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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  January 24, 2024 12:00pm-1:01pm EST

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and what is your number. ashley: why will go with 12,870. >> we will go with number 2, 11,000. stuart: i will go with number one, 10,0408000. 13,000 one hundred 70 one, construction on the wall began during the chin dynasty, third century bc, the largest portion of the wall, and i can't believe that. come to the southern border please. coast-to-coast starts in 321 now.
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>> ronna mcdaniel once nikki haley to fall in line. let's just say she is not getting in line are following the party line, not even close. the republican party chair seems to be saying nikki should look at the man. that is what the republican opponent to donald trump is doing. haley is apparently concluded, 217. one thousand 215 delegates to clinch the nomination and by her math, there's a long way to go. we thought about it here. and when it comes to the 1-way front runner. what could potentially slow them. before that, brian yannis on the fallout. >> a record 300,000 voters
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showed up in new hampshire to vote in the republican primary yesterday and if you look at it one more time, you've got trump leading haley, beating haley by 11 points. haley has opted out and currently trump has 32 delegates, haley has 7. haley was about to win 26 from and a winner take all state of 50 delegates. trump was leading in the polls by 30 points, you do the math, haley could be in a much bigger delegate all. this morning, and attacking trump are being too alden reminding voters of some of her accomplishments. haley won 62% undeclared voters.
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200 hampshire voters. and a 700 advantage over voters who said immigration was there, immigration is the most important issue facing this country. and when asked, 95% of voters say being mentally fit is important. 85% said it was important to be a strong leader, the best policies, haley challenged trump who said he would do better than haley on a mental competency test. >> trump claims he would do better than me in one of those tests. maybe he would, maybe he wouldn't. but if he thinks that, then he should have no problem standing on a debate stage with me. [cheers and applause]
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>> reporter: haley has a rally in charleston, south carolina tonight but the campaign is looking through super tuesday saying super tuesday and it's 874 delegates, is the real litmus test. charles: thank you for that. julie: brian yannis in new hampshire. they tell me about the back-and-forth and how things changed last night. and the statesmanship, this is donald trump. >> this is not your typical victory speech. when i watched her in the fancy dress that probably wasn't so fancy, i said what is she doing? we won, she appointed you, tim? and think of it. you are the senator of a state and she endorsed me. you must really hate her. it is a shame. it is a shame.
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>> i just love you. stuart: you have the very unpopular governor of this state. you think bird brain, i mean nikki, becomes -- neil: you get the idea that some of those comments hearkened back to prior comments. a lot of people thought that had been dispensed with, that he was going to rise above the fray, that might be the case now until and unless she leaves the race. the national politics reporter bill mcgurn of the wall street journal editorial board, what do you think of his posture? it change, people were praising get him for going above that, he got back involved in that. >> it presents an issue for donald trump. while he was doing that, he was very focused on nikki haley. president biden spent the day focused on donald trump, at a rally in virginia he talked
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about abortion, mention trump by name multiple times and it was interrupted by protesters which gets to an issue biden faces but later he won a race he didn't compete in, a right in campaign. afterwords he focused all of the attention on the general election and donald trump in those clips you showed painted a different picture for the former president. he focused on nikki haley and that's the issue that's wearing a lot of republicans. they would like to see donald trump pivot towards the general election, talk about biden, how the parties attempt to be president biden. he is consumed by the fact that nikki haley says she will fight this until super tuesday or beyond. it to delegate fight. that could present a rhetorical issue because as you noted, he seems consumed by the fact she's not getting out of the way for him. neil: when an opponent's in the race, rips him a new one. he retired the ron sanctimonious thing as soon as
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rhonda santos announced he was supporting him and bowing out. maybe this goes away if nikki haley does bow out. doesn't look like that will happen anytime soon. >> i agree. up to a week ago if you thought ron desantis was the big enemy in the name calling, that's part of politics. there is no one less gracious than president biden. he basically called half of republican voters, half the country nazis in their approach. should the guy, we thought after the election in 2,020 when he gave a victory speech he was very gracious and united the country and has done the opposite. i think in the republican party none of this matters. you want to win the nomination you have to get the most delegates which means winning in most states. i think nikki haley's best bet was new hampshire, small state,
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more moderate, more separate than her views and she didn't do it and they come up with arbitrary things like if she gets within 10%, she's going to lose and i don't see a path. there is a path at the convention if trump is derailed by conviction in one of the federal cases but the delegates on the first round, i don't see, all of this is fanciful. it is like college football rankings when you're sitting there, and be losers to see and the, maybe could be number one. stuart: this might be simpler, and if something were to happen
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to donald trump, not that that would change among many republicans. and the conviction of 2 or more. what do you think of that? >> money is one of them. and the issue to delegates. many states on super tuesday i winner take all or some form of winner take all. not like iowa and new hampshire, to pick up some delegates, gets more typical as this race goes along. important to note, donald trump and president biden can do both at the same time, president biden has benefited from nikki haley staying in the race and his campaign is focused on the general election. donald trump might talk about nikki haley and the operatives in donald trump's headquarters, very focused on the general election.
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mike caputo and i wrote last night that the trump campaign had one big toe in the primary, the rest in the general election. if donald trump is going on stage spending 20 plus minutes focused on nikki haley. neil: he is running away with it, a long way from 1215 delegates needed to secure what he needs to get the nomination. having said that, not as if, to dan's point the president has had a stumbling bumbling kind of liftoff to his own campaign including the fact they like to write his name and new hampshire to begin with because of this kerfuffle over new hampshire being first, the same in iowa. he is off to a rough start himself. >> trump or biden? >> biden. >> i think he is. the big issue, i hate to say
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it, the republican elite just continues to underestimate donald trump's popularity within the party. they are constantly surprised at explain away what he does. i don't know what is left. one thing i think, both for trump and biden, if they were to drop out by not being defeated, neither will be defeated in the republican primary, biden is going to be nominated and looks like trump is. but if there are other circumstances, look like it would be better for him to knock out i don't see either of them leaving willingly and if they don't, the parties have to get the nomination if they win it. i don't see biden agreeing to step down and i don't see trump willing to do that either. neil: that is where we stand right now. a final word, thank you.
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with donors and what they do in the case of nikki haley. in a statement, who had been a big backer, and won the line and not doing anything in new hampshire. >> and bringing something by one point or two. and what do you do and >> do i have a choice. i will support trump. and and never give them a nickel. and i will support him. i will not give him any money. neil: she didn't win the money stops, then get the message back.
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and nikki haley donor, good to have you back. what are you going to do. >> i remain unbroken and support nikki haley. stuart: you are good at math, looks prohibitive for her. what do you think? >> i've never been good at balancing checkbook so my math, not particularly strong. i leave it to her campaign to determine whether or not there is a path forward. as long as she's in the race i am there. stuart: next stop south carolina, depending on the pole donald trump leads by 30. in one poll close in one pole close to 40 points. don't know how real that is. if she doesn't is it over? >> i will leave that to her to decide.
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keep in mind some ominous signs for donald trump that came out of new hampshire. he did very poorly as pointed out in one of your previous segments with moderates. he's going to need those votes if he is going to win new hampshire. rather than trying to embrace them, he was insulting to those voters and reminded them why they didn't vote for him and why he lost in 2,020, notwithstanding his protestations to continue to say he won. if you are going to win in new hampshire, wisconsin, michigan, georgia, arizona, nevada, pennsylvania, you're going to have to win and appeal to moderates and independents and right now donald trump doesn't. and nikki haley does. i still believe she has a far better shot in a general election than donald trump and people should keep that in mind. i would also remind people who was on the stage with donald
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trump when he was giving his vitriolic victory speech, vivek ramaswamy and marjorie taylor greene, two people enormously unpopular in vast segments of the republican party. and what did he do with vivek ramaswamy? gave him centerstage to go on a ranch which reminded us why we didn't want vivek ramaswamy and marjorie taylor greene who has been telling some of the republican base that she wants to purge the non-amaga portion of the republican party. how does that get me to want to support donald trump? neil: he also had tim scott on that stage, a great fit in with that crowd, maybe he is campaigning to be the running mate, i don't know. he didn't fit that cast of characters, did he? >> i originally endorsed tim scott coming out of this, i
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remain friends with tim scott, he made his endorsement of donald trump, he made his own calculation and i have no doubt he made the right decision. >> he did not give the microphone to tim scott to give a speech, he gave it to vivek ramaswamy. neil: enough time for tim scott to say it's because i love you. >> after donald trump made some snarky remark about you hate your governor. this isn't how you endear people to voters. he is in a situation where he should be trying to bring people in. if he has people on the slate, people in the republican party, nothing but rin ohs and not welcome and moderates are showing up in vast numbers to vote against him we are going to have a real problem in battleground states if donald trump is the nominee and i would encourage primary voters in south carolina and super tuesday to keep that in mind.
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neil: the business in the news channel, i should remind you it's very early. i want to keep emphasizing is that. those of a certain age will remember in 1992 bill clinton came in second new hampshire after losing iowa, he was given up for political dead meat, he went on obviously to turn all of that around, he came up with a name for himself in the media went along forward and made the nomination and made it to the white house. the consensus at the time was he would certainly not be the democratic nominee. that was then and now talk about who is issue in and who isn't. in the meantime just be careful judging get this market, boeing or the future of that aircraft builder. and it could be weighing on the dow but today it is not. and the ceo on capitol hill, a firestorm of criticism after this.
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hi, i'm janice, and i lost 172 pounds on golo. when i was a teenager i had some severe trauma in my life and i turned to food for comfort. i had a doctor tell me that if i didn't change my life, i wasn't gonna live much longer. once i saw golo was working, i felt this rush, i just had to keep going. a lot of people think no pain no gain, but with golo it is so easy. my life is so much different now that i've lost all this weight. when i look in the mirror i don't even recognize myself. neil: the boeing ceo is on capitol hill, everyone trying to get to the bottom of the problems with the major aircraft carrier. hey, hillary.
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>> reporter: the boeing ceo making rounds on hell, he made the rounds with senator mark warner and dan sullivan. he will meet with senator ted cruz, lawmakers have a demanding investigation into his company and the aftermath of the blowout where a piece of the boeing plane came off while airborne. calhoun said today they don't put airplanes in the sky, they are not 100% confident in. we get a chance to ask the ceo what his game plan is for rebuilding consumer confidence in boeing planes. how do you and customers back to say they are never going to get on the boeing plane again because they don't feel safe? how do you get those customers back? you don't have any words of assurance for customers who were to this scared to barfly on a boeing plane? >> we believe in our airplanes and we feel safe airplanes, or people to come we have confidence and that is what all this is about. we fully understand the gravity. >> reporter: one of your planes
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fell apart in the sky. >> reporter: major airlines losing confident in boeing, in order for boeing's max 10 impact, saying the max 9 issues are the, quote, straw that broke the camel's back, the airlines suffered the midair blowout recall the traumatic incident last night. >> we had a guardian angel on the airplane. makes me angry. boeing is better than this. this should never have happened. should never have happened. >> reporter: that's not the end of issues for boeing planes over the weekend. in atlanta, a delta flight lost its knows tire shortly before it was planning to take off so more plane parts seem to be falling off boeing planes.
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neil: jonathan cortina has of meridian equity partners. stock is stabilized. don't know if that means anything, lost a quarter of its money from its highs, this is weighing on investors, and the dow component, 100 points, and stress boeing is gaining and what you make of boeing and its impact going forward. >> reporter: boeing is in the hot seat, and 46,000 commercial flights a day, 2.5 million travelers, it's a massive industry with a lot of moving parts. when you look at what's going
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on recently, and is this systemic from a maintenance point of view across multiple airline manufacturers or isolated to boeing. and the practices that are going on in those manufacturing companies, there's a breakdown in process. they have to come to that rather quickly. companies continue to face difficult questions and come up with some answers. the longer it waits more pressure on the stock. it is holding its ground, it had been under pressure recently and wrapping into this other euphoria we are seeing in this market, boeing left the highs with our recently. neil: with boeing, the soap opera around us that is nonstop, the dow upward by a few hundred points or more if not for boeing and with all of that the bullish sentiment across the board, the boeing case notwithstanding, but you
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see it continuing? >> i do and the investor sentiment has this rising tide that is lifting with it. any negative headline we get it seems the market has been is absorbing quickly. not for us to ignore the head winds we've seen over time and will continue to see, geopolitical risks, interest rate hikes, pausing or what the fed has to do with that and as you've been discussing all day we are heading into 2,024, political cycle, there's a lot that is in front of us. our economic data is showing that our economy has regained some of the softness we've seen regionally, investors are feeling more comfortable investing back into this market. when you couple that with the plan the fed will bring interest rates lower over a longer period of time, those effects will help wall street and main street.
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neil: always good talking to you. the dow jones industrials in record territory up 123.5 points. we are getting word that the uaw is very close to endorsing president biden for president. teamsters, we will ask the teamsters president what he's thinking, he had some curious meetings including donald trump again, sean o'brien is next. ♪ ♪ slipping out of balance into freefall. (the stock market is now down 23%). this is happening people. where there are so few certainties... (laughing) look around you. you deserve to know. as we navigate a future unknown. i'm glad i found stability amidst it all.
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>> president biden: i am proud that my administration is the most prounion administration in american history. [applause] >> president biden: let me be
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clear. whether it is autoworkers or any other union worker, record corporation profits should be record contracts for union workers. neil: the president reminding you of support for them and how he has been on their side every step of the way but is yet to get the uaw endorsement. maybe this appearance before them today will move the needle on that. the uaw president has not indicated one way or another where he will go, certainly appearing to lean toward the president. the afl-cio has committed to the president but a union that has not done so yet, the teamsters. sean o'brien was kind enough to join us. good to have you back. you've been fairly quiet on this you have been fair and balanced on this, you met with all the major president will candidates, most out of the race now but they did include donald trump and there's another meeting coming up with donald trump.
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tell us about it. >> we met with donald trump two weeks ago, meeting with general exec it of board, rank and file members, the teamsters on january 31st, the invitation to president biden, talking to the white house, trying to schedule both in the same day and we think it is important, with all candidates, one. 3 million members. we owe it to our numbers to do our due diligence and make recommendation in the best interest of members nationwide. lauren: 20 the other sean of the united auto workers said in a meeting with donald trump that it would be pointless, i need so -- see no point meeting with him because he doesn't care about our workers and what they stand for, what the working-class stands for, he said he serves the billionaire class and that is what is wrong with this country. what do you make of that? >> everybody has their opinion.
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my opinion is i think everybody has their own structure but dialogue is important. it has been important to our organization. we have conversations with billionaires every day, corporate america we negotiate against, have to deal with and a lot of times you find common ground and have a dialogue. i'm not speaking for the union, the teamsters union. we won't be influenced to endorse one candidate or the other, there's a lot of pressure to make an endorsement, with our due diligence, and make a decision after, with the executive board. neil: has been a while since you considered a republican. what would make you switch now? >> there's a lot of issues, to deal with national right to work which we are not for. without threats of retaliation. we need bankruptcy reform and a
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lot of commitments, a lot of boxes that need to be checked off. president biden has done great work on behalf of the unions but at the end of the day, what was done in the past doesn't make it guarantee for the future and we've got a very diverse membership. our members vote. they can influence an election so we need to make sure all the boxes are checked on behalf of our members. neil: a lot of them in the maga crowd, they love donald trump, they don't often mimic union bosses. there is a difference between the higher ups and the rank and file. what do you notice at the teamsters? >> that is the perception. i have bosses, one. 3 million bosses that elect me to lead this great organization. at the end of the day everyone has an opinion. it is different time. we endorsed nixon. we endorsed reagan.
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we endorsed george bush senior. historically over the last several years, the democrats have gotten the endorsement consistently but like anything else, we got to take a step back, look what we did in history and see if it will help us moving forward. at the end of the day the decision that will be made will be an inclusive decision, not 1-sided, we won't pick take a hard-line and say we will not meet with certain people. i will meet with anybody anytime especially if it's in the best interest of our members. i can't speak for anyone else's thought process but i can speak on behalf of the teamsters union. lauren: 1 you meet with donald trump, how did it go? >> it went fine. we put our cards on the table, very matter of fact meeting. he claimed he was 100% supportive of unions but history, take a look back, certain issues we have with him, we told him what our issues moving forward is and what we went to see. neil: they said he wouldn't
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like them, he reneged on contracts, don't know how true but there's a lot of burned bridges with his own former workers. >> we have a lot of dialogue, there's a lot of information out there that contradicts what you said and he showed the moving forward he is pro-worker, procreating jobs like everybody else says but the one thing we are good at regardless of who wins the presidential election, we are going to be a conscience to any candidate with a his support him or not to remind them of what they said and what they are doing. that's important. neil: when you look at the market tenure of savvy financial guy, a lot of earnings better-than-expected, the feeling seems to be a lot of union members say you can afford to pony up more dough. a lot of those companies are reluctant to do so because they think it won't last very long. what do you think?
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>> there has been a disparity between ceo pay and company earnings versus what workers are getting. we've changed that narrative. people deserve more especially when companies are doing well and that is our mission moving forward. we can't predict what will happen in the future. we provide goods and services and tremendous labor as a union movement and our members should be rewarded as such. a lot of ceos, people receiving higher earnings have never done the job our members are doing. we don't want it all but we want some of it. neil: when president biden talks about going after companies dodging their taxes, the wealthy should pay more taxes are you on board with that? >> taxes are a controversial subject. i don't have a problem paying
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tax, never did, never having. i don't mind paying additional taxes to get the services. everybody has their own opinion, their own perspective. that's an issue you have to come up with on your own. neil: donald trump is just the opposite. you wants to cut corporate taxes. already proposed that if he gets back in the white house and things the wealthy pay enough in taxes and wants to cut that as well. >> i would rather see corporations pay their workers more money. tax issue is going to be decided on a higher level. are lime focused on is making sure our workers get the most because of providing great labor to this country and these corporations. . 20 everyone is following you, though dustup with mark wayne mullen, almost came to blows, that diner, cup of coffee. >> there has been an unofficial
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cease-fire between senator mullen and myself, continues to be a work in progress, we are very busy and we have a lot of goals and objectives to focus on. neil: i think i can take credit for that improved atmosphere providing something out of italian restaurant we are working on. >> i hope so. neil: sean o'brien, and endorsement, big names, someone like donald trump, we are on that and a lot more after this.
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>> i want to take you to the border in eagle pass. you see guys sitting in what appears to be razor wire in
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eagle pass, looks like some officers trying to push them out of their. of there. this is the same razor wire supreme court said to go ahead and be cut down by fed officials because the state went too far putting it up to keep migrants away. the missouri attorney general said that's part of the problem. it's very difficult terrain and this problem of migrants coming even when it comes to razor wire to stall them at the final path, he's kind enough to join us now. this is part and parcel but going on, lawsuits going back and forth never address the underlying problem, how so many migrants are coming to the border and that's a problem for you too. >> it absolutely is. this disaster at the southern border is a catastrophe for the president and secretary mayorkas's making, they undermine rule of law. they refused to comply, the
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state of texas erected their own border security system to try to prevent unlawful entry into the state of texas. missouri and texas join together to file a lawsuit to force the biden administration to finish donald trump's border wall, congress appropriated money for but at the end of the day this is about holding wrongdoers accountable and wrongdoers are the president and secretary mayorkas and missourians are hurting because of their failure to do their job. stuart: we are very close to a deal being cooked up in the senate, might get house approval but we are told donald trump is not a fan of it so it won't go anywhere. what do you think? >> don't know why we would be casting new laws when the president and secretary mayorkas refused to enforce the laws already in the books, donald trump took immigration law which remain largely unchanged for the past 40 years and reduced illegal border crossings by 90% but president biden perverted the law to hang an open sign with a catch and release policy and refused to
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finish donald trump's border wall that triggered a lawsuit from missouri and texas. congress appropriated money and commanded the secretary to build the border wall and he refused to do it. so the lawsuit is moving forward, we will hold him accountable but i would also say congress has a role to play and i'm encouraged by what the house is doing in their impeachment proceedings against secretary mayorkas, we got to get control of the disaster at the southern border. there been 1500 deaths in a single year from fentanyl exposure in missouri. missouri had 1100 cases of human trafficking. we are the fourth highest state for human trafficking, 43 innocent children killed in a single year due to accidental fentanyl exposure. these consequences are attributable to the president and secretary mayorkas's disaster at the border and their refusal to do their job so lawsuits will hold them accountable. neil: we are watching closely. to show what's going on it
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looks confusing to you but this is a migrant standing in this barbed wire, razor wire that the feds argued should not be there. making it difficult to get into this country and that was the idea when governor abbott put it up. it has to come down and looks like border agents are trying to coax this migrant trying to get across, to be careful and take it easy. they are standing and talking. i have no idea how this is progressing. we will have more after this. ♪ ♪
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neil: will talk is considering it might be scaling back on itself driving applecart features. there's been a lot of technology associated with evs, it's less inclined to pursue the whole auto thing for the time being get. this woman is walking get encyclopedia and always wonder
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why. what apple is saying are not saying about these high-tech features and their future. >> it is standard, you have to wonder, seventh or eighth titan project that started in 2015, including tesla and we are dealing it to 2028. apple is 3 billion a year. the research and development is huge, larger than the market cap of the german stock market including its automakers. they put a lot of money into this and that i don't know what they said they would do. people spotted an autonomous car with no steering wheel. to me that's level v, and amusement ride, crews going, they pulled that ultra cruz,
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and next up, beyond the excellent super cruise system. maybe apple is getting smart talking to people like tim cook and saying let's not go into this, other car manufacturers are struggling. stuart: these other carmakers, tesla's issues having second thoughts or worries post the storm and everything else happening, people have problems with evs in general. is there a reassessment of evs, not that they are going away but the process of having every one have an ev has slowed down. >> absolutely. i don't think they will go away. he will always have electric vehicles in the marketplace. there's a demand for it. tesla wouldn't be taking over 64% of the market share. toyota really thought about just within an executive where
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i am today working on hydrogen, synthetic fuel, shall on that and already using hydrogen as an option for large trucks from the long beach port where they are taking in methane waste using it to create hydrogen for their vehicles, testing and that is what i think will happen with large trucks and then work their way to consumer vehicles but as far as evs, we found out from the wall street journal last week that there is a 6.67 multiplier on all gasoline cars. tesla model-emac is equivalent to 65 miles a gallon. that's a previous all day long but they get the multiplier, 6.67, consumers are thinking wait a minute, 430 mpg, and finding infrastructure,
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chicago, philadelphia, boston, buffalo, everywhere, people are not very happy. they see superdeep pockets and they want in on this. night not be seeing camp lejeune ads but do you buy an electric car add? neil: that seems, are these hybrids -- is that going to do the interim future? >> hybrid is a great solution. previous won north american car of the year. the car is all new but it is important to note hybrid technology at first people put their noses up at it and now they like it because you get the best of both worlds, electric for running around town but a road trip, don't have to rent a car, take my vehicle and go. people of the hybrid technology. we are seeing that in a lot of things and other brands, ford
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pulling back on their f 150 lightning, going to one shift per day and the rest being broncos and trucks. neil: sorry to cut time. more after this. earning on my favorite soup. aaaaaah. got it. earning on that éclair. don't touch it, don't touch it yet. let me get the big one. nope. -this one? -nope. -this one? -yes. no. what? the big one. they're all the same size. wait! lemme get 'em all. i'm gonna get 'em all! earn big with chase freedom unlimited. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what's yours. dad, we got this. we got this. we got this. we got this. we got this. yay! we got this.
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gained getting into the next hour

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