tv The Evening Edit FOX Business September 26, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm EDT
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larry: holistically, holistically, free enterprise capitalism will always triumph over big government socialism. and holistically, david asman is up next. david: [laughter] don't stick me with that word. thank you very much, larry. appreciate it i'm david asman in for elizabeth macdonald. welcome to the special edition of the "evening edit."
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vice president kamala harris can no longer avoid the issue. she's promising to make inflation her top priority if she's elected president. now the trump team hitting back with a rather obvious point she's already been in the white house for three and a half years and has to take some responsibility for the ups and downs of the economy. madison alworth in new york city with the latest on this. reporter: harris says bringing down costs or inflation will be her top priority as president. she has made promises like saying she will give $25,000 to first time home buyers. she's pledged $100 billion in tax credits and vowing to boost manufacturing jobs. she doesn't really explained how she will implement some of these policies, but she pushed the ideas on msnbc yesterday. >> let's create an idea where people have the ability to buy a home, to start a business, to take a nice vacation from time to time, right?
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reporter: critics say the biden-harris administration are the ones responsible for making the american dream harder to reach. during the biden-harris administration prices have gone up 19.7%, and harris continues to make promises on housing, but during her time as the vice president, mortgage rates have gone up 120%. there are questions as to why this hasn't been tackled over the last three-plus years as harris and her boss have repeatedly promised to bring down prices. >> when i am elected president i will make it a top priority to bring down costs and increase economic security for all americans. >> want every american to know that i'm taking inflation very seriously and it's my top priority. >> discuss my top priority and that is addressing inflation. >> the president and i are doing everything in our power to lower the cost of the things that matter most for american families. reporter: of the proposals we've
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gotten from harris, they include many hand-outs and lots of spending. similar policies to the ones that have gotten us here toed. david? david: madison alworth, thank you very much for that. joining us for more on this , trump 2024 senior advisor corey lewandowski. great to see you in new york, thanks for coming in. let's start with the back and forth on manufacturing. i mean, the harris campaign is incredibly suggesting they have done a lot better particularly with jobs, manufacturing jobs, than the trump administration but we can put up the figures. it's very clear to see under trump we had 414,000 new manufacturing jobs start. it's half of that, less than half of that under biden-harris, 17 7,000, and just in the last three months, we have been losing manufacturing jobs. we lost 24,000 of them in august. we gained a pitiful 1,000 in july, and we lost 8,000 in june.
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so, we're actually draining manufacturing jobs right now. >> well david it's very clear, right? the biden-harris tim walz administration doesn't put america first. we've seen that with their continued support of another $2.5 billion is going overseas and to put this in perspective they have allocated about $300 billion of our money, the equivalent of the etire economy of california which is 39 million people in it to give to a foreign agency, to a foreign government, to a foreign country as opposed to taking care of americans. why are we losing manufacturing jobs? because kamala harris, joe biden, and tim walz have said we don't care about putting america first. we're willing to give others the opportunity to eat our lunch every single day, manipulate their currency, flood our markets with bad products and no ramifications because their idea of foreign policy is the word don't. david: you'll have to build back. if trump is elected, you're going to have to build back those manufacturing jobs and
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trump's plan, i'm intrigued by this bonus 15% corporate rate that he give to companies that use american made parts, but i'm not sure exactly how it would work out. is that 100% american parts you have to use to get that bonus 15% rate? >> you can't use 100% american parts and we know that. david: how do you slice it? >> look when it comes to the things called made in america, there's a criteria. it can't be 2% made in america it has to be the plurality of the product made in america because it's very possible particularly in high end items, you have to import some of the components but you have to assemble it here in this country. david: so just to be clear, so you're talking about assembling it all here. you're not talking about all us-made parts . >> it's very difficult to make all of those. now of course we want that david but you can't stop the supply chain from moving forward by saying it can only be manufactured in the us, because of the draconian policies of this administration these manufactures can't get up to speed in time so what are we seeing? we're seeing big manufacture, moving overseas, taking benefits
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from being outside of this country and then being able to put their products back into this country at the detriment of our own workers. david: let's talk about housing because kamala, because of the holistic, we'll talk about it her use of that word but her approach is $25,000 gift, i say gift, of course we're paying for it taxpayers are paying for it and most economists agree all it would essentially do is raise the cost of housing for everybody. however, it's a powerful lure, is it not, to voters to say, i'm going to give you $25,000 for your first new home? >> it sounds great by the way. i wish someone gave me $25,000, or paid off my student loans or gave me the opportunity when we had our children to write-off all those things. david: so could it work as an election ploy? >> at the end of the day we're kicking the can down the road. we have a gdp which is 100% of our debt for the first time since world war ii. how do we continue to sustain this? we can't continue and so it
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sounds great. we want everybody to be the homeowner under the trump administration more people own their homes than ever before in american history. we need to get back to that. david: she also claimed homes have been out of reach since before the pandemic. we had figures that you can put that up again. it's clear that prices were affordable before the pandemic. you could buy a house at 10% down and pay a monthly fee of about 1,000 dollars for the mortgage itself, or the average loan, the average mortgage. now it's double that and you have to put up more money down, so it was affordable, before bidenomics ruined that. no? >> it was affordable, more people were owning homes back then, but now with the interest rates of what they are homeownership is on its decline so under the trump administration more people were owning homes than ever before in american history. we should aspire to do that david. it's such a sign of success to be able to own your own home and take pride in your home but under the biden-harris tim walz administration less people have the opportunity to do that and they believe giving away more
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money to you is a recipe for success. david: you only got 20 seconds to make the pitch. what is the trump plan to help out the housing industry and homeowners particularly the first time? >> it's very simple. smaller government, lower regulation, less taxes means more money in your pocket and by the way donald trump, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, tax on social security means more money in your pocket less money in the government you decide. david: you don't like price controls i understand why, they always create shortages. isn't his cap on credit card interest kind of a price control that would cause a shortage of credit? >> very temporary relief because of the policies the biden-harris administration you have to provide people relief because they are taxed out of the business. david: corey lewandowski great stuff. you actually answer questions unlike a lot of people these days. good to see you. well yesterday, a day after the senate released a damming report on security failures they trump rally shooting in july, today the house bipartisan task force investigating the incident received jarring testimony from
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local and state police officers. david spunt is live in d.c. with the details on this. david? reporter: we've heard a lot from the secret service director and fbi about what happened that day but today was a chance for the public to hear from local law enforcement. we heard from the butler county emergency services unit, the butler police, pennsylvania state police. former secret service agent was not connected to butler and the medical examiner who did the autopsy on the 20-year-old shooter. out of all of the interviews pages and pages of documents there's one pressing question both sides of the aisle are still asking the secret service more than two months later. >> why in the world would you let former president trump go out on to that platform if you weren't sure it was secure? >> now chairman kelly is referring to a quote from a senate report released yesterday a secret service counter sniper saw local police with guns drawn and asked did the thought press your mind you should inform someone to keep donald trump from going on stage or if he
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was already on stage taken back. did that cross your mind? the answer is no the thought did not cross my mind. well, it was local police officers who claim they first spotted the overall noise. >> had these officers not picked on this suspectish us behavior we wouldn't have know what was wrong until shots were fired. >> the medical examiner said he died from a gun shot wound to the head. we are ex expected to have more hearings in the coming months but the house is gone back in their district until after the election but they could do virtual hearings but the issue will continue after the election and into the before inauguration and even possibly into the new administration. david: although just at the moment when we were really getting with what went wrong david thank you very much appreciate it. joining us now from senate homeland security kansas senator roger marshall. senator good to see you thank you for being here. some of what we heard today seems to conflict particularly
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the reports from local police officers who were on the scene with what we heard from acting secret service director ro. i just want to play a clip of what was said at a press conference last week and then what we heard today from local butler police official. roll it. >> who should be secure, period. there was a discussion about how the roof was going to be secured, and i think what it came back to was we should have challenged how that mechanism was being implemented, meaning we should have been more direct. >> at no point during the planning process was butler esu asked to deploy a sniper team to the roof of the complex and at no point in our operations plan did we ever say we would deploy a sniper team to the roof of the agr complex. david: senator there seems to be a conflict about the way things were seen by the director and by this local official. what do you think? >> well here we are. it's over two months now david i
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believe and there's no personal responsibility taken on the part of the secret service. this is clear demonstration of a lack of leadership, broken chain of command. multiple failures on multiple levels. they had a poor plan that was implemented even worse and the communication was in silos and this communication continues to be in silos, without any doubt the secret service failed us that day. that's what all these hearings, these testimonies, just confirmed what i thought immediately after. we need a crisis intervention team, to step in and take over the secret service. we need someone like a mike pompeo to step in there, turn that place upside down. they lost over half of their agents in a years time. there's something wrong in the secret service. it's a cultural rut. someone needs to go in and start over. david: in fairness to director row, he did say that butler was a failure. how could it not be because a man, a good man was killed. the president himself was injured. was wounded by a bullet. obviously it was a failure;
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however, there's so many conflicts and of course he's attached to the previous leadership, should he resign? >> look, he needs to be replaced. this is why we need a leader in the white house to make a decision and when something is broken fix it. when someone's done a horrible job to fire them. i'm just telling you the culture there is horrible. in my experience in the real-world, when there's a situation like this , you fire all the management and you have to start over. i think that there's a problem where the secret service is. i think that their mission and the dhs doesn't mesh and of course we have a secretary of dhs which is incompetent as well so multiple problems at multiple levels that starts in the white house. it goes to your secretary, and here we had the director, of the secret service just struggling as well so they all need to go. we need to start over. david: senator, there's a big question also about how secret service agents should be deployed, and whether they are being spread to areas where perhaps they aren't there.
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we were interested in seeing how many secret service agents were deployed for the iranian president, former president trump had words to say about that. i want to play that and get your reaction. roll it. >> meanwhile, we have the president of iran in our country this week. we have large security forces guarding him and yet, they are threatening our former president and the leading candidate to become the next president of the united states. certainly a strange set of circumstances. around the world our enemies are desperate to prevent donald trump from returning to the white house, because they know i will make america great again. they don't want that. david: it does seem a little absurd doesn't it, senator, we gave so much attention to the president of iran and we've had two assassination attempts against donald trump? >> i can't believe we allow any leader from iran into this country. this is a country that has promised death to america. these are very serious threats on president trump's life.
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i want to go back to the day of president trump's attempted assassination on him when joe biden had more than president trump did for a crowd of 400 people versus 15,000 people, she had more assets. so, only in america does this happen. i'm concerned, why did the justice department release the $150,000 bounty on president trump? is that more lawfare? it just doesn't make sense the white house piling up, working to do everything they can to harm president trump. >> dean: senator roger marshall good to see you, senator. thank you very much for being here appreciate it. well, former president trump's lawyers in a new york appeals court hoping to convince a panel of judges to overturn the civil fraud judgment that could cost them nearly 500 million bucks and from another new york city mayor eric adams remains defiant in the face of five federal charges of bribery, fraud and soliciting illegal foreign campaign donations, insisting
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that this is coming from the doj inside the beltway and vowing to stay in office. steve forbes with his take on all of this coming next. >> the commentary, the demonizing. this did not surprise us that we reached this day and i ask new yorkers to wait to hear our defense before making any judgments. moving forward with node-positive breast cancer. my fear of recurrence could've held me back. but i'm staying focused.
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therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title. david: a new york appeals court hears arguments on former president trump's nearly half a billion dollar civil fraud ruling. trump's lawyers asking the court to toss it out. fox news bryan llenas is live from the new york state appellate division in new york city. brian what's the latest? reporter: hey david well actually i moved over to trump tower because the former president did not show up to court for the appeals, for that appeal. he let his lawyers do that. instead he's currently holding a press conference going on now for about 45 minutes speaking to the press. hasn't taken any questions yet but going back to that $454 million judgment, time is of the essence. that judgment is accruing $114,000 of interest every
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single day that it goes unpaid. so it is now $489 million that the former president owes thanks to that ruling from judge aragone who made it in february saying that the former president, his sons, and his trump organization are liable for fraud by over-valuing their real estate assets. today, the former president's lawyers argued that that civil case brought forward by attorney general leticia james in new york was an abuse of power and she overstepped her power boy using the law to go after the former president and by issuing this excessive and grocery excessive according to them judgment. here is a cross-talk between one of the justices and an attorney representing the attorney general. listen. >> are there any cases where the language harm or threat to harm limits the scope of
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the attorney general? >> no, your honor, not as to liability and not in cases like this. >> there has to be some limitation on what the attorney general can do in interfering in these private transactions that where people don't claim harm, so what is the limiting principle? reporter: so the justices there, there are five appellate justices voicing some skepticism on behalf of the former president. that, the attorney general, leticia james may have overstepped her power. there is also a moment where you heard former president trump's lawyer argue that these allegations were past the statue of limitations and therefore this entire judgment should be thrown out. listen. >> it was just a complete disregard of statute of limitations and an analysis that again and again goes all the way back to 2012. >> even if we are degree with you on the statue of limitations point that would not result in the complaint in its entirety being dismissed. there would still be several
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transactions that be not timely. reporter: this five justice appellate court typically makes its decisions about a month after hearing oral arguments which means, david, we could hear a result from this right before the election if the result is not to the former president's liking, they can then perhaps appeal to the highest court of the land that is the court of appeals here in new york and if that doesn't go right it could maybe go to the us supreme court. david? david: very good bryan llenas thank you very much for that. >> it's an unfortunate day and it's a painful day but inside of all of that it's a day where we will finally reveal why for 10 months i have gone through this and i look forward to defending myself and defending the people of this city as i've
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done throughout my entire professional career. david: and another new york story getting at the heart of its local government. new york city mayor eric adams becoming first new york mayor in history to be indicted while in office. prosecutors are saying adams knowingly took illegal contributions and pursued money in secret into 2021. prosecutors today unsealed their 57 page indictment and it reveals he is being charged with five counts including wire fraud and bribery. however, mayor adams stands firm and said he will not resign to fight the charges. let's welcome to the show for more commentary forbes media chairman editor in chief steve forbes. great to see you. it's kind of related to the trump fraud trial, because there's growing suspicion and not just from mayor adams himself but that this federal case might be motivated by lawfare, that is to say the administration is very unhappy with his comments about migration and how the open
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borders killing cities like his own and maybe they prompted the doj to do something like this. now of course doj is saying no way, the white house is saying no way, they are completely independent body but what do you say? >> well the idea the doj is an independent body has been blasted away in the last three and a half years certainly in the trump case the coordination of all of those indictments so in terms of mayor adam . yes what he's accused of, you look at other cities in america where you see violence and corruption and that goes by the boards, and this case, they go after him of course it's lawfare, and we'll see what happens in a trial but it's very strange, the whole history of this. going 100 years ago a mayor named jimmy walker accused of corruption, found guilty of corruption and franklin roosevelt then candidate for governor didn't want to remove him because he thought it would hurt his delegate count in the convention. fortunately they persuaded
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walker to resign and then another one 20 years later a mayor with extensive corruption and truman, suddenly made ambassador to mexico because the people around with information that implicate people around other big city bosses in the country, truman, so there's sort of a history. david: there is kind of a history, but the question is if, in fact, one way or another adams leaves, he be replaced immediately by a guy named jumani williams. now he has been on fox news and so forth. he makes kamala harris look like a conservative. he's very far to the left. what would that do to the city of new york, which is already suffering from a lot of woke poll supreme courts increasing crime and causing other problems. >> just continuing a downward spiral because businesses fear. what if this guy wins the election in 2025? who knows, he be incumbent and that's why hochul isn't going to
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remove adams from office. she as governor has the power to do so. i think they are sort of hoping adams runs the clock, keeps this going and they can get an election where they get somebody to become mayor. because they are all fearful. this guy, you're right. makes fidel castro look like a moderate. david: and it's also the city counsel because like so many cities across america they now have much more control than they used to and they are very far to the left. >> it's astonishing. somebody should study what is it about these cities that elect these people that have no sense. david: i'm getting wrapped up. could new york survive as a place of commerce with a group like this in charge? >> not for four years. new york would survive but it would take years to undo it just like it took years to undo the near bankruptcy of new york back in the 1970s so try to keep this ship afloat before the bad guys, the pirates take over. david: the great steve forbes thank you very much. appreciate it.
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still ahead, concerns of a greater war intensifying after israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has distanced himself from the us-led proposal for a cease-fire in lebanon. plus critics slamming vice president kamala harris' planned trip to arizona southern border tomorrow is nothing more than a "political stunt." arizona congresswoman debbie lesk ox will discuss howw voters feel about the trip to the state. that's next, on the "evening edit." did you ever worry we wouldn't get to enjoy this? [jeff laughs maniacally] (inner monologue) seriously, look at these guys. they are playing great. meanwhile, i'm on the green and all i can think about is all the green i'm spending on 3 kids in college. not to mention the kitchen remodel, and we'd just remodel the bathrooms last month.
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david: now to this story. vice president kamala harris planning to head to the southern border in arizona tomorrow for the first time as a democrat presidential nominee with just 40 day ago until the election. her last visit to the border was back in 2021 and donald trump currently leads harris on border security and immigration. joining us now from the congressional border security caucus is arizona congresswoman debbie lesko. congresswoman, great to see you
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thank you for being here. kamala harris of course blames everybody but her own administration for the border crisis. she blames current immigration laws which of course they haven't done much to fix on their own. even donald trump she blames for this five-fold increase in illegal migration since she's been in power. who do arizona voters blame for the crisis at the border? >> [laughter] well arizona voters blame kamala harris and joe biden because they are the right people that have ruined the border and have an open border policy. i find it interesting that she's going to douglas, arizona, because there's a great photo of where the wall actually stops right ind in douglas, arizona sl these illegal migrants can cross right over and i suppose she's not going to pose in front of that place because it was her and president biden that stopped construction of the border wall. david: well you never know. history is being rewritten as we
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speak, congresswoman, but getting to today's polls coming out of arizona. trump does have a slight lead. the average is 50% for trump, and 49% for harris, but on issues, it's very interesting. the number one issue that voters care about according to a poll preserving democracy. 27% go for that and 26% for inflation. 21% formation. of course preserving the democracy, democrats feel they own that issue. are they right in that suspicion and are you surprised that that's the number one issue that concerns arizona? >> yeah, i'm very surprised by that poll. illegal immigration has been the number one issue in arizona for many many years, way back when i first ran for state legislature in 2008 and so that is very surprising to me and besides if that is the issue,
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they should look at themselves in the mirror because they just anointed kamala harris. they throughout of office president biden. david: and then there's the whole issue of lawfare, et cetera. so maybe not everybody who thinks democracy is the number one issue we're going to vote for kamala harris. that's yet to be decided. congresswoman we've got to leave it at that. thank you very much for coming in appreciate it. well middle east tensions are running high as israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu distances himself from negotiations foresees fire deal. fox news reporter trey yingst is live in israel to explain more. trey? reporter: yeah, hey, david. good afternoon. the israelis are continuing their war against hezbollah in southern and central lebanon. we know earlier tonight they conducted a new round of air strike against the iran-backed group and it came just hours after israel conducted a targeted strike against a top hezbollah commander in
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the capitol. we know this strike took out the lead of the aerial unit for hezbollah, the man responsible for the drones that have been crossing the border targeting israeli cities. it was the strike in the lebanese capitol in the past week and approved the prime minister himself from his plane. here, sirens were sounding earlier today as hezbollah rockets slammed into the sea behind us. the group fired around 45 rockets toward northern israel and throughout the day more than 150. israel continued its vaccinated against lebanon targeting dozens of positions overnight and into this evening. the exchange of fire comes amid calls by the united states, france and others for a three week cease-fire between the two sides. now this morning israeli mediabuzzed with errors of a possible cease-fire in the coming hours before the office of the prime minister quickly shot down those comments saying that netanyahu actually instructed the izf to continue fighting in full force. the leader left earlier this morning for the u.n.
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general assembly and will address the body to address the current state of affairs in the middle east an in lebanon more than 600 people have been killed since last week. israeli operations are ongoing against gaza with most population displaced from their homes there are new calls for an agreement between israel and hamas to allow for aid to be distributed to civilians. >> given aid unimpeded and immediate is needed now more than ever in gaza especially that we approaching another winter and that's going to be another tragedy for the civilian population. reporter: next month, the region will mark one year since the october 7 massacre and right now, there are no diplomatic solutions on the table to end the war in gaza or in lebanon. david: trey yingst, thank you very much from israel. well for more on these growing tensions in the middle east let's welcome to the show from senate homeland security committee wisconsin senator ron johnson. senator, first of all let's talk
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about our security. israel should not be treated in my mind the way they are, but we have problems with iran too. it's not only israel that has problems. first of all, we can't forget the marines they killed in beirut back in the 1980s and also had various cells here in the us. one of which was busted in 2001 that a lot of people don't know about, and now, apparently, they are targeting a former president who is running for president again. why are we getting more pushback against iran for what they are doing here? >> america unfortunately elected joe biden as president and both president obama and president biden have coddled iran, with the misguided assumption that if we give them and funnel billions of dollars into iran's economy which means into their military and terrorist operations, somehow that will change iran's behavior for the better.
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new it changes their behavior for the worst. they are the largest state sponsor or terror. by the way, you then support and backup your allies like israel and you make sure they can defeat the enemy, eliminate the threat, you don't keep twisting their arms to stop short. david: and also, you don't keep, well you use the word codel. i'd say helping in many ways iran in terms of giving them more access to funds. over $100 billion worth which they use to fund terrorism and of course to develop their nuclear program, but you also had this former envoy of this administration a guy named rob malley suspended because there was suspicion he was sharing a classified information with iran about israel of all things. i mean, what's going on here? >> well again, the democrats have a different world view than republicans.
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again, yes, they obviously funnel more than $100 million into again the largest state sponsor of terror. i call it codelling but again you just misguided, thinking that by doing that, iran will not pursue nuclear weapons. well that's madness. if i ran doesn't like the sanctions, they could just stop pursuing nuclear weapons but they continue to do so because they want a nuclear weapon. they want to eliminate israel. they chant death to america. you can't live in a fantasy world like the biden administration and kamala harris does. david: senator johnson just 10 seconds but do you think iran has anything directly to do with the two assassination attempts against donald trump? >> i haven't seen any evidence of it but it wouldn't surprise me if they did. david: senator ron johnson always a pleasure to see you appreciate you being here. well vice president kamala harris' latest word salad in her msnbc interview has americans wondering if she's
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discovered a new buzzword. fox news contributor joe concha an the federalist brianna lyman will join us for reaction but let's check in with dagen and sean to see what they have coming up in the next hour of the bottom line. >> thank you david yeah, so iran's threat to assassinate donald trump we'll unpack that with cash patel former deputy from dni, also cnn and the washington post had to fact check harris on trump's manufacturing record, uh-huh, monica crowley to discuss and unpack. dagen: the running for senate, trying to unseat tammy baldwin in one of the most closely-watched races, wisconsin. sean's home state and elizabeth pipco from the rnc on why the media props up harris, props up the dems, and crushes republicans at every turn, top of the hour. liberty mutual customized my car insurance so i saved hundreds. with the money i saved i thought i'd get a
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david: kamala harris attempting to elaborate on her economic mans but instead offering more buzzwords this time pushing who list being housing. listen. >> i'm looking holistically at the connection between that and housing, and looking holistically at the incentives we and the federal government can create for local and state governments to actually engage in planning and holistic manner that includes prioritizing
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affordable housing. david: three times in one sentence. now if you're wondering what that means don't worry google unbiased a.i. search system laying it all out for us. the phrase is of course echo friendly meaning housing with spa-like bathrooms and supportive vibe that provides good energy. joining us now for more, the federalist elections correspondent brianna lyman, and joe concha. joe it sounds like holistic housing means everybody is entitled to a spa in their own home. that's cool, ha? >> oh, it's awesome and i'm sure it'll be really inexpensive too, right? that has to be a record, david. i timed it actually. three times she said holistically in a span of 13 seconds. that's really hard to do, and just watch this interview and again, it proves that empty vessels make the most noise. for example, she receives a first question on the economy and if her plan covered those who were struggling now,
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and she came back by saying within the first 60 seconds that yes she grew up in the middle class family i think we got that at this point and on three occasions in the same answer she evoked the hopes and dreams of aspirations of americans and when she finally got around to actually answering the question she starts talking about $25,000 for new homeowners and $6,000 for new child credits so what if i already had a home or not kids or not planning on having kids. david: you got to act on faith and joy. that's what it's all about. brianna, i think it's just kind of a word that her handlers came up with. it sounded cool and new agey and maybe it doesn't even have any particular meaning at all, but she thought it would somehow stick in voter's minds don't you agree? >> yeah, actually i think it's probably the latter. kamala is known for tossing off word salads and luckily for her,
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if she did, she wouldn't have been satisfied by those word salad answers. she would want to know how are things going to be paid for? what kamala will get done and i think what's concerning about last night is for the first time in stephanie's life she was the smartest person in the room, which means the bar for intelligence was low and kamala couldn't reach that. what is she going to do when she's sitting across from someone like xi-jinping or putin who can recite his country history front to back and is by no means an unintelligent person. does kamala harris think a word salad is going to suffice when safety and prosperity is on the line? david: another mystery and joe i'll throw this how. kamala harris has come out with this economic plan which would just be terrible for a lot of corporations. this is for joe concha. i mean, raising tax rates is not something that corporations are supposed to like. but at the same time, she has people like mark cuban funding for , the billionaire entrepreneur and i'm just going to run a little bit of how mark
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cuban is making his pitch for kamala harris and then run a response. roll mark cuban first. >> if you look at donald when he talks about policies they are impulsive, set to match whatever is happening at a rally. she takes the time to vet her policies thoroughly and when she says them and presents them, they are what they are. david: now, joe, here is cantor fitzgerald ceo howard lutnik pushing back on mark cuban. roll that. >> he wants to run for president as a democrat so he's just going to play the game as hi, let me talk about how to run for president as a democrat. so you have to take whatever he says and put it in the trash bin, because he's just for office. david: joe, you only got 10 seconds sorry to do this but what do you think? whose right on this , mark or the other billionaire? >> the other billionaire, i mean, i want to hear mark cuban actually say, you know what? taxing unrealized capital gains,
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whichever are economist says will tank the stock market tell me why that a good idea i'd love to hear your answer. david: brianna i owe you one, so sorry we've run out of time. great to see you both. still ahead, the country is bracing for major impacts from potential port strike in the coming days, analysts are warning this could cost the economy $5 billion a day. we have the latest details on that, next on the "evening edit."
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our advanced matching helps find talented candidates, so you can connect with them fast. visit indeed.com/hire >> the risk of a looming work stoppage, working on the east coast and gulf of mexico, is causing financial uncertainty physically. sean: u.s. manufacturers, which of the goods out that includes marlin steel, located near the port of baltimore grady trimble is on the floor at the steel
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factory in maryland with the latest on the impacts of the potential strike grady. >> yes and david with this potential portal strike looming, the businesses are bracing as if it's going to happen and what marlin steel come over the make all sorts of steel products with u.s. steel including baskets like this one and cards and patent bucket handles and all sorts of stuff, made right here in baltimore area and the ceo in the issue is not that your importing materials, that you need to make these products because it's all u.s. products, but you should without exports with the strike happens, will be able to deliver on the boats and on ships and what you need to get out to your customers. >> it's a huge problem being make everything in america really is american steel, make it an indiana michigan and in baltimore right here and if this strike happens, it's going to disrupt is not going to be able to pull make it challenging to ship untimely won't check on five and so we will have to fly
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things and that's very expensive. grady: how much more expensive and will be usually the cost. >> yes we have to heat that press because we made firm commitments to ship on time every time is when be brutal, hundreds of thousands of dollars a week in the next couple of weeks, just to be straight up and to be honorable with our clients c4 nike's income you're planning that this strike is going to happen even though crystal could be averted, you gotta come up with plan b. >> we are very concerned is going to happen and so our plan is to talk to ups and fedex and get airplane pricing because we can never other clients down. >> and so david, this is just one company of thousands and maybe even hundreds of thousands dealing with this as a way to see what happens with these dockworkers. david: great reporter thank you brady trouble announced time for the bottom line with dagen mcdowell and sean duffy. dagen: thank you david
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