tv Varney Company FOX Business September 19, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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>> this excessive debt and spending shut down the american dream for so many americans. homes are unaffordable, cars are unaffordable, even groceries now, that is a direct result of the behavior of washington dc. >> his campaign is in trouble. you have democrats openly talking about how they don't want him to run. the economy is not good. foreign policy is not good. border policy is not good. crime is rampant and this is something that people associate with president biden. >> the cartels are laughing at
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joe biden is they surge the board we are a whole bunch of migrants and play our system to their benefit and then joe biden has the audacity to tell the american people for the boarder and the significance of the auto worker strike. two electric vehicles that no one wants to buy. stuart: this is the blue sky electric orchestra. >> love that one. stuart: you remember that one? >> yellow. stuart: yeah, me. good morning, everyone. 11:00 eastern. tuesday, september 19th. first of the market and we're take ago further leg south. dow off 230 and nasdaq down 118 and interest rates are up and the price of oil is up and we've been facing a government shut down.
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apple 177 and amazon down more than $4. 4.34%. now this. this may sound like a minor league subject. unworthy of editorial attention. but it stuck out to me like a sore thumb. senate leader schumer relaxed the dress code. it used to be business attire for men and women, and it still is for visitors and to senate staffers. but now senator john fedderman, democrat, pennsylvania, will be allowed to dress how he pleases. hoody and gym shorts. he hated wearing a suit and tie, i don't know why. perhaps business attire detracted from his man of the people image. since senator schumer needs every single vote he can get in the senate. why not create a fedderman exception. that's what he did?
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why he shouldn't, hoody and jim shorts convey no -- gym shorts convey no respect and don't dress like a slob and expect to be respected. fedderman is troubled bay stroke and depression and difficult for him to speak. do you need to separate yourself out even more? apparently yes. fedderman wants everyone to feel more comfortable. okay. but the united states senate is a place where serious business is conducted. the 6'8-inch tattooed senator fetterman outfitted in baggy shorts and baggy sweatshirt doesn't look serious. slobs and i'm very sorry if that offends anyone. do not attract respect. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: before we continue, i want to hear from john fetterman himself, watch this, please.
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>> i mean, i feel it's, you know, little more freedom, which should be bipartisanship. you know what i'm saying, i don't know why the right side seems to be losing their minds over it. like dogs and cats are living together and like the world is spinning off its access. you know, i think it's a good thing. stuart: okay, jimmy failla will have a go at this. are you with nerve nucleus dress like a -- me? dress like a slob and don't get respect? >> i'm all the way with you on this. it's so far beneath congress. they have an approval rating of 19%. schumer is like i've got it, casual fridays. doesn't make sense. you're supposed to be dressing for the job you want. isn't that what they say? apparently the job fetterman wants is selling weed behind a bowling allie. what is he -- alley. what is he wearing? we're making a big deal out of the country relaxing its standards and we're a country in decline and not even keeping up appearance that we're managing
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this thing. okay. when you start -- remember like there used to be signs at stores and it was like no shirt, no shoes, no service. you don't need that sign in the united states senate. no shoes we're voting on tuesday at 2:00 p.m.. you can be here. last week pennsylvania had a crazy escaped inmate story. the police like be on the rout for a man dressed better than senator. it's not a political point and american point and we're giving the country a happy hour in key west and there's different decor rum in different places and don't show up in a tank top. >> you will in the future. stuart: one country singer, i
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don't know this story but i'm sure you do. maren morris and quit country and blaming politics. the trump years blamed weirdly poll cal music. >> it's a strategic move. she's trying to get ahead of the curve of celebrity trump outrage. you know, trump's polling really well and seems like he's on a trajectory of the nomination and there's a points for maya of hysteria and leading the celebrity pack and they find currency doing this and more people in country music are telling that and backlash against jason al lean leading to not -- aldean not vandalizing small towns and pop culture and center left ideology. again and again the reaction
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that trump manufactured hysteria and applied today as in 2016. what i mean by that is donald trump hosted a show on nbc for 15 years and not some fringe guy in a shed leaving some up -- leading some uprising we didn't see seeping through the crabs and he was this mainstream of a human being as there's ever been. he was going on the view, he was going on howard stern and king of all media and not prince harry of all media as now and they had a manufactured hysteria to trump and that's all this is. what threat does trump represent to country muse and i can none? shut up. stuart: manufactured hysteria and that's why you come on the show. check the markets on that one. stuart: that just touched $33 trillion for the first time. that's a big number, isn't it? mike murphy is here. this debt is going to rise some more inevitably. when does it become a problem
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for the market? >> good morning, stuart. it doesn't any time soon and this is a gradual move. >> it's not that impact of the market at all and market can handle 10 trillion, 20 trillion, can handle 33 trillion and we have assets and liabilities and we can offset each other and i'd like to see them under control and it's not going to stop the stock market from making new highs. stuart: there's no way to argue and get out of the stock market? >> i'd point to last 150 years i would never because i work hard for my money and invest my money and the stock market has been the best place over history for money to be. stuart: tell me about the new company on the market that is, instacart. ipo today and they're expected to start trading around $39.50 i think, it's likely to the first trade. you don't get into ipos but any real value in this company, instacart?
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>> i don't typically but there's value in instacart. it's a profitable business and we plan to buy them. stuart: you do? >> we do. stuart: when it settles down or now today? >> a bit of both. depending on where it opens up, we'll be watching. i didn't expect the pop from 30-39 and left a little meat on the bone and look at arm holdings the way that traded, traded up and back into today with the ipo price or right about there. i think the story for me with instacart is more the technology. i don't think of it as a grocery delivery company and technology company and way people get groceries is changing and this company can make money and continue to expend their profits and bottom line profits, it'll be a good stock. stuart: fascinating and never heard you talk about an ipo like that. >> it'll be interesting. stuart: tell us when you buy it. stay there, please, mike. ashley, come back in. i want to know what's this about tiktok tracking its own workers. ashley: oh, yes, reportedly using a new employee badge to
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monitor how many days workers spend in the office. tiktok employees telling the new york times they received notices about the new tool called my rto, which reportedly monitors bad swipes into an office and they ask employees to explain absences on days when they were expected to be in the office. now, the staff will reportedly inform that had any deliberate consist disregard may result in disciplinary action. many tiktok employees are reportedly required to show up in person three times per week and more expected in five days and tiktok not alone and apple has begun tracking attendance and meta by the way sent a momentum -- memo they could be fifile fired if they don't comen three day as week.
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stuart: this is the same. what's wrong can it? >> nothing at all. stuart, before covid, people went to work five days a week. the idea of tracking an employee, you showed and you happen swiped a card and you expect to get pied and i expected you to show up for work. >> the whole narrative and soon enough if you don't want to be there. >> just five days. stuart: done want them to be six days? stuart: president biden attended a fundraiser in a packed new york theater last night and told the crowd, donald trump is determined to destroy the nation. more on that in just a moment. many voters continue to fight for a say in their child's education. it's one of the top issues ahead of 2024. edward lawrence talking to
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issue getting governor glen youngkin in virginia ed and this school district decided not to follow the plan laid out by the state for transgender students. that plan allows or honors the rights of parents over their kids to be notified when there's anything that needs to be talked about at home. now in some school districts, the debate is what to teach your kids, what version of history to coach, what to tell parents and how to expose kids to racial and gender ideas and stephanie linquist has three kids in the fairfax county school district and worries some lessons based on race are polarizing kids. >> it's polarizing us and i have mixed race kids and i don't want my school district trying to tell them what that means for their identity and then further encouraging them to see their
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friends in racial terms. that's not part of the government funded school and what parents should explain. >> kamala harris went after florida for teaching what she calls another version of slavery. >> i'm telling you the young leaders here, this thing is an intentional thing to suggest that we should not pay attention to race, should not pay attention to gender, should not pay attention to where people start out and then make allowances for how they can compete equally. reporter: when it comes to gender for example, new jersey governor signed a bill saying schools should not notify parent ifs their kids start to identify as transgenderrer and some of the school boards in the state have released their policies reversing that law. the governor has since sued so, stu, there's a lot going on and a lot to talk about and it's not
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reading, writing or math. back to you. stuart: edward, thank you. kennedy, the one and only joining me now. if parents decide which books go into stool libraries, did you notice that guarantee chaos. one says i don't like and it's out and others like it and it's back in. chaos. >> it comes from a top down educational system where parents don't have a say because we don't have school choice. the point of teacher's unions has been to divorce parents from the classroom so they want to do whatever they can. it doesn't matter the issue, to divorce parents from the system. this is why we need school choice because if you're the kind of parent that want assay in the curriculum and which teachers are tired, which administrators are there to oversee the school so you have a strong voice in your student's education, you should be able -- stuart: does school choice give you that? >> yes, if you have proper school choice. talk to parents at charter schools here in new york city. they love the involvement in charter schools and that's one of the reasons there's a much more positive outcome.
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yes, we don't have school choice and because they're trying to take demonize parents and take them out of the classrooms. when that doesn't work, you work with the federal government to label as domestic terrorist. stuart: all right. another one for you, a new california law will require judges to consider parents stance on gender identity in custody battles. is that okay? >> i think divorce is contentious enough and hard enough on families and on parents to try and keep everything together, to keep thicks positive and this is just another wedge. it is a gross overreach of the state, and there's so much wiggle room in this law. that means that if you have a loosey goosy progressive judge, they can look at a parent and say, oh, you don't want sterilization and medical intervention in your child's life, i'm taking them out of your home. that judge may be able to put your child to foster care to god knows whom because they happen to disagree with your personal stance, with your personal
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feelings about your child and whatever gender-affirming care that judge feels should be imposed upon your family. we're talking about children here. there's a line that i draw, you know, this is one of the reasons i'm a libertarian. we have to push back on the state because they're trying to take all of the control, especially in the most sensitive areas, over the most vulnerable citizens in society. stuart: you live in new york or a round about new york. >> i live in manhattan, baby. man happening as i call it, stuart. stuart: last night in man happening, whatever you want to call it, 1500 abject trump hahaters packed a new york thear saying donald trump is determined to destroy american knock seizure disorders. what gets me is all -- democracy. all these people hate tram and give money to a -- trump and give money to a president with his open border is ruining the city. >> and the country. that's why 70% of people don't think joe biden is up for a
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second term. i agree with them, but these people love to live in their bubble. they only, you know, read certain media and associate with certain people and they're not curious about why other people, include ago lot of democrats, don't think this president is capable of handling a second term. i don't think our country is capable of handling a second biden term. go to the theater and huff your gas or whatever you do. it's a disconnection from reality. i don't think trump should be president again. i think we need new people, new ideas, and a solid rational limited government course for our country. stuart: would you stay right there for me, i have another subject in just a moment. >> sure. stuart: meanwhile, one father is suing a hospital after witnessing his wife's c-section. okay. ashley, it's all yours. tell me more. ashley: i'll try to explain this one. a man in australia sued the melbourne hospital why he watch his wife deliver a baby via
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c-section birth in 2018 claiming it left him with a psychotic illness. he filed the lawsuit several years after the successful operation declaring that the experience led to a breakdown of his marriage. the father claims he was encouraged or permitted to ab serve the delivery and that led him to seeing his wife's internal organs and blood. what the heck was he expecting? he claims the hospital breeched a duty of care it owed to him and is liable to pay him damages. the suit asks for the damages of $1 billion australian dollars, $642 million u.s. dollars and the hospital said we did nothing wrong and a judge agreed and called the claim an abuse of process. i would sue him for being a moron. but that's just me. stu. stuart: it was in a australia t. >> how you doing, mate? seeing my wife's gigly bits covered in blood.
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stuart: kennedy, you're still with us, i can tell. give me a reaction again to this. >> first of all, is the baby healthy? i'm guessing it was healthy and a emergency c-section and make sure mom and baby were fine. if that's the case, man up and grow a pair. this is what happens. it's like, birthing children, raising children, extracting children, it's not for the weak. you entered into that contract to be a dad. suck it up, butter cup. stuart: could you see a trial lawyer making the same claim in america, mike? >> no. stuart: father of six. >> father of six. i have kind of been through that. i had six c-sections, my wife did. i was there for them. they tell you don't look at a certain time because you're exposed to a lot. but over six times, happily married and couldn't be happier so. stuart: just fascinating and we're spending more time on this
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subject than anything else. the market is down 250. >> that's because of that. stuart: thank you, kennedy. good stuff. just over a week until the second gop debate. it seems like republicans have picked donald trump as the clear front runner, that's the way it is at the moment. some donors are still a little unsure whether to back the former president or wait and pick someone else. mark me meredith will have our report on that shortly. james caravelle sounding the alarm on biden's chances in 2024 saying voters don't want this. they're trying to push biden out because they know he's going to lose. david webb walking over to the set momentarily and joining me here in new york and will take that one on and caravelle. we'll be back. ♪
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murphy, ace investor brings stock pick withs him and first is first solar. did you pick it because it's up 3% today? >> i didn't, but it's, iny it's worth points out the stock has been under a lot of pressure and sold off a lot in the last few weeks and get ago little bounce and not something investors should be looking to jump into on the bounce and entire solar industry is coming under fire and people aren't as excited about solar and consumers aren't using as much and i'd be careful jumping into first solar. stuart: it's a stock pick but when do you jump in? >> it's a stock pick to discuss but i don't own and wouldn't even if it sells off more. stuart: i forgot that definition of a stock pick. we'll move on. mgm. aren't they losing a lot of money because they were ransomware or something? >> i'm afraid to answer now. mgm dropped quite a bit after they had the cyber attack but this is one, stu, where i think
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the united states of america with the online gambling, online gaming, i think gaming is really picking up. i think mgm is something that's sold off in a big way, but look for a bounce and it might get interesting. i don't own but i'd watch. stuart: $8 on mgm. thank you, sir. second gop debate about eight days away now. while donald trump remains the front runner, some donors are still deciding whether or not they're going to bac back trump. mark meredith is with us. what donors are they considered in >> sexed debate roughly a week away and field of candidates feels set but there's one gop megadonor in the past spent a lot of money backing governor ron desantis who thinks another candidate could jump in still. >> if i had my dream, we'd have a great republican candidate in the primary younger of a different generation request a different tone for america and we'd have a debate around ideas
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and principles and policies to make this a great nation. we're not having that dialogue right now. that's really concerning to me. >> governor ron desantis was asked about the lack of support from griffin here on the show and the ceo you heard from, the governor told stuart earlier this morning he does not regret standing up to disney or mandating ocean policies and he's confident his strategy will pay off in the long run. >> you've got to earn this thing. i don't think that we can just sit there and say someone's entitled to be nominated. you've got to go answer questions, go to the communities, and that's what we're going to be doing so we continue to gain support in the early st states. >> that's one of the front runners and debate may give candidates polling in the single digits and breakout moment and nikki haley got a lot of buzz after the first debate and south carolina senator tim scott sees next week's debate as a chance to surge too. >> my hope is that with the
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thoughts business, we'll have the opportunity to talk about the economy and my made in america plan and have a chance to create 10 million new jobs, that will be remarkable. >> well, former president trump continues to dominate in the gop primary polls and his campaign says he'll once again skip the debate and instead be out in michigan for an event with the striking auto workers so, stu, a lot of sense of this next debate could be a game changer for some of the candidates but you'll have to let us know how that turns out, stu. stuart: only time will tell, mark. you know that. thanks very much, mark. democrat strategist james caravelle is warning about biden's chances in '24. he says the voters don't want this and that's in poll after poll after poll. you can't look at what you look at and not feel some apprehension here. david webb with us this morning. david, let me come out with it and say i think the democrats want biden team to move out because they don't think they can win. in politics, you've got to win. >> yeah, and the bottom line for
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this and when you look at a lot ovamericans make ago decision between octogenarian and next generation, thinking about it, that's where the population is. democratting over the -- democrats over republicans and that's rare, they know how to play the win game better no matter who they put in and push the policies and intermix obama, clinton identities, biden i, it es and mixed government. if biden doesn't fit, kick them out and put the next guy in. there's a voter strategy. stuart: think he'll get out? senior republicans come along and say, mr. president, time to move aside. ms. vice president, time to move aside. >> i don't think involvement i've been watching him for decades and watched part of his speech at un and he wants his picture on the wall but for two terms. stuart: in which case we've got a huge problem. how would the world react if somebody happened to our president, heaven forbid, and
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he's become president harris. what happens then? >> the world is in panic. what she's proven is she's unqualified and incapable. forget politics for a moment. put her on the stage under any r or d or any other denomination politically and she is incapable of doing the job. she wasn't before she was a senator and she certainly not now as vice president. stuart: quick one to culture wars, comedian hassan admitted to fabricated and embellishing some of the stories he's used in standup performances. that's quite an admission. where's the outrage? >> there won't be outrage. he played the race game, various is orism games and played for comedy. with comedy you embellish real life and tell funny stories about your family and other things around real life. he played into a narrative. he's a liar, pretending to be a comedian, and he's now being called out. stuart: no outrage?
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nobody's saying anything about it? >> they won't because they protect those who carry out the narrative. this is the orthodoxy of the left. if you speak the right thing today, you're n. if tomorrow you say the l wrong thing, you're russell brand. stuart: you're in miami? >> i am. stuart: time to move to naples, i think. stuart: less than two weeks from what might be a government shutdown. speaker mccarthy plans to have been met with stiff opposition from the gop republican congressman. congressman lance gooden joining us shortly. whose side is he on? we'll try to short it out. the union's president said they're not going to let the ev industry be built on the backs of workers. grady trimble on the ground in wayne, michigan, and he'll join us next. ♪
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stuart: okay, we've got something of a selloff. we've got a fed meeting today. the market doesn't think we're going to get a rate hike, but they're worried about now rate cuts until somewhere down the road. we've got the yield on 2-year treasury going up to 5.08%. that's a selloff cocktail. we have the dow down 200 and nasdaq down 100 points. now this. it's day five of the auto worker's strike. grady trimble in wayne, michigan. grady, any progress at all in the negotiations? reporter: stu, the talks are happening but there's a lot for the two sides to work through. one of the issues that they're working through today and throughout these talks is the transition to electric vehicles. from the workers perspective sports grill the union's perspective, they're concerned that as auto makers transition to evs, it'll require fewer
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workers and that is obviously a problem. the auto makers investing in ev, they're losing a lot of money already and on top of that, labor costs compared to nonunion shops like tesla and auto makers get a bad deal and it could drive up the labor costs even more for them. i had a chance to catch up with the coo for north america of stellantis today. i asked him what role evs are playing in the contract negotiations. >> it's a critical role and we all have to be competitive today for today's vehicles and ice and plug in hybrids and we have to be just as competitive if not more so tomorrow and a technology costing today 40 to 50% more.
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reporter: there's a noon deadline and they'll ramp up this strike by walking out at more plants. stu. stuart: grady, we hear you, thanks indeed. mike murphy with me. this strike is about electric vehicles. let me offer an opinion. whatever the outcome in terms of negotiations and settlement, electric vehicle prices go up. tesla and china win. what say you? >> i think tesla wins stuart, but it's interesting. when there's an oranged union work force, they get paid more than tesla workers, that are not unionized and tesla is able to make these cars in a cheaper way than the companies that are represented by the uaw. that's the conundrum here and they're not able to make these vehicles to compete with tesla so, yes, tesla wins but i think these -- the gms and fords of the world have to figure out how they can compete with tesla going forward because right now
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they can't. stuart: how do you do that? good yes. mike, thank you. toyota ramping up their ev strategy. ashley, what are they doing? ashley: well, the world's top selling auto maker believes it can close the gap with tesla by combining new technology with the famous lean production methods and toyota using older equipment to process parts that can be run on nights and weekends and automated through robin lou boot ick -- robotics and 3d products and it's touting the self-propelled production lines and ev guided by sensors through the assembly line allowing for greater flexibility in production. toyota has been criticized for being too slow to adopt evs. last year the japanese auto maker accounted for only about 0.3% of the global electric vehicle market, but now the company hoping to change that with some pretty ambitious plans to ramp up its ev selection.
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stu. stuart: got it, thanks, arkly. this is the time when we show you all 30 of the dow stocks and a sense of the market. i get the sense there's a lot of selling i i only see four wi winners. three winners and 27 losers. dow is down 244.7%. 17 migrants were found sealed inside a wooden box underneath a flat bed truck. that comes just as fox cameras witnessed one of the largest overnight border crossings in the last couple years. congressman lance gooden, republican from texas joining me on that next.
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stuart: president biden wrapped up speech to un general assembly. peter doocy joining me. he aerodynamic dressed competition with china. what did he say? >> he did and this followed on what we heard from him in hanoi at the beginning of last week where he doesn't want to say anything too negative about beijing. >> when it comes to china, i want to be clear and consist.
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we seek to responsibly manage the competition so it doesn't tip into conflict. we're de-risking the decoupling with china and push back on aggression and intimidation -- >> that's about as firm as he wanted to go. believe it or not, a few minutes later it got a little bit friendlier in tone. >> we also stand ready to stand together for is issues hinging n progress. >> president biden has not speckle to leader xi, a leader he's known for more than a decade since november and he was on the stage for the efforts for the united states and china to make sure they're competing with each other, following international rules of the road, but so far there's no evidence
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to suggest that the chinese side is hearing that. stu. stuart: i got it. peter doocy, thanks very much indeed. congressman lance gooden, republican, texas, joins me now. congressman, let's talk immigration at the border and massive new wave coming. may i offer my personal been? opinion? i think the flow is increasing because biden looks weak and trump looks strong and they want to get in before anyone changes the open border policy. with me on this, sir? >> i'm with you and agree totally. stuart: you have to expand. you can't do three word interviews and leave me high and dry. >> like so often, i don't know if you're done yet. stuart: that was a slam. >> we're friends. i agree. you know, the reason these train full, these caravans and train full of immigrants are coming is because the border is open and the message got out when joe biden took office and it's only gotten worse and there's a push
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to get across as many as possible in the event that what you and i hope that there's a change in power and the donald trump is president and will go back to those days where there was some security at the border where there was this respect and this thought that if you get to the border you're not going to automatically walk in like it is now. stuart: congressman, what do we do about it now? there's no change of policy till after the '24 election, presumably. >> glad you mentioned that because here at the capitol, we're facing a government shutdown and semis want a continuing revolution that goes into perpetuity funding nancy pelosis bill that you and i were against last christmas and senate pushed through and joined hands with nancy pelosi to get through and that expires in a week and a half and where we are on the republican side of the house, we're talking a about very short term continuing resolution for a few weeks getting to the point but only if the border is secure and we're
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not in agreement on it. we're working oen it in the next few days, but we control so little in the town that one lever we have is the power ovthe purse. if that's what it takes to schultz down the border or control the border, that's what we need to do. stuart: the word is there's significant number of conservatives, house republicans, who will vote no on the vote on thursday. the likelihood of a government shut down is strong. where's the win for republican ifs the government is shut down and you've got chaos? >> first of all, i believe we already have chaos. my constituents are calling in saying if the government's job is to secure our nation, whether whether it is with our military or at the border, and they're not securing it, what difference do we see if the government shuts down. that's why this target that will have a sudden amount of chaos if the government shuts down doesn't excite me or my constituents and the government has already shut down at the border.
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what this revolution will end up being is an agreement with all sides and vote is not there to pass as it stands today and i feel the same way. i believe after the meeting that i was just in earlier this morning that over the course of the next 48 hours, we will perfect that and get to a point where we are in a position to say to the american people, that we are for securing this boarder and we're even willing to give you a few more weeks of this budget while we come to agreement on appropriations for the senate. stuart: think the freedom caucus can get if line at some point? >> scott perry is in agreement that we will not win with nothing and we have to have something and fortunately the something we've rallied behind is securing the boarder and it's a win for the american people and i dare the senate and deputies and president biden to say no, i'm not going to keep the government open because republicans also want to fund the border while they do it.
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that is a losing argument for democrats. stuart: congressman lance gooden, thank you for joining us, sir. >> thank you. stuart: it was fun and see you again real soon. >> i hope. stuart: check that market. we're down, what, 260 now, three quarters of 1%. nasdaq down 0.85 and s and p down about 0.7%. it's that time, tuesday trivia question and again, it's a good one for those who know a little american history. how long did prohibition last in the united states? 6, 9, 13, 16 years in the answer of course when we come back. ♪ (sfx: stone wheel crafting) ♪ ..
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projects in america is about to get bigger. blackrock silver. stuart: how long did prohibition last? 6, 9, 13, i am sure you know this one. what your answer? ashley: what do you mean? i don't think it lasted long because it was a failed idea, six years. stuart: i'm going with number 3, 13 years and the answer,
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save your applause, not necessary. lasted 1933 when the 21st amendment repealed the 18th amendment and gave control to states over alcohol laws. thank you for joining us, time to show me the movies? cooper teaming up with oracle to offer last mile deliveries called collect and receive, available on the retail apps, goober is up one%. one%. thank you very much for giving me that stop take. >> lots of levers. stuart: good stuff. it was a great show, lots going on but our time is up. you know what i'm going to do now? count you down to coast to coast. it starts now. neil: sean fain and uaw leaders threat to target additional strike
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