have given many platform to speak. i understand the anger of that right. you have every right to be anger and outrage but you think staying in a silo and only listening to people you agree with will make that person go away? stuart: trump fired back at those who criticized cnn for even holding the town hall, said they did the right thing, tammy bruce, go through your reaction. >> they did the right thing for ratings. it was a blockbuster night because people want to hear from the man that is the leading candidate for the republican nomination, a former president been considering what is happening in the country people want to hear from him. what is disturbing is the rhetoric from cooper and others
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mirrors the reasoning to establish the censorship state, people we disagree with should not be heard. keep it away, that is what fed the blocking of the new york post, destruction of twitter by the left and all of this, now that we are learning with the twitter files this massive federal state of censorship and the argument being differing opinions are dangerous and you see that kind of panic in the left, the audience did applaud, the audience that was there in person applauded and wanted to hear from him instead of bemoaning that people were hearing it, this is a matter of questioning why are people applauding, why were the ratings so high and other editorials including the new york post that they did him a big favor. allowing a person to be heard by the country who has ideas that they like, this is a man who still speaks to things and their fear of him being heard
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confirms all our complaints that the left has become a censorship based state that cannot tolerate alternative ideas or better ideas. stuart: do you think president biden could handle a town hall with an even vaguely opposition interview? >> no and that is why they keep him away from it. this make sure are sharper d bader, being on this network, having a variety of opinions you have to be prepared to defend your ideas, that makes you the better candidate overall in the better governor, the better president, when you shield your self to that you remain unprepared for someone like trump, there's more people like trump. is not the only one. it will come generation after generation but we've got to allow this to occur and he remains by his existence he
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exposes them, shame on all these individual to say the option is to silence him, that's a reasonable thing to be angry about, the regional thing is why do other people like him, what's happening in the country, what do we need to be prepared for? they don't have answers for that. stuart: always good. do you warm up for this? you are all right. next case, florida governor desantis locked in two new endorsements. are these endorsers from florida republican lawmakers? ashley: not even close. he got a boost in iowa, 21 hours live from here, the first caucus in the country and two high profile state republicans endorsed his potential presidential bid. desantis is set to hold a pair
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of events saturday in iowa the same day donald trump is set to appear at a rally in des moines. santos helped cool in $4.3 million in fundraising for state and local gop organizations coast-to-coast, the governor of florida has headlined ten republican party events in 8 states that have been sold out. last month, 500 republican leaders and activists had a hotel bar room in manchester for the annual fundraising. local officials say with desantis's help, it was sitting fundraising records. raising money. stuart: and pulling it in. back to the markets. we have a little green for the dow. fractional loss for the s&p and 25 point loss for the nasdaq.
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are you betting against the banking sector? betting against banks? >> the trend is down and bank stocks go lower. every day i look at the list and it is full even now, big bank stocks like northern trust, or smaller bank stocks, trend is lower, and look at the indices, 40% but the big banks are down 10% on the last six months. and etf called spf, bank stocks go down in the trend continues. stuart: did you say scf? and want to talk financial advisors.
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one month treasuries yielding 5.5%, 30 year treasuries, not supposed to work like that. banks are headed lower. stuart: let's pursue this, shorting bank stocks, betting bank stocks will go down, 2007-2008 financial crisis, that brought the banks down, short-sellers pushed down and down for good reasons. could your shorting of bank stocks lead to another crisis? >> what pushes bank stocks down is bad management. what shortselling does is provide more accurate prices, antagonism toward short prices so they can control the market, like lending the messenger because you don't like the
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message, it added volatility and made prices less accurate. it has nothing to do with short-sellers and bad policy for the federal reserve. they wanted to have that on your radar screen. stuart: by if you bank stocks are going down. i like these exotic ideas of yours. >> it is all about making money. come back in. i want to know what jamie dimon is saying about the debt ceiling. ashley: the june 1st deadline approaches, convening weekly sessions to assess the impact of a default even though there is doubt the country will default. >> president biden: i don't think will happen. the closer you get to it, the
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closer you get you are volatile and the treasury market has problems and we got to be careful. ashley: he also took a jab at donald trump for encouraging republican lawmakers to think of raising the debt limit even if it means default but also advocated removal of the that ceiling. ashley: got it. last one, microsoft just signed a deal with the nuclear fusion company, hellion energy. ashley: it will provide microsoft electricity from its first-ever fusion plant. fusion is where two atoms such as hydrogen are heated to extreme temperatures and fuse into one heavier atom releasing a large amount of energy.
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it could help the world to cut emissions linked to climate change. its plan that it's plant is expected to be online by 2028 and expects to generate 50 mw for a 1-year ramp up period. it could supply up to a thousand us homes. want to know how much this is? and no financial details yet. stuart: more than a thousand migrants will arrive in new york city every day now the title 42 is lifted. where are they being housed. senator lindsey graham and alejandra mayorkas, lying about border security, roll it. >> we are on track to have more illegals this year than last year on top of title 42, misleading the american people and he should go. he should be fired.
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stuart: brandon judd on that next. ♪ is? - what? - especially when it comes to your finances. - are you a certified financial planner™? - i'm a cfp® professional. - cfp® professionals are committed to acting in your best interest. that's why it's gotta be a cfp®. ♪ choosing miracle-ear was a great decision. like when i decided to host family movie nights. miracle-ear made it easy. i just booked an appointment and a certified hearing care professional evaluated my hearing loss and helped me find the right device calibrated to my unique hearing needs. now i enjoy every moment. the quiet ones and the loud ones. make a sound decision. call 1-800 miracle now, and book your free hearing evaluation. with gold and copper prices pushing towards all-time highs,
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hotel just behind me according to a report from the new york post, this was a landmark in new york city that shuddered during the pandemic and could next become a housing site from migrants. we reached out to the mayor's office which declined to confirm this report. it said no site is confirmed until we announce it but the new york post did add this deal for the roosevelt hotel could cost as much as $225 million over three years. 100 hotels and other facilities have been converted into housing from migrants and mayor eric adams is suspending the right to shelter rules in the city which opens the door to housing migrant families in gyms another congregate settings. they reporting closing down city streets to house migrants intents and inside central
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park. listen to this? >> what we are doing is unprecedented to any other municipality. when we spoke to mayors from other cities we are no longer giving bags. we are leading the way so if we have to re-examine the law to make it adjust to the real-life humanitarian crisis we have, we have to do that. >> this migrant crisis is create an cost for the big apple and creating tension between mayor adams and president biden. city officials recently requested $350 million in federal aid to support migrants in new york city. the city only got $30 million from the federal government, drop in the bucket of what they requested. a smaller amount compared to the estimates of what it will
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cost the city. $4 billion through the middle of next year. stuart: thank you very much. border patrol authorized its agents to release migrants into the us without court dates. the judge has just ordered them to stop doing that. they can't come into the united states without a court date. brandon judd is president of the national border patrol council and joins me now. now that a judge says you can't come in without a court date are they going to pile up on the border? >> that never happened. there are many options we can do, cut back on the paperwork, expect other agencies to do their job and put this on border patrol agents, we are overwhelmed and there are other things we can do, never release people into the united states without giving them a court date.
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the judge was absolutely correct, there are other options we have. when we look at what we are dealing with, thousands of people crossing the border illegally, completely overwhelming resources. we had one station, 72 across the southwest border, one station yesterday, 44 agents showed up to duty, only four agents deployed control border. the other 40 agents doing administrative work. transport, processing, detention security. we had four agents patrolling the border in that area. cartels control the border. cartels control the border, can't protect the american people. that is the issue we are going to stop tomorrow. stuart: you sound mad as hell and think you are. the rest of the border patrol feel the same way.
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>> with are sick and tired. that he does not give any facts. also extremely upset at the mainstream media, tired of not asking tough questions, if the american people understood they would put a stop to it. they would put pressure on elected officials. they are not doing it because they don't understand what is going on. stuart: senator lindsey graham says mayorkas should be fired. watch this tape. >> misrepresenting the solutions being offered. they won't work. we are on track to have more illegal crossings this year than last year. after title 42 repeal, this is a moment coming out of the department of homeland security.
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i've never been more disappointed and disgusted than i am now. i like this man but what he is saying won't work. he is misleading the american people and he should go. he should be fired. stuart: i don't think it matters if he goes, he would be replaced by someone else who pushes biden's policies. >> it would send a clear message that somebody is trying to do something. i would support his termination. he does need to go because he's been derelict of duty. of the next person does the same thing, needs to go as well. i know for a fact he knows what needs to be done. i met with him on multiple occasions prior to his confirmation. i used to meet with him on a regular basis. i refused to meet with him today because i know he's not going to do what is right, there is no point talking to him because he is going to
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pander to open border activists. what we are dealing with is activism is running legitimate law enforcement agencies. we have this chaos and crisis that will continue to go on day in and day out and the american people suffer because fentanyl will flow into the united states and thousands and thousands of american citizens will die. stuart: we do hear you loud and clear. thanks for being on the show. always appreciate it. then - sylvia garcia tried to use migrant children in cages to fight republicans immigration bill. it did not go as planned. we will explain it. we are three weeks from a potential default, scheduled debt talks being the clade -- delayed. senator mike braun is on the senate budget committee and will explain. ♪
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stuart: on the markets, seeing a bit of red ink, nasdaq down 36 points and the dow struggling to maintain a 14 point gain. we are three weeks from possible default on our debt but scheduled debt talks between president biden and congressional leaders have been delayed. grady trimble on capitol hill. why the delay? >> white house official says we should take that is a sign of progress, that the talks between the two sides are going well. the meeting was supposed to take place today between president biden, speaker mccarthy and other congressional leaders. it has been pushed back to sometime next week but at this point, any delay in those meetings takes us closer to default. >> they have no plan, no proposed savings and no clue. mr.
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president, my message is very simple. do not miss another deadline like you just missed on title 42. our country cannot afford it. >> reporter: senate majority leader chuck schumer sent a letter to his democratic colleagues saying this. we wall, bipartisan debate about our nation's fiscal future but as the president, leader jeffries, and i, made plain to our republican colleagues, we must not do so under the reckless threat of catastrophic default by the hard right. you see the two sides are digging in their original positions, at least publicly. we are also learning some of the potential consequences of us default, payment for programs like social security, veterans benefits, healthcare programs, snap, food stamps, could be at risk. interest rates could spike and infrastructure projects could
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come to a screeching halt and did not meet a deal so a lot at stake as the meeting is postponed. stuart: thanks very much. senator mike braun, republican from indiana, joins us now. the talks are delayed. is this good news or bad news for america? >> 41/2 years, this is a combination of no budgeting, not engaging appropriators. this is a little different because some of us that are fiscal conservatives said we need to do something different about what this reminds me of is a version of the past, this is a formal game of chicken in terms of who's going to say what they actually intend to do first. if you look at what the speaker said yesterday and schumer, it doesn't go far. my opinion, let's put the big picture in place the biden
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administration put a budget out that puts us $20 trillion more in debt in ten years. whether they are going to do anything substantive, i doubt it. i think the dynamics are different. at least our leadership in the senate signed on along with 40 some other republican senators, that we are behind mccarthy and what the house is doing. whether that materializes i'm not holding my breath. the dynamic is different from what it was and several senators had meetings with the folks in the house that are true fiscal conservatives to get to this point. i am hopeful, but let's wait and see. stuart: house republicans past a bill on border security which restricts asylum protections and would finish the border wall. are we sure that this dies in
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the senate, doesn't necessarily die in the senate? could a couple of democrats crossover? >> here's a fairly clear observation. and all the years i have been here, it would be like pulling a wisdom tooth to get a democrat over on a major republican idea. i asked the senator who had been here many years how many times we dragged democrats into something that is a key republican initiative. he said over three decades he couldn't remember one time. i don't think that will occur. we would need 11 of them, with all 49 of us, to get the 60 votes to do that. i don't think that's going to happen. the merits of that issue are on our side. i was there a couple years ago, 16, 17 republican senators when it was going from a trickle
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under the trump administration to one fourth of what it is now. look at the mess we've got. that is fully on the shoulders of democrats. stuart: they should pay a political price but not sure they will. senator mike braun, see us again soon. democrat congresswoman sylvia garcia tried to use photos of migrant children in cages to fight the republicans's immigration bill. i understand it didn't go the way she planned. ashley: not at all because garcia used a photograph taken in 2,014 when president obama was in charge and joe biden was vice president. garcia used the picture along with a statement that said house republicans child deportation act is extreme and wrong. the image blown up in size place alongside her as she spoke from the house floor in
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opposition to the secure the border act of 2023. that bill calls for renewed efforts to build a border wall. more border patrol agents and a end to catch and release policies but garcia hasn't responded since it was pointed out that photograph was taken when democrats were in charge. stuart: thanks. now this. don't forget to send in your friday feedback. we want your questions. what do you want to know about us. it's not too late, email us, varneyviewers@fox.com. on musk is stepping down as ceo of twitter. who is going to replace him? kelly o'grady tells all next. ♪ ♪
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stuart: not much of a moving market for stock, the nasdaq is down 41. that's where we are after an hour and 10 minutes of business. elon musk says he's chosen a new ceo of twitter. he will step down from that role in the coming weeks. kelly o'grady with me. tell me more about his successor please. >> reporter: it looks like it will be linda yakarino. she was nbc universal's chairman of advertising at partnerships until a few hours ago when the company announced immediate departures this morning. musk was in talks with her for the top twitter job.
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musk teased the news in in a tweet and a couple takeaways we can get from this. the choice is a woman starting in six weeks but he's going to remain heavily involved. my role will transition to being executive chair overseeing product software. and that means the new ceo will be responsible for the business side of things and figure out how to monetize the platform and he will need someone who understands add sales with the loss of several high-profile brands. this would fit the bill. we dug into her little bit. she was an appointee you to one of donald trump's special counsel's, very well respected in advertising. sources tell me, at a conference they write in miami last month, she law want to the taught role at twitter. on the tesla side investors were happy to hear this, openly called for him to step down in december and the stock getting a nice boost from the news. the ceo if it is linda will be
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walking into a tough environment. a lot of layoffs and\lose we will look for that news today. stuart: elon musk warned users about the new direct message feature. what is he saying about it? ashley: he tweeted that warning get saying, quote, early version of encrypted direct messages just launched, says try it but don't trust it yet. very honest, isn't he? the encrypted direct messages feature is part of a number of updates musk has been employing to the platform since taking over in october. he says the release of encrypted dms will grow in sophistication rapidly tweeting, quote, the asset test is i could not see your dms even if there was a gun to my head. the company says that should be
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standard anyway but acknowledges not quite there yet. stuart: twitter is facing competition on the blue sky platform. what is the platform? ashley: it has been backed by jack dorsally. the social media platforms have no single leader and are not beholden to commercial or financial interests. advocates say they are less likely to collect users data unless susceptible to censorship. blue sky has exploded in popularity reporting 628,000 downloads in april up 600% from march. whatever it is is doing well. stuart: we told you about the retail exodus plaguing san francisco.
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shoplifters are ransacking a target in san francisco every ten minutes. we will target be the next retailer to leave that city? democrats in washington state refused to criminalize drug use. there solution, tell teenagers to carry around max alone took --naxalone to combat drug overdoses. ♪ if your child has diabetes,
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stuart: show me regional banks and i will show you the market going down, the western alliance up a little. they are all down again and that is putting pressure on the overall market which is in the red. dow is up 20 come in nasdaq 35. democrats in washington state are refusing to criminalize drug use but they are asking teenagers to carry around narcan which reduces an overdose. jason rantz, they are pushing
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narcan overtreatment. >> one hundred% of nothing wrong with talking about it, it is effective in saving lives but the problem is the strategy from the state seems to be harm reduction instead of actual treatment. i would argue we should be doing both, put more funding in support into the treatment aspect rather than just saving someone's life, let's get them treated so they are not an addict. stuart: would you agree with me on this? i see a lot of people intoxicated on city streets, not just new york but a lot of different places i go to. i think public intoxication of what other drug, public intoxication is a very bad thing and should be outlawed. what say you? >> one hundred%, how do you go about attacking that issue? i don't think we should throw
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every person in jail because they are addicted to a drug. you have to use the connell justice system to get someone into treatment. there are some folks who refuse to get the help we are offering them and if there are no consequences they will continue the deadly behavior. not only does it hurt them but it hurts everybody else around them. nobody wants to go into a business surrounded by people who look like zombies because they took fentanyl. people are scared to take kids to parks that are overrun with these folks. i wish we would think about it more holistically across the country but it is in the cities and states that have the greatest drug legalization culture. stuart: tell me about the town of bellingham in washington state known as the hippie town in washington state. i know they band open drug use, it is an arrestable crime.
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why are they doing that? why is the hippie town doing that? >> because the direction they were going, we are seeing year over year huge surgeon opioid overdose deaths. what you are starting to see is even left-wing cities stepping up saying we can't continue to go down this direction, we are not going to go the length of making possession illegal yet but we have to do something. there whole point is we are going to use the police, the threat of going to jail to put someone in treatment but if you are not willing to go into treatment, if you want to detox over a weekend in a jail cell okay, don't recommend it. it is pretty rough. stuart: it seems there is the beginnings of a reaction against public intoxication in so many cities.
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is the tide beginning to turn? slowly but beginning? >> it feels that way. it is very slow. the fact they are going in this direction, they are facing a little headwind from the activist community and not backing down. as long as they move forward, as long as they continue to ignore the most extreme voices, we will see meaningful movement in the long-term, short-term, we will save a lot of lives. stuart: the activists, thanks very much indeed. one target store in san francisco says they have seen shoplifting every ten minutes at that store. i thought everything was already locked up. what is going on here? ashley: almost everything. they posted social media, large quantities of stock including things like shampoo, deodorant,
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some foods are behind barriers but it is unclear how effective they are. workers at a target store in a shopping mall, san francisco's union square detailed the daily battle against brazen shoplifters who could be seen shoveling goods into bags before taking off, goods including trays of lipstick and nail polish cleaned out by shoplifters every day. aluminum foil is a popular target it is is used to help drug users smoke fentanyl. other retailers in the area have given up. nordstrom, whole foods, anthropology, office depot, marshalls, the gap, banana republic, they all decided we are going to shut down. why bother paying for anything when progressive policies have no deterrent and no consequences which might as well walk in and grab it and walk out. stuart: they are telling you it is not immoral to steal, it is
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okay to steal. it is ridiculous. thanks very much, see you again shortly. still had, pete hegseth on the migrant invasion happening right now. steve tilton talking about california's reparations program and brett holden on the investigation into the biden family business. the president and vice president are intentionally ignoring what is happening on the southern border. we are being invaded and they are doing nothing to stop it. that is "my take" next. ♪ ♪ ...
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become a partner in hope today. i can't, you know, thank my parents enough for making sure that this connection is here. one of the things that my mother told me when she was in the hospital, she didn't tell me, actually, she couldn't speak at the time, but she wrote it down... "go see alicia." oh, my goodness. you know, and there was never a time that you were too busy. there was never a time you said i'll call you back, you know. i needed to be there to carry you through, just like, you know, some of my friends carried me through. >> i think we've got a little room to go down before we go up. >> court data the last decade says nine out of 10 of the people who claim asylum will never get relief in those courts and you get order of removal, how often do you leave? 6% of the time. >> we're seeing effects of joe biden's border crisis every single day. we feel it in our communities. we see it in
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