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tv   The Evening Edit  FOX Business  October 25, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm EDT

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agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free, and there's no obligation. you know medicare won't cover all your medical costs. so, call now and see why a medicare supplement plan from a company like humana just might be the answer. larry: stop one iranian hip. stop an oil tanker bound for china. draw a line in the sand. deterrence, not appeasement just once, and it'll help the whole situation. and thousand it's time -- now it's time, actually, to appease liz hack donald. i don't want to deter you --
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elizabeth: don't deter he, you can't appease he. bring it, larry. go, larry, go. [laughter] we're right behind you. now this story, house republicans ready to rock and roll. congressman mike johnson unanimously elected house speaker. we have got what they're going to take on first. and president biden claims he's not doing a slow-walk strategy on hamas. critics say if hamas lays down its arms, no more violence, but if israel lays down its arms, no more israel. and new developments in former president trump's new york civil fraud case, we've got it. and lawmakers hammered the irs to stop its hyperfocus on audits of regular americans that democrats support. and college students slammed for calling resistance, hamas' barbaric, unequivocal terror killing prix against israel, turning israel into a killing field. plus, the push to probe mysterious secret donations to these student groups. who's doing that? plus, how did a pilot high on
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mushrooms almost crash an alaska air flight, killing potentially 83 people? if i'm liz macdonald, "the evening edit" starts right now. ♪ elizabeth: look who's here, house homeland security chair mark green. it's good to see you, sir. >> you too, liz. elizabeth: sounds like it's game on. are you guys ready to rock and roll now? congressman mike johnson elected unanimously house speaker. what's going to happen first? >> yeah, so, i'm about to walk in, in fact, the vote has already been called p and vote support for israel. it's a statement put together by our chairman and ranking member of foreign affairs, pledging the full support of the united states congress and the united states government to israel in their fight against hamas. elizabeth: so it's going to be hamas, israel first and then what? >> yeah. then we're going to jump into the appropriations stuff. we've got two appropriations bills we think we can get passed this week. that'll take the number up to six. we've sent four to the senate. unfortunately, they haven't even
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acted on it, right after the homeland bill was sent over there, chuck schumer decided to take a trip to china. we can e get two more done this week, and there was a backwards plan released by mike johnson this morning, and it is how we get through the rest of them as quickly as we possibly can, fingers crossed get it done by november 17th, but he's got a plan b just in case can. elizabeth: so how's the conference feeling in. >> the conference is elated. we got through this very difficult period, and, you know, mike johnson is, he's conservative, he's just a real genuine guy, deep heart, deep faith. it's going to be a great, great, you know, 118th under his leadership. elizabeth: got it. congressman green, let's take a second and listen to the new speaker mike johnson explain the lay of the land. you're going to see democrats sit down and not stand when he says republicans want to fix the border collapse. watch this. >> i call them the seven core principles of american
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conservativism, but let me concede to you all i think it's really the core principles of our nation. i boil them down to individual freedom, limited government, the rule of law, peace through strength, fiscal responsibility, free markets and human dignity. we have a catastrophe at a our southern border. the senate and the white house can no longer ignore the problem. from texas to new york, wave after wave of illegal migrants are stressing our communities to their breaking points. the status quo is unacceptable. inaction is unacceptable, and we must come together and address the broken border. we have to do it. [cheers and applause] elizabeth: okay. so how come democrats did not stand for that? >> i actually am glad they didn't, because it just shows
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the american people how out of touch the democrats are with the american people to include democrats back in their districts. if you look at the new york governor, the massachusetts -- i'm sorry, the massachusetts governor, the new york city mayor, i mean, democrat leaders across our country are saying enough is enough. the democrat -- actually, a council han from new york city came to our committee and testified that this was destroying their city and that they were going to spend $12 billion next year to house migrantses. migrants. sure, if they want to be out of tune with the american people, i'm fine with that. we're going to vote them -- the american people will vote them out of office, and hal be one of the best things that could happen. elizabeth: america's always been pro-legal immigration can. >> sure. elizabeth: it's not fair who people to who do it legally get pushed back to the end of the line. we've got 5.7 million illegal immigrants crossing, equivalent to, i think, the population of half a dozen states. but what's more concerning, we
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checked the numbers, under this add a managers, 11,042 terrorists -- 1,042 terrorists on the fbi watch list caught crossing too. final word. >> yeah. we had a hearing today on iran in the homeland security committee, and we talked about just that, the threats to the homeland with an open border and hamas attacking israel. and it's significant. we've got 1.7 million gotaways. they can't assure us there are no terrorists in that group. and that and any blood of americans because of any terrorist attacks here will be on secretary mayorkas' hands. we will hold him accountable. elizabeth: got it. congressman green, thanks for joining us. >> thank thanks for having me. elizabeth: let's welcome retired colonel bob maginnis who helps out the army working for the pentagon, also retired lieutenant colonel darren galb who served in the u.s. army for 28 years, 4 deployments to afghanistan. gentlemen, thank you so much for joining us tonight.
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lieutenant colonel mcginnis, so president biden claims he's not strongarming israel into with a ceasefire. israel's netanyahu says he's not doing that anyway. what do you make of -- can it sounds like the administration is publicly hawkish but privately dovish. what's going on here? >> well, liz, it could be that they're trying to build up a deterrence factor. the eisenhower isn't in position as yet. of course, the uss ford is in the eastern med, but there's a host of things going in there, thad, patriot, iron dome, a thurm of other facilities as well as -- number of other facilities as well as personnel and capabilities. so that's part of it. but at the same time, israel needs to make israel's decision. the ground invasion, assault, whatever you want to call it it, has to take place if, in fact, they're going to destroy hamas which, of course, has been a thorn in their side for 75 years. elizabeth: so, colonel galg --
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galb, it's to buy time to rush defense systems in, get more aid to gaza, evacuate hundreds of americans, rescue hostages. you know, hezbollah, other iranian proxies, they've already injured two dozen u.s. troops in syria and iraq are. where do you see this going? >> yeah, liz, it's difficult to see this not expanding in some way and tearily quickly now at this point as well. first of all, our soldiers in syria and iraq are, they're -- everybody should be asking the the question of why they're there because i can't see a strategic purpose for them being there, probably best they're not anyways. since they are there, we need to do everything we can possible to protect them from everything that's happening. and i'm talking with sources in both locations, and i've got a pretty good idea of what's going on. i am starting to get very concerned about this delay, if you can call it that, moving in by ground because you can only leave military forces in the
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field in these assembly areas near gaza saw for so long before you run into a host of problems both israel's economy in general and just the keg keg rerahation of what happens to soldiers in the field as well. it'll be interesting the see if and when he moves, and i would hope it would be pretty soon if he makes that decision. but bob is right, this needs to be israel's decision, and we should not be influencing it in anyway. elizabeth: colonel mcginnis, should they move more quickly? >> well, there's only so much you can do quickly, you know? we're pulling forces and equipment like the iron dome, a couple batteries of it at fort bliss, so you have to put it on the airplanes and fly over there. these things take time to put deterrence in place. but, you know, clearly the hezbollahs of the world -- there's one in iraq, one, obviously, in lebanon, they're making threats against our forces in bahrain as well as kuwait. we need to, of course, put intelligence cells in place that
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are beginning to put together packages of targets that should, in fact, these people come after us like they already have and likely will once the ground assault starts, we have to be totally prepared. now, you can only be so prepared at the same time, you know, like i said before, you know, we've got to let the israelis do what the israelis are going to do. they have a plan, their senior general has already indicated they have a three-part plan, and that includes postwar governance. and these things have to be begun to move out. we can't wait forever. elizabeth: so, you know, colonel gaub, gaza civilians voted in hamas. people though that. they can also be considered hostages of hamas too. i mean, hamas terrorists who have been captured, they've been une equivocal and unapologetic about what they were ordered to do. they've been candid about their killing spree, shooting thousands of rockets at, you
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know, israelis, innocent israelis. death squads where they did, with impunity, executions, torture, beheadings, dismemberment. they had orders to behead and mutilate. what do you think of senator josh hawley's proposal, no more hundreds of millions of dollars in u.s. aid for gaza until hamas frees all hostages? >> yeah, liz, i think that's a decent place to start as well. we've got to start showing, sharing the message that america's not going to keep funding terrorism whether directly or indirectly. i mean, let's be honest. our opening up of sanctionses and the oil sales and everything to iran has made them flush with cash, and so they're using that cash to flush what i call their mercenary armies. hezbollah and hamas are simply a mercenary army for iran the same as for moscow. elizabeth: thank you both so much for your service to our
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nation. we'll have you back on again soon, gentlemen. thanks for your insights. still ahead, congressman tony gonzalez, congressman andy biggs, aviation expert mike foy and former federal prosecutor francey hakes. former president trump took the witness stand today. tensions flared up in the new york civil fraud case against him. we're going to explain why. also he just was fined again for violating a judge's gag order. and anything joe can do gavin newsom can do better? if california democrat governor gavin newsom ramps up speculation he will try to knock off president trump -- excuse me, president biden to the from the 2024 ticket. as newsom gets a warm welcome in china. we're going to take it on, on "the evening edit." >> we all know what he's doing here, he's trying to appear presidential in case joe biden doesn't run, that is obvious. >> you don't make trips like this unless you think you're in the bullpen if awaiting the
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manager to say bring in newsom, biden out, because why else would you go there? you want to look like you have international bona fides. ♪ muck after advil. feeling better? on top of the worlddddd!!! before advil. advil targets pain at the source of inflammation. when pain comes for you, come back fast with advil liqui-gels. ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ [bell ringing] and doug says, “you can customize and save hundreds on car insurance with liberty mutual.” he hits his mark —center stage— and is crushed by a baby grand piano. are you replacing me? with this guy? customize and save with liberty bibberty. he doesn't even have a mustache! oh, look! a bibu. [limu emu squawks.]
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who are you? no power? no problem. introducing storm-ready wifi. now you can stay reliably connected through power outages with unlimited cellular data and up to 4 hours of battery back-up to keep you online. only from xfinity. home of the xfinity 10g network. elizabeth: look who's here, francey hakes, former federal prosecutor, former doj official.
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okay, former president trump was fined $10,000 for violating the new york judge on his civil fraud case in new york state. for violating that gag order. what do you make of that story? >> well, you know, liz, i think both of the gag orders in trump's civil case and in the criminal case in d.c. are unconstitutional. i suspect that the former president is going to just rack up fine after fine after fine and plan to aea peel them later, and i suspect they'll get thrown out eventually. elizabeth: francey, we want to just now turn to nate foy. he's at the courthouse where the scene of the action was today. we want to get your reaction to what he's about to report. listen to this. nate, what happened in court today? >> reporter: so, liz, former president trump took the stand himself today explaining a comment that he made that resulted in a $10,000 fine for a violation of a partial gag order that prevents him from commenting on members of the
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judge's staff. here is the comment that he made that resulted in that fine. listen here. >> this judge is a very partisan judge with a person who's very partisan sitting alongside of them, perhaps even more must have -- much more partisan than he is. the facts are speaking very loud. >> reporter: so after that is when trump took the stand, and he said person that he was referencing next to the judge was the witness, his former lawyer, michael cohen. however, the judge ruled that trump is not credible and the judge said that he believes trump was referencing his law clerk. and remember, liz, last friday the judge fined trump $5,000 for a social media post that was not taken down from his campaign web site about the law clerk. as for cohen himself, in his testimony under cross-examination today he admitted to lying numerous times
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not only about trump, but also his own actions. he still had more to say about the former president while exiting the courthouse moments ago. listen to him here. >> i saw a defeated man. i saw somebody that knows that it's the end of the trump organization, already found guilty of fraud. >> reporter: so at the end of today's proceedings, cohen said that the trump never actually instruct thed him to inflate the property values. instead, he said trump talks like a mob boss and that it was implied. so at that point trump's lawyers asked the judge for an heed verdict to which he declined, and at that point trump stood up and walked out of the courtroom. we'll send it back to you. elizabeth: nate foy, great reporting, as always. francey, you heard the that report, the details of what happened. what's your take now? >> well, it seems to me that michael cohen is somebody without any credibility at all, but it does sound like there at the end he may have actually helped the former president by having to admit that president
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trump never directly gave him an order to inflate the values. now, just as a reminder to your viewers, liz, these real estate values are very subjective, ask as president trump himself has said the bank had its own valuation. so i'm just not sure why this case is actually still going on. but michael cohen is not a credible witness. he's a convicted liar and is a convicted fraudster. he evaded his own taxes, so i'm not sure how the attorney general and her office can call him as a witness because i think it's akin to supporting perjury, and she ought to be ashamed of herself. elizabeth: so what's the strategy to immediately call for a verdict? >> well, the defense believes then that that single witness has in his own way totally taken town the prosecution's case -- down the prosecution's case which is that donald trump himself ordered the people that worked for him to assign a specific valuation that was inflated to these particular
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businesses. and cohen saying that trump didn't do it, he was really more like a mob boss, it was just sort of understood, really takes the air out of the sails of the attorney general if the jury believed cohen. elizabeth: okay. so this, you know, this is really roiling the 2024 race. whether you love him or hate him, you know, he's got 99 1 counts against him -- 91 counts against him, trump. critics are sayings this could with one of the most dangerous because if he loses, he'll have to give up all his properties. he says he's boeing to appeal because there's constitutional due process rights. he doesn't have a jury, right in and there's a gag order, first amendment. could he win on appeal? could it go to the supreme court? >> well, i think he could, liz. this is something that's never been tested before. it's a very up unusual statutory scheme, and i think some of the judge's early rulings really, to me, mean that trump may stand a very good chance on appeal. because, again, these valuations are subjective. and it looks like they're going
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after trump, and you can't go after just one person with a chute or a law, and that is what it looks like new york is doing having never done it before. so i think president trump has some really good arguments on appeal. the additional thing that your viewers should know, liz, is that kind of appeal all the way to the supreme court is going to take at least a couple of years. so while president trump may very well lose in this new york court, it won't be over. elizabeth: got it. now, francey, we understand you've been in government, you've been in d.c. you know the lay of the land there. we know that you're not, you know, an election expert, but there'sal this story. we're going to have to pivot to this, because this race is all over the map. we've got california governor gavin newsom in china. the thinking is he might relace biden on the ticket. politico reports white house insiders are worried about a biden 2024 run. multiple polls show democrats say biden should not run again. the cook report, you know, the bipartisan -- nonpartisan cook report says if the election was
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held today, trump would win. because he's winning in seven swing states, and biden's poll numbers, quote, are very dire. so the way you see it, if trump is the nominee e for the republicans, who's the better candidate for him to take on? >> well, that that's an interesting question. i'd like to see some polling on a newsom versus trump matchup which i have been really seen. one thing you can say for gavin newsom, he looks more presidential than president biden. he can complete his sentences. he appears to have some energy. he doesn't stumble all up and downstairs, and he does look to be taking a pre-presidential run tour around the world, israel and china, so we'll see. elizabeth elizabeth got it. francey hakes, you're terrific, thanks for joining us. >> thanks, liz. elizabeth: college students did a national walk walkout today calling for a ceasefire in israel. what they are not acknowledging is the barbarity, the savagery, the butchery of hamas terrorists. why won't they acknowledge it? also the irs commissioner on hot
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seat, he's facing up against gop lawmakers demanding to know why are you increasing audits on regular americans when you're not boosting customer service? we're going to take it on next on "the evening edit." ♪ ♪ this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. promises of all shapes and sizes. each, with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. ♪ explore endless design possibilities. to find your personal style. endless hardie® siding colors. textures and styles. it's possible.
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you only turn 30 once. and jen z? her credit's golden. hello new apartment. three jens getting ahead with chase. solutions that grow with you. one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. elizabeth: joining us now from house oversight, the one and only congressman andy biggs. congressman, it's good to see you again. so we understand that mike johnson won the speakership. what is, what is the house gop if going to do about this with the irs? your house oversight committee went after the irs commissioner, daniel werfel, for dysfunction, spending tens of billions of dollars in the on customer service, but on more audits of americans. americans are scared. they don't like what democrats are doing here. what are the house republicans going to do here on this? >> well, the best way for us to address it is to go in and remove some of the funding that
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they previously receive. they haven't used that money, and they want to use it to audit more people just as you said. but not only that, they're falling behind on the transition to better systems, you know, computer systems and technology, but they're not answering letters, they're not processing things. so for us to get at it, we need to use the number one check on them that we have, and that's the pocketbook. we still have a few appropriations bills to get done over the next week or so is. that's what i think is the way we address them, start taking away the funding. we said we were going to do it, we haven't delivered on that yet, and that's the way we get it. stuart: elizabeth: so it went from $80 billion over 0 years to now $60 billion, right? -- 10 years. >> that is correct. we should is are never given them the $60 billion, much less the 80. my position is we need to start defunding them down the a
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certain level. if we think they need more technology, let's find out what that is. but they have a history of not getting the technology that we have funded. and so they these to be brought back under rein, and the best way to do that is through the appropriations process. now, i will tell you that the oversight chief, what we've been trying to do there, is to expose this. and i'm glad you're on top of it, liz, because that's going to help us get the momentum to do what i'm talking about. elizabeth: all right. you know, things got heated during the hearing. let's watch what happened. watch this. >> the dysfunction is across the board from data breaches, leak ares and identity theft -- leaks and identity theft to slow audits, backlogs and really horrific customer service. this funding spree prioritizes enforcement over improving taxpayer services. finish if if a private business repeatedly left you on hold for hours as my cob stitch wents and actually -- constituents and actually myself has even experienced at a time or didn't
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answer the phone call, it really would go out of business. >> i know you keep talking about going after millionaires and billionaires, but you're also going after taylor swift fans who sold their tickets for over $600 it's not just millionaires and billionaires, you're also going after auditing small businesses and others. elizabeth: did you hear that? so they're going after -- democrats wanted the irs to go after $600 phone app transactions like on zelle when they didn't even read the entire bill. you know what i mean? so you see taxpayers are really upset about this. taxpayers wait for months in isp against. there's neurotic fiddling with the tax code by lawmakers, and
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is gathered in washington square park with shouts of from the river to the sea and the occupy ocean has to go. tracking shows
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sjp has more than 250 chapters across the country, and the student group is known for being confrontational. according to the anti-defamation league. in fact, this what we're trying to show you here was a tense moment that we saw where pro-palestine pro-palestine protesters shouted free palestine at jewish students who stood shoulder to shoulder in a line. now, you may remember, liz, after hamas's attack on israel, sjp called it, quote, a historic win for the palestinian resistance and told students, quote, we have an unshakable responsibility to join the call for a mass mobilization. now lawmakers like senator josh hawley and congressman burgess owens have raised concerns about how these student groups like sjp and others are funded. hawley is demanding an investigation by the department of justice as dozens of jewish groups are calling on
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universities to withdraw recognition of sjp chapters and florida governor and republican presidential candidate ron desantis ordered just yesterday that sjp chapters on florida campuses be disbanded. the chancellor of the university system in florida said that those student groups can create new groups if they comply with university policies. but liz, back here at nyu, we did talk to a number of jewish students who are walking through washington square park as this walk out in support of palestinian palestine was happening earlier today. all of the jewish students told us that these demonstrations does make them feel unsafe. listen to back to you, lydia, who great report. you be safe out there, my friend. okay. thank you so much. let's welcome to the show cornell university law professor william jacobson. sir, it's good to have you on. your reaction to that story? well al, it's not surprising. i've been following students for justice in palestine for over a decade. they're very confrontation. they're very radical. they
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openly supported a convicted terrorist, rasmea odeh. they put on their posters for their pro-hamas, you know, events. the paraglide that were used to slaughter 270 people. so this is really not surprising to me, professor, who's funding them? i mean, the there's pressure on the justice department to investigate who is funding these anti-israel groups on college campuses. do you know who's funding them? i i don't know if there's any outside funding, but people will probably be surprised to know that a lot of the universities will, if they get approved as a student group, they're entitled to the same funding that other student groups get. so it's very likely that your tuition dollars and if you're if it's a state university, your state taxpayer dollars are funding sjp on campuses. yeah there could be dark money. that's the concern. mysterious secret donations we don't know about. that's and you know, the issue is this how can they call resistance a following? what captured terrorist s are candid and
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unequivocal about orders from top terror commanders to do death squads, squads execute innocent israelis, torture, behead children and women dismemberment, not to mention shooting thousands of rockets at innocent israelis with impunity. how is that just now benign resistance? well, it's not, and that's the problem with groups like sjp, is what they're calling for is terrorist. i'm think florida is shutting them down on campuses, at least the existing groups, because of their support for terrorism. so think that they are not your normal group. they if all they were saying is we support palestine, then nobody would care. but they're very aggressive. they're supporting hamas. they're vocal for hamas. and i'll tell you that that's really a problem. we've seen the images. we urge viewers, you know, don't look at the images. it'll give you insomnia. i mean, there's also this former president trump said in iowa, we will revoke and deport the student visas of radical, anti-american, anti-semitic
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students. us senator tim scott also said that so do florida governor ron desantis. what do you think of that notion? well, you know, if the immigration laws provide that support for a terrorist organization is a ground to deport, you then think that's that's warranted? again, nobody would care if all they were saying is we support palestine or palestinians, but they're going way beyond that. and they have to live by the laws that any other people here on a student visa have to live by. got it. professor jacobson, thanks for joining us tonight. it's good to see you. tell versus attorney general ken paxton sues the biden white house for destroying the state's barriers at the southern border. now this is a big constitutional states rights fight. it could go to the supreme court. plus, we've got aviation expert mike boyd. fliers now on high alert. there's no pun in that. a pilot who tried to shut down and crash an alaska airlines plane in
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because he was high on mushrooms . we're going to break down what happened. how did he get in the cockpit? let's check in first with our friends, dagen and sean, i want to hear what the guy coming up next hour on the bottom line. yeah. thank you. imac. we have jamaal bowman, squad member, congressman, he was pulling a fire alarm. he's now charged as well as the house having a speaker. ana paulina luna here on that as well as steve moore talking about the record number of men of working age that aren't in the workforce. it's a problem. general anthony tata on biden says that, well, he's going to make iran pay. well 20 us troops more more have already been injured in iraq and syria. and he's done absolutely nothing. alex glaze is also coming up on cnn. losing his marbles. oh, my god. the terrorist tunnels and gaza have shampoo. you can't make it up. top of the hour. we had to take out our old gas heating and radiant heat. that
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aviation experts, we got summa people seven listen he's very smart, he's the president avoid group international like boyd and michael may is good to see you again my friend and okay, you aviation experts, evan warning about near collisions use airports are now what
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happened yesterday, in houston, the houston airport what you make of this private plane departing without permission, crashing into it another private aircraft, no injuries, the debris caused the grounds, that use an airport shutting on the airfield for like several hours that's an actual crash of two jets on the ground and what is going on here. mike: that is not near miss that was ahead in the collision do not cause a loss of life, this is a problem that we have. and it's an excusable and we've had the faa this been an automatic for years, hope that will change soon when you have this happening, it shows a weakness in the system and the faa is never really been able to get there make surrounded and better do it soon. dagen: let's get to the story, how this guy get into the cockpit and had an off-duty pilot, joseph david emerson get into the carpet alaska airlines
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hundred mushrooms and then he tried to crushed the airplane, and try to switch off the engines midflight and he could've killed 83 people on board and howdy to get into the carpet. >> because the was a legitimate deadhead arms probably donned that dozens of times before in the proof flying the airplane, they've had that happen several times and he's one of them, before 911 are used to ride in a coptic jump sing when i was in with the her lines because they who you are and in this case, he was there because he was authorized to do be anybody was unauthorized to go bonkers and nobody could've forcing out. >> so nobody could of foreseen that he was hired mushrooms. >> i don't know if he was emotions right but everything he was acting fairly normally and he did say that he did not feel well or something like that from what i understand you know the person flying an airplane, you cannot look at 70s i will argued mushrooms in a missed it this is not the 60s anymore i just don't think they could know
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that. >> i think it's a matter of drug testing toward infantile the authorities he believes he is having a nervous break down anybody was dreaming that he experimented with the psychedelic mushrooms as his mental health horse and according to a federal complaint made public yesterday and so not immediately clear from a document it is hired mushrooms early when we was on the plane be an fbi agent that a probable cause, without gunman that, so this scaring people are asking us as i have to get in the car so easily. mike: rise it to be there like the copilot and captain was making have the credentials is very common for let people in carpet like that in this was a pilot at alaska airlines so there is nothing about him being there deadheading, this happens every day just when you have a crazy person goes crazy coming cannot predict that and there
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was no failure on the part of the lesson presided but he could know this guy was on something that's all there is to it and mosey of humans making decisions flying airplanes, we will have mistakes like a. dagen: will the scary because you can crash and die right mike boyd thank you so much is good to see you we will have you back on mystery, texas as the biden white house taking it to court in a lawsuit, to stop border patrol from cutting straight razor wire destroying berries along the rio grande river coming up in the evening evident in edit. >> the border patrols of alumni sought support yesterday there's a thousand encounters every 24 hours overwhelms the system and we don't take control of the senate we don't have a different president, and 2024, it is going
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to continue to get worse that is gotten worse every day of his presidency.
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look who's back with us, tony gonzalez from house, security, it's good to see you again. let's show again the moment all house democrats sat, they did not stand up when mike johnson said he wants to fix the border collapse. why did they sit?
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>> thank you for having me. this -- i'm tired of publicans being on defense. we got to be on offense and part of that is we have to expose them for the open border policies. we have to expose them for everything that's wrong, the reason why myself and marco rubio introduced a bicameral resolution i said if you support hamas or support terrorism, your visa needs to be revoked. when you go on the offense, time for republicans to hold democrats accountable put them to the test. >> is interesting, texas is going on the offense, this new constitutional fight. it's a fight mexico to the supreme court, it overstates sovereign rights to protect themselves. where do you think this goes? texas and the state attorney general ken paxton sued the biden white house for destroying texas border barriers and wire fences. texas is say we got because additional sovereign right to
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construct border barriers to prevent illegal aliens. did you think it will go to the supreme court? >> i suspect it may, i can tell you texans have had enough and i think all americans have had enough. we want the biden administration to do it job, enforce the laws and the books. border patrol agents and selves i've spoken with thousands, they are telling me we want to get back out in the field and do our job and this administration is preventing them doing that. once again, it's time for republicans to go on the offense of whether an estate or federally here in the house now that we are back to work we need to hold the administration accountable and say here's the deal, we are asking you to keep americans safe because what happened in israel can happen in our backyard because border security is national security if we allow people to come when lawlessness. >> new york hump the statue of liberty, home to ellis island, is it emblematic of how the
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united states is an open arms welcoming nation to legal immigrants? it's not fair to those who are pushed to the back of the line by those doing it illegally. the state is saying the government cut texas to destroy state property intercepted security efforts and he's naming defendants in the suit, sec security, header mayorkas and customs and border patrol acting commission troy miller so are you going to try to impeach mayorkas? >> i think a big part is getting back to work and just bring the facts. all we have to do is continue to bring the facts out and let the american public be the judge of what's happening. can't let up. if we allow the administration to take hold, this is the new normal. just imagine two years from now
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will look like, we have to continue to go on the offense, i'm ecstatic and we are ready to get to work. >> a new poll from siena col college, 84%, more than eight out of ten new yorkers think new york's illegal immigrant crisis and message is a serious problem. new york is a heavily blue state, biden favorability rating is plunging in new york state. final word, ten seconds. >> if republican's are for the party of illegal immigration we will win because everybody is against it like this should be. >> thanks for joining us, tuna tomorrow, former arkansas governor mike huckabee and for, we will stay on the jampacked newshour and headlines for you, i am elizabeth macdonald, inc. for watching "the evening edit". it time to send it to megan and sean at the bottom line. they got a hot joke went up, watched the bottom line, good to see you. ♪

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