tv The Evening Edit FOX Business September 24, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm EDT
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[coughs] when caroline has a cough, she takes robitussin. so, she can have those one on ones again. hey jim! can we talk about casual fridays? oh sure. what's up? get fast, powerful cough relief with robitussin, and find your voice. ♪robitussin♪ larry: i'll just say it again, kamala is making a huge mistake dissing new york catholic charities and i'll say this again, among other issues, remember hispanics important vote. they go to church on sunday. and by the way, david asman in
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for elizabeth macdonald. goes to church on sunday. you knew that was coming. david: and my latin wife is the one that insists that i go. larry: right. that's wonderful. you knew it was coming. david: larry thank you very much i'm david asman in for elizabeth macdonald. welcome to the special edition of the "evening edit." >> [chanting] david: newly-emerged footage showing then-senator kamala harris chanting against deportation of illegal migrants in 2018, after her campaign confirmed to fox earlier this month, that she no longer believes into criminalizing illegal migration and maybe no longer believes in free transgender surgeries for illegal migrants but the vice president insists her
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values have not changed and maybe poling is responsible for the drafting policy shift. meanwhile reporting that the harris campaign is planning a trip to the us southern border while she's in arizona on friday but could that move backfire on her? this is an nbc poll shows trump leads harris on border issues by 21 points. joining us now is new york post columnist miranda devine and she's author of "the big guy" how a president and his son sold out america. this book is out today, congratulations on the book, miranda. so glad to see you thanks for being here. there's so much to talk about. it's so rich this subject, but does she really think that she can escape these past videos, and that's just one. we could have shown a half a dozen videos similar in the way in which she has changed her views or claims to have changed her views 180.
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can she escape her past on this issue? >> no way, and it just is a sign of desperation from kamala harris' campaign that they need to go to the border. i mean, david. she's resisted going to the border for years ever since joe biden made her the border czar back in 2021 she was in charge of the border and lack at what a disaster its been between 12 and 20 million illegal migrants arrived undetected terrorists and a whole lot of shocking stories of abuse of children being drugged as young as eight and brought along across the border. it's horrible, and you know, she didn't want to go to the border. she has avoided it for her entire career. she did one ridiculous dragged by the heels trip down there as far as possible from the border but now, as you say,
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arizona is really looking like a win for donald trump and so they have to tackle the border story. david: what is she going to say? forgive me for interrupting but she has absolutely no bragging rights. we could put up the numbers. we actually have very conservative numbers about migration during her termwho hao do with the border. we have 2.1 million total that includes the gotaways. and again, these are very conservative figures but look at the trump during donald trump -- >> it's way more. david: i understand but we have a very conservative way of calculating this but during trump the most conservative records under trump are 2.4 million that's about a four or five-time increase what happened over trump, and then you have the criminal records. its gone up about five times in terms of the number of criminal
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arrests, and of course, that doesn't deal with the trend the venezuelan crime family that is in my mind at least equal to the way that they are spreading is sort of like the 1930s when the maffia came into the united states and spread its wings and led to the emergence of the fbi, so we have trouble after trouble after trouble and you mentioned the awful situation of the spending that new york has where we are actually funding some of these venezuelan crime families, giving them free room and board. >> you're so right, david. the way you enumerate that and you can see that this is going to be a problem down the generations. this is a permanent problem for america and just completely need less, and i'll tell you what kamala harris will do. she will just continue what she and joe biden have been doing, this lie that donald trump was responsible for stopping some amazing piece of legislation
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that was all bipartisan and was going to solve the problem. no, that b was not going to. joe biden could have done executive action like donald trump did, like the executive actions he unwound of donald trump to quell the problem at the border a long time ago. kamala harris could do it tomorrow. she could tell joe biden, let's fix the problem tomorrow, but she won't. david: no she won't and i just think this thing is going to, if she does go to the border on friday, it's going to back fire because she has no bragging rights whatsoever. quite the opposite. miranda we could talk for hours but i want to plug your book, "the big guy" how a president and his son sold out america. you turned him out much faster than i would. you're an amazing prolific writer and it's always good stuff. we appreciate you coming in, miranda, thank you very much. switching gears to president joe biden in his final moments on the world stage delivering remarks at the u.n. general assembly while multiple
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geopolitical crisis have broken out during his presidency. fox news senior national correspondent rich edson live outside the u.n. in new york city with more on all this. hey, rich. reporter: good evening david. you've got president biden addressing the united nations general assembly earlier today urging the world to work together to try to solve the fighting in the middle east and in europe but the president here has less than four months to make an imprint as president of the united states on these world affairs. biden says he recognizes the challenges from ukraine to gaza to sudan and beyond. the president says when he came into office he was determined to rebuild american alliances and he did just that. he also acknowledged his administration's withdrawal from afghanistan. >> i came to office as president afghanistan to replace vietnam as america's longest war. i was determined to end it and i did. it was a hard decision but the right decision.
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optimisit was a decision accompy tragedy. 13 brave americans lost their lives along with hundreds of afghans in a suicide bomb. i think of those lost lives everyday. reporter: biden's critics point to afghanistan and the expanding war in the middle east as israel is fighting hamas and gaza and now hezbollah and lebanon and hamas still holds israelis and several american hostages. the pentagon announced this week it's sending what it describes as a small group, small number of additional troops to the middle east. there's also the war in ukraine which shows no sign of ending soon. >> biden and harris the 11 day war from gaza into israel have been nothing but unrest from the middle east. you think about what happened with ukraine and russia would have only been precipitated after the massive failure of joe biden handing over afghanistan to the taliban. reporter: biden says he wants to
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accomplish more. he loves being president but after 50 years of public service it's time to pass the torch on to the next generation. of course, number of republican are criticizing him for saying that that decision only came after his poor debate performance. polls sinking and them berkshire hathaway of democrat donors pushed for him to exit. david? reporter: rich edson thank you very much. david: joining is founder of polaris national security, morgan ortegas. wonderful to see you morgan. thanks for coming in. >> thanks. david: i'm wondering what all these world leaders make of the united states right now. i mean, a lot of us don't know whose in charge, and if we don't know, they certainly don't know. it must concern them that the world leader lacks leadership right now. >> it went from being like funny, you know, three or four years ago with his little missteps and we laughed at it where, you know, you just saw where he had the prime minister of india. the world's largest democracy
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with him at the white house and he either forgot who he was or forgot his name, he couldn't remember who he was supposed to call on. world leaders see that. our friends see that. our allies see that and our enemies see that and they make calculations based off of what they believe is the leadership coming out of the white house. so i think it's incredibly scary. it's very serious and we need to know, is he actually making the decisions. take all of the campaign stuff aside. trump or harris will be inaugurated next year but there's still a lot of time between now and january and we need to know if xi-jinping decides to tomorrow that he's invading taiwan who is making the decisions? david: whoever is making the decisions is making a mess of it. look at what's happening in the world right now, several wars breaking out in the middle east. a war in central europe. i mean, we have problems after problems, and concerning that, these people seem blind to the risk. we have this incredible sound bite.
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i'm going to play it in a second, of jake sullivan, national security advise or jake sullivan, eight days before the massacre in israel. the october 7 massacre. play that tape. >> the middle east region is quieter today than it has been in two decades. now challenges remain, iran's nuclear weapons program the tensions between israelis and palestinians but the amount of time that i have to spend on crisis and conflict in the middle east today compared to any of my predecessors going back to 9/11 is significantly reduced. david: again eight days before october 7, eight days before the lid blew off of the mid east. these are the folks who are making the decisions. >> yeah, i guess wonder boy wasn't so wonderful. that's what they call him of course defining washington d.c. press. the thing is that he should have known. it wasn't just that, of course october 7 was a surprise to so many people, to israel. we lost americans that day. we still have four americans
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left behind held hostage by terrorists. however, the big blind spot, what they didn't see coming and why they missed this in general in the middle east is because of their policies towards the islamic republic of iran. david: it all comes back to iran. >> they are bragging they are doing more sanctions. take their oil off the market. stop fiddling around with little sanctions here and there. you can stop them from exporting their oil? you know how i know? because we did it. it's possible. david: maximum pressure it worked and i think of the abraham peace accord, i just wrote these down between arab nations and israel folks like john kerry said it couldn't be done and it was done and could have included saudi arabia if they included it perhaps. we took out isis. remember isis was a big threat to the world. we took it out in syria, and in iraq. baghdadi we took him out and russian mercenaries with all of the talk and trump working with russia, we killed about 200 russian mercenaries in syria and
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of course we had a conditional plan for an afghan withdrawal which is a lot different from the one we got. final word. >> we also had no deaths of us troop in afghanistan for the final i believe it was 13 maybe 17 -- david: 18 months. >> exactly so we went with the administration with no us deaths from combat in afghanistan as well. david: yeah, morgan it's an incredible situation. i just hope we can get through at least until january when a new administration takes over. >> might not be any better with harris but yeah we'll see. david: thank you so much for coming in good to see you. kamala harris and data centers donald trumpremain at odds overd economic policies but if there's be thing for certain the economy is taking center stage and the final stretch to november. former gop presidential candidate larry elder is joining us next on the "evening edit." >> we're cutting the business tax now. we brought it down to 21%, but now, we're cutting the business tax from 21% to 15%, which makes
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trump outlining his economic platform in georgia today, meanwhile the kamala harris team says we'll get more details on her tax plan later this week. grady trimble is live in d.c. with the very latest. grady? reporter: hey, david, and in his speech this afternoon, which lasted about an hour, former president trump outlined a host of policy proposals. he says will boost manufacturing by helping american companies and by lowering foreign companies to the united states. >> and under my plan american workers will no longer be worried about losing your jobs to foreign nations and instead foreign nations will be worried about losing their jobs to america. the only worry will be deciding which job to take. there will be plenty of them. that will be your biggest problem. >> [applause] >> darling, which company should i go with? reporter: not a bad problem to have. the former president is prom using to place a 100 to 200% tariff on cars imported from
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mexico. he's proposing offering foreign companies access to federal land. for american companies trump says he will expand r & d tax credits and provide write autographs for the cost of heavy machinery and pushing to cut the corporate tax rate from 21% to 15% but only for companies that produce in the united states. vice president harris on the other hand wants to raise the corporate tax rate to 28%. a move the us chamber of commerce argues would over the next 10 years in new york, texas, and california alone, cost american workers more than $85 billion in pay, and increase prices for everyday americans by more than $130 billion. vice president harris will get her turn to talk taxes and the economy in a different swing state. trump was in georgia today. she will be in pittsburgh, pennsylvania tomorrow. david: grady trimble good to
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see you. joining us is former gop presidential candidate the great larry elder. what a pleasure to see you larry thanks for coming in. i think it's pretty simple. trump's plan. it boils down to producing more with lower taxes and lower regulations and a lot of very interesting new accounting standards that will help small businesses, and spending less. you've got elon musk coming in and slashing all of the waste and fraud the way he did with twitter where he fired about 90% of the people who worked there and has a company working pretty well so those two things. producing more and spending less by the government. that would bring the deficit down. what do you make of it? >> well david what an alien concept, needing more money in the pockets of people and getting government off their backs. this is a pretty simple analysis. we have two administrations back to back we can compare. are you better off now than four years ago and the fact is the average family of four is spending $1,200 a month more
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for the same goods and services as that family bought four years ago. they are spending 50% more for gas price as they spent four years ago so the issue is the economy and most polls say voters are more concerned about the economy, followed by borders and by illegal immigration, this ought to be a very simple analysis. most people are worse off unless of course you are in fact an illegal alien. david: of course that's why kamala harris doesn't answer that question. she talks about her middle class background rather than addressing the question, whether you're better off. there are some bean counters i call them, these accountants with the green shades who say that trumps tax cuts would increase the deficit but they said the same thing about his 2017 tax cuts, which actually increased revenue. a think we could put up the figures up there. despite the fact that biden-harris are claiming his tax cuts cost $2 trillion. they actually made $1.5 trillion
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as we had a 47% increase in revenue over the first five years from 2017 to 2022 so it actually increases economic growth and therefore, increases tax revenues as a result of more economic growth as tax rates are reduced. >> once again the curve art laffer the economist said you lower taxes and over time increase revenues, and keep in mind this is our candidate, kamala harris, was perceived to be the most left-wing senator on the hill in 2019 even more left wing than bernie sanders so apart from her wanting to raise taxes, corporate taxes she's also proposed a whole bunch of stuff like national rent control, like giving illegal aliens a taxpayer healthcare, like giving a sex change operations to illegal aliens behind bars. she wants a commission to study reparations and on and on and on. david: it's incredible. there is one problem i have with some of the stuff that i've
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heard with trump's plans. he does plan to cap credit card interest rates at 10%. now that's the kind of a price control and as we know price controls always cause shortages and in this case shortage of available credit. the "wall street journal" wrote about it. mr. trump criticized kamala harris for proposing price controls on groceries. he's right yet mr. trump is doing the same on credit cards. it's bad enough to have a democratic party ignoring economics, what's the point of a republican party that follows suit. do you agree? >> i agree it's a fair criticism, the same kind i would level against biden-harris when they talk about junk fees eliminating those but the bigger problem is neither of them wants to do anything really about the entitlements that really are the driver behind the debt and the deficit. trump knows it's political poison. democrats never talk about it so the big problem and the large amount of money we spend on
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the so-called entitlements programs that need to be reformed desperately, nobody but nobody is talking about it. that's my bigger criticism against both trump and harris. david: great point well there's a lot of work ton done. larry elder good to see you my friend, thank you very much appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. david: still ahead former president donald trump says he wants the state of florida to handle the second assassination attempt on his life claiming the doj is "mishandling" the case, but first, one long time democrat slamming his own party saying that it's no longer the party of the working class. gop pollster chris wilson will react to that next, on the "evening edit." >> so i was raised as a middle class kid. >> i grew up a middle class kid. i grew up a middle class kid.
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coming down to the swing states where the two are virtually neck and neck in the polls. joining us now is gop pollster chris wilson. chris, great to see you thanks for being here. i just want to go over a couple of the sun belt states because trump seems to be doing pretty well. he seems to be going in his direction. he's now headed in arizona, north carolina and georgia by substantial numbers, 50-45 in arizona, 49-47 in north carolina. it's tighter there but then you go to georgia and it's 49-45. trump's ahead in all of those races, but what about pennsylvania? that is the big kahoona. how are they doing there? is it still neck and neck? >> yeah, it is and i think what you're seeing is what's going on with the economy really manifest in polling. you saw kamala harris get a bump coming out of taking the nomination coming out of the convention, but now we're starting to see regressions. we're starting to see economic concerns rise back to the top and it's a nice contrast, or a
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contrast that works for donald trump for 2020 the economy was a significant factor there but the context shifted. inflation and cost of living issues are heightened voter concerns and that's driving support toward trump in these recent polls and you mentioned pennsylvania. that's putting him in front there and also the biden economy versus the trump economy. you can be critical about donald trump's debate performance, but the fact is he was able to get one point across and that was sort of the comparison of the economy you had under donald trump to the economy you have under now under harris and biden. so i think that has started to resonate through as have his rallies and just in the last segment with larry elder you were talking about his message on no tax on tips, i mean it's all of those things. david: well there's a haze regarding a lot of the policies of kamala harris because she's changed so many of them. almost all of them seem to be changing dramatically. i want to talk about what happened last week with it's
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kind of a sea change in alignment of those that consider themselves to be democrats particularly with the teamsters union not specifying therefore democrat but clearly, the members out-poll for trump. the uaw, the auto workers saying the same thing basically leadership is for kamala harris. the members are going to be voting for trump, and then you have a democratic strategist i'm sure you know julian epstein if you don't know him personally you've seen him. he's talking about the democratic party in general no longer representing the working class. roll that tape. >> biden lost the working class vote by 4%. harris is trailing working class voters by 17%. if you look at the new york times say en into poll working class voters favor trump on the economy by 27%. the same poll shows that working class voters favor harris by i'm sorry favor trump 24 points on the question of immigration, so
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i think there's no question the democratic party is no longer the party of working class or even middle class voters. they have all shifted towards republican as the democrats have taken i think are extreme left positions and most of the major issues. david: i mean, this is a historic event very quickly. is it not, chris? >> yeah, i couldn't have said it better myself. the erosion of the democratic blue collar base is reflected in recent polling out of michigan that shows the race within the margin of error and trump having a lead and it manifest itself in a lot of the shifts we're seeing in the makeup of the current environment. david: chris great stuff. switching gears donald trump blasting the doj for mishandling a second sanctuary assassination assassination attemptdemanding e of the investigation. david spunt live from the justice department with more. reporter: david good evening. donald trump the former president incredibly critical of the justice department. he says the doj and the fbi are
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mishandling the investigation into ryan ruth, the second attempted assassin that he's dealt with in the past couple of months and he says that doj needs to do more when it comes to tougher more stringent charges. doj says they are just around the corner of charging ryan ruth with something that could put him behind bars the rest of his life. now he is behind bars right now in florida. he's charged with two federal firearms charges. we're told that those were just the easiest and could get him behind bars and keep him in cuts o diplomat but more are coming specifically a charge called 18 usf-51 attempted assassination of a presidential candidate could put him in bars the rest of his life and slowdown a state investigation led by florida officials. attorney general merrick garland says doj is not bound to any pressure from the state of florida or the former president and that the doj including the fbi is more than capable of handling the investigation. here is the attorney general this afternoon when i asked him
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about this. >> the attempted assassination on the former president was a heinous act. i'm grateful that he's safe and as i said immediately after the event, the justice department would spare no resource to ensure accountability in this matter. >> further additional charges will soon be filed. all of our top priority should be insuring that accountability occurs in this case and that those who run for office and their families are safe and protected. reporter: david here is where we get into the state vs. federal government fight. florida attorney general ashley moody is asking to deep her in the loop and if doj charges ruth with attempting kill a presidential candidate it could put the brakes on her probe and the federal case must go first and she wrote the fbi director and local us attorney to be clear i believe it be a grave mistake for the federal government to invoke this provision and i urge you to cooperate with the state investigation rather than seek
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to frustrate it all the evidence right now in this case is with the fbi in quantico, virginia and we are told the justice department and it's rare we find out this stuff early but the attorney general and prosecutor in court yesterday in front of ryan ruth said that he's going to be facing this charge of 18 usc-351 which could put him behind bars the rest of his life. david: david ursino reported that so well. there were a lot of issues i wasn't clear about thank you for clarifying them. let's welcome house oversight and accountability chairman james comer. chairman, you think of everything the fbi did to donald trump when he was president. the whole russia collusion hoax, et cetera. there were fbi attorneys who lied to present evidence in that case. you think the doj's law fare campaign against him, can you blame him for not trusting them to investigate the assassination attempts fully? >> absolutely not and don't forget about what the fbi did to cover up for the biden family
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crimes, and to obstruct our house oversight investigation of the biden family influence pedaling, so no, i don't blame president trump at all and i share his distrust of the fbi and i think it should be led by the state of florida. david: senator blumenthal, a democrat has come out and said that the house and the senate are being stonewalled by both the doj and other investigators of the federal government looking into this case. do you agree? would you use a word that strong? >> absolutely. i know all about it. i mean, i went through it for a year and a half when we were trying to get bank records, trying to bring people in for depositions all to prove what hunter biden just plead guilty for , for a couple of weeks ago. that the biden family took money from around the world and never paid a penny of taxes on it. look, this department of justice, this fbi has proven untrustworthy. they have proven to be bias toward donald trump. they have proven to turn a blind eye towards anyone that may be a
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threat to donald trump that's done anything wrong. they have proven to be obstructionists, to credible entities like the house oversight committee that truly tried to investigate corruption so i don't blame the president for not having any trust in the fbi. i don't have any trust. i'm not leading this investigation into the assassination attempt but i think anybody be more credible than the fbi. david: chairman, there's something even more ominous than the whole lawfare campaign and other things we're talking about. the doj just released information concerning the letters that the accused assassin down in florida had written out, that some people say could incit ex other assassination attempts. the other letters, and it's not me saying that. this is former attorney general bill barr who as you know is not necessarily a good friend of donald trump, and he wrote, it was rash to put this letter out
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in the midst of an election during which two attempts on the life of president trump had been made. it served no purpose other than to risk inciting further violence. that is ominous, isn't it? >> it is. i agree completely with bill barr. look, the department of justice has withheld almost everything that we've requested of them information that should be transparent to the american people, but in this case, they released a letter that as you said, had nothing to do with the investigation. all it would do is entice more people to do the same thing that's been done two times already and attempted assassination on donald trump so it was unnecessary. david: congressman james comer what a pleasure to see you again sir thank you for being here. appreciate it. navigating the potential port strike, officials at west coast ports insist that they are ready for the surg in shipping as the strike happens in the east coast is about to
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begin, plus former president trump revealing who he would call first if he wins in november. congressman dusty johnson from the house transportation and infrastructure committee will have reactions coming up next but first let's check in with our friends dagen and sean to see what they have coming up in the next hour on the bottom line. >> david thank you, yes, we have dualing presidential tax plans we'll unpack that with the trump national press secretary as well as the state of play in nevada senate race want to talk to gop candidate sam brown. dagen: kamala harris planning potentially a trip to the border? senator james langford on that. will she get heckled for the horror she's inflicted on the united states of america with her open border, and todd rakita, the attorney general of indiana. free sex changes for child murders, top of the hour.
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call today or go to gentlecure.com. david: west coast ports are preparing for a shipping surg amid a potential port strike in the east. max gordon is live from the port of los angeles. hey, max. >> david we're already seeing an increase in goods being shipped to the west coast ahead of this potential strike. behind me is the port of los angeles and it is bustling.
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last month they saw their busiest non-pandemic month on record and its 113-year history. a long shoreman strike at ports on the east coast and gulf coast appears imminent of a deal isn't reached. the big sticking point? wages. the international longshoreman's association says it's 45,000 dock workers will stop work if they don't have a new contract with acceptable pay by october 1. the united states maritime alliance which represents the employers has blamed the ila for being unwilling to negotiate with the clock ticking already busy west coast ports are bracing for more cargo to head their way if east coast and gulf coast ports shutdown due to a strike. but could there be any issues with west coast unions standing in solidarity with the striking dock workers and could they refuse to unload ships diverted? we asked the executive director
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of the port of los angeles. >> if there is a work stoppage back east and on the gulf coast i have no evidence ships will be making a left hand turn from those ports coming out to los angeles. there have been decades worth of informal agreements that one labor union will not take advantage of another's business while they are in the midst of a contract negotiation, and here again, i don't see evidence of that happening on the ground now. reporter: now if there is a strike, the supply chain repercussions will be significant. by some estimates it'll take six days to clear the backlog for every one-day of a potential strike. david? david: this could be huge implications for our economy, for the country. max gordon thank you very much. let's bring in from house transportation infrastructure committee congressman dusty johnson. you know, you would think that by now, you would have seen sight of our transportation secretary. i haven't heard much from him, if anything. are you working with him with
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the transportation committee to try to figure out what to do about this? >> i would mention the administration has been real, real quiet. i think they can play important role in getting people to the table. you mentioned some of the carriers and folks who actually have to run this freight have been a little frustrated that the union has not been at the table as much as they would like. you are right in the repercussions are massive. it be a $6 billion hit a day, $5 billion a hit. that's a 6% reduction in our country's gross domestic product. we have to get this figured out before tuesday. david: but if we don't that 5 billion is not just the cost. it's also the inflationary factors and supply chain routes, et cetera. that was part, i think government spending was the biggest part of inflation but the supply chain problems we had after the pandemic was part of it too. wouldn't that be a big increase in inflationary pressures? >> you're exactly right. biden inflation is already
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taking 13 or $15,000 a year from the average american family. this would absolutely make it worse and the hangover be a long time. it wouldn't just be the six days to unwind a one-day strike. it would also be the fact that the folks that we sell products to abroad would begin to wonder whether or not they can count on americans. 55% of the value of american agricultural exports which is a huge number go out of these ports. you'll have a lot of people wonder if they can count on america if we can't deliver. david: you're also on the ag committee and from south dakota where a lot of farmers are there. donald trump has mentioned the first phone call that he would make if he was re-elected as president and here is what he said it's going to be about. the call is going to be to china. here is what he would say. >> so the first thing i'd do is i would probably my first call i'm going to call up president xi and say you have to honor the deal you made. we made a deal, you'd buy
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$50 billion worth of american farm product and i guarantee you he will buy it 100%. he will buy it. david: you think he can deliver on that promise? >> i sure hope so. we have not been projecting good strength abroad. that's one of the real benefits of a donald trump presidency. nobody will think he's a pushover. david: and he did do it before. he got the chinese to buy a lot of our produce in the past during his first term. congressman thank you very much for being here. appreciate it. >> thank you. david: republicans warning that education is on the november ballot and parents say so is our future. an ivy league professor encourages young conservatives to speak up on college campuses. the hill's julia manchester will break this down for us next on the "evening edit."
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new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. when you sponsor a job on indeed, it's easier for talented candidates to find it. which makes it easier for you to hire them. visit indeed.com/hire david: oklahoma secretary of education ryan walters is out with a fox news op-ed, emphasizing that education is on november ballot and so is our future. saying: for more on this serious concern for parents and students, let's welcome
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julia manchester, there is so much evidence to back what he says. i just picked one -- it could be a thousand different cities america but chicago is a city that i used to teach in, i was shocked to hear 22% of chicago 11th graders could read at grade level, 19% could perform math in spring of 2023, these people are being graduated. they are getting high school diplomas despite not able to do the work, which has tremendous implications for the kids and country. >> true, we're not just seeing this in chicago w but across the country where math and reading scores are declining from the past. that is something that both presidential candidates should be asked about, there is also the issue of a teacher shortage, there are so many different aspects to
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education, whether public, private higher education. the cost of higher education, the student loan debt relief debate. you know, the debate over whether you prioritize higher education or grade schools or 4-year college degrees there, are there is room for education debate in this election, we have not seen the candidates asked about it. i covered virginia gubernatorial race a few years ago. education of the the center of that election, presidential election is a bit more broad. david: the thing that gets under the skin of vot voters is how much moneys, during the covid pandemic we had 200 billion that went through k-12 education, they were worst in creating a
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lack of proficiency, i know we had to do a lot of remote learn, we went on too long on that, at teachers union's insistence. they are close to the democratic party, they have not been good for education over the past dozen years. >> i'm surprised we have not seen former president trump and maybe we saw it more in republican primary, but former president trump, sort of you know go after teachers unions, make them a center point of his campaign. presidential campaigns are broader but we know that republicans do that, we saw that a bit in virginia for example. glo-- i amure curious to hear if donald trump elaborates this plan to dismantle orrery a
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rearrange the department of education, we don't know what it would look like. i am curious to see whether we goes more in depth on that. david: then question of indoctrination, we have been talking with professor robert george of princeton, he gave advice to young conservatives saying they need to defend the right to could independently -- to thinked inly, independently, a lot of waging in the wokeness. we have about 10 seconds. >> i think historically college campuses have been more left leaning, we do have conservatives on them but they are left leaning. david: julia manchester thank you so much, i am david asman in for elizabeth macdonald, we'll see you back here tomorrow
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