tv Varney Company FOX Business September 27, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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>> you have technology company, you have the big industrials that say, okay, rates are not going up. rates are going to go down slowly. >> for kamala harris, if she remains a mystery box where you have to fill in the gaps because you're not sure, well, then i think you're going to the either see her base deteriorate among independents -- >> in this failure of a president had let zelenskyy have the f-16s, the abrams tanks early on, this would not have lasted over 9000 days now. >> they're still being released into the country through direct flights or through the use of the app which is a complete fraud. >> this is political, that they're twisting things around, making absurd is claims in order to prevail. that's' not what the legal system is supposed to do. ♪ ♪ i can't get no satisfaction ♪ if. stuart: all right, i can't get no sphafntle that was always a one of my favorite rolling stones songs throughout my long life, i can't get no
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satisfaction. it is 1 success eastern time -- 11:00 eastern time, friday, september the 27th. check out the that market. nice gain for the dow, up 3467, but i'm afraid -- 347, but the nasdaq has slipped into negative territory. show me big tech. yeah, we've got microsoft, amazon and nvidia, all of them on the downside is. just two stocks in the dow are up, alphabet gaining 1.5. the 10-year treasury yield, where's that? it is at 3.77%, down ever is so slightly. now, we're keeping a very close eye on tropical storm helene. it's currently tearing its way through georgia and south carolina after making landfall in florida. we're getting reports that historic flooding could be imminent in parts of north carolina. millions if are currently without power. now, you can join fox in supporting recovery efforts following hurricane helene. visit redcross.org/folkforward -- foxforward or scan the qr code
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on your screen right now to support these efforts. now this. kamala harris goes to the border today. it's her first visit in three and a half years. all the polls show donald trump with a commanding lead on the border issue. and in the border state of arizona, new fox polling shows trump up by 3 points, 51-ing 48. harris really just had to go. with just weeks til the election, the pressure was too strong. youn't can't ignore one of the top issues especially when the world knows that harris has been in charge. so she'll stand at the border for a photo op that will appear in her commercials. she'll look good there. she will be making a speech blaming donald trump on the grounds that he helped defeat a border bill earlier this week where year. of course, that completely ignores her doing nothing while 8 million illegals flooded into our country. her handlers are hoping that if you repeat nonsense often enough, some people will believe it. harris is looking for something positive. she will point to, amazingly,
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fentanyl. her team has put out a fact sheet that claims border officials have stopped more fentanyl in the last two yearsen than in the previous five combined. voila, we're doing something. she may dodge and weave, but she cannot hide the big picture truth; 8.3 million migrants came in during the biden haste years compared to 2.4 million during the trump years. she can't hide the problems migrants bring to new york and chicago. she may talk about prosecuting transnational gang, but she can't hide the arrival of tren de aragua, allowed in by her administering, and she cannot hide the fact that the open border has changed america forever without a vote. third hour of "varney" starts now. ♪ if. ♪ stuart: steve hilton with me this friday morning. is this border trip anything
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more than an election stunt for harris, steve? if. >> well, the entire harris campaign can be basically described as an election stunt. it's pretty much a unsubstance-free campaign, and people are seeing through it. specifically on the border. effectively, kamala harris going to the border today is kamala harris going back to the scene of the crime which is usually not a good idea. and so i think it just serves to remind people of one of the biggest calamities in terms of its overall impact, surely the biggest calamity. i would put afghanistan as the most disgraceful episode. but in terms of the impact on americans across the country, the open border disaster that was a deliberate act of policy is just right up there. and the thing is that she can say it's all trump's fault because of this last minute bill that came up just within the last year. what about the first three years? what about most of the biden-harris presidency? no one was talking about any kind of bill then. most of the damage was done
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through their specific executive actions which undid the executive actions of the trump administration which gave us a much more secure border, the most secure we've seen nor decades -- for decades. so it is the all on her. for a while they pretended, when it suited them, that a kamala harris a was right at the heart of the biden-harris administration. now she's trying to run away from the if record. going to the border today just reminds everyone of the disastrous record. stuart: the governor of california, gavin newsom, i believe he's vetoed a series of bills including an accountability legislation for state spending on the homeless crisis. in other words, there's no accountability for all the spending on homelessness in california. is that accurate? he did that? >> he did. and it's a very good bill. actually, put together and pushed through by a very good young member of the assembly, josh hoover, someone who i know well. and it's a disgrace that newsom has vetoed it.
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he claims that the reason for the veto is that we already have plenty of accountability measures in the homeless trending. oh, really? why is it then that a recent audit of california's homeless spending literally said that $24 billion of taxpayer money spent on homelessness couldn't be accounted for in no record of what it did, where it went, what the outcomes were. what it really shows is that they're embarrassed by the complete if failure of their approach because it's till the case that in california -- it's still the case that in california we have this law, housing first, which means it is the illegal for any organization taking state money for homelessness to require sobriety, to require people to go through addiction programs or anything else. in other words, it's illegal to solve one of the main causes of the problem. it's a joke. stuart: i'm told that newsom has over 800 unsigned bills on his desk. california's got an overregulation problem, doesn't it? >> massive. i mean, this is a huge issue.
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i mean, thousands of bills making their way through the legislature every year. we are the most overregulated, overlegislated, overlitigated state in america, and the result is the fact that we have all the indicators in the wrong direction. we have the worst business climate, the highest taxes, the highest rate of poverty, on and on. the highest cost, the highest housing costs, the lowest homeownership, and that's partly because of this massive expansion in regulation and legislation that just crushes everything, makes itnd -- it impossible to get anything done. we've got to change it. stuart: one of these days you'll see the light and leave california. see you next week, i hope. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: check the market, please. now we have a 400-point gain for the dow industrials and a 20-point loss for the nasdaq. split decision there. jonathan hoenig with us this friday morning. now, jonathan, we have this inflation report, a 2.2% gain
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over the last 12 months. inflation really is cooling. interest rate are down. the economy's expanding at 3%-ish, something like that. looks like a solid rally to me. >> and i have to say, stuart, i think inflation's down, but i don't think it's out. just the last couple of days we've talked about gold at an all-time high, silver is breaking out, platinum is also breaking out, even dba, that's the etf that tracks agricultural commodities. tests also at a 52-week high. i'm watching, you know, a lot of these indices, stuart, to suggest that perhaps inflation isn't dead. it's slowed, but i don't think it's dead. and all of them are surrounding around the biggest trend i see in the marketplace, and that is the weaker dollar. it's propelling international stocks, all the precious metals and a lot of those inflation-oriented names. it's going the power them all higher. stuart: is that why your gottivic of the week is short international treasury bonds -- exotic pick, is that your
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reasoning? >> exactly right, stuart. think about the stocks that have been the strongest, a lot of those international stocks, the multi-nationals that earn their money outside the u.s. coca-cola, for example, 3m. so i'm looking at a bw dis, exactly as you said -- b bb workz. as the dollar goes down, the value of those international bonds go up. this is one way, i think, stuart, to play to me the strongest trend in the marketplace, the weak dollar. you play it directly with shares of bwz. stuart: that's what you need, a weak dollar, for it to go places, doesn't it? >> indeed, stuart. once these trends take place, they tend to persist for years at a time. the dollar went down almost every year from 2001-2010. that helped propel international stocks during that period, gold as well. so i think, you know, whatever the fed is doing there, weakening the u.s. dollar, this is one trend you can take to the
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bank. bwz. do your own due diligence, but it's the biggest trend i'm seeing right now. stuart: fascinating. jonathan hoenig with the exotic investment of the peek. hanks, jonathan -- of the week. thanks, jonathan. lauren's looking at barrett gold. lauren:s it is down about 3% today, but it's the best quarter for gold since 2016. baric is up 23% this quarter, so when you look at it over the past three months, this 3% loss is nothing. stuart: a little profit taking, as they say. chevron, that's a dow stock. i believe the -- it's up sharply. lauren: nicely. it's restored production in the gulf of mexico after they were shuttered from hurricane helene. a quarter of oil production had been shut in that area, so this is good news. stuart: now let's get back to tropical storm, helene. right now it's flooding parts of georgia and south carolina, knocking out power to millions
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of people. six people dead. high water rescues are underway across the southeast. early this morning a fox weather reporter walked off the job to save a woman trapped inside her car. watch this. >> reporter: she's screaming right now. i just called 91 is. going to see if i can help this lady out a bit more, you guys. [background sounds] stuart: pulled that lady out of the car, held her and walked her to safety, carrying the woman. now, that guy's a hero. what a guy. and he did that on live television. fox weather guy. pretty darn good, i'd say. florida is also dealing with major flooding. helene hit the state as a cat four hurricane overnight. we'll be monitoring helene, we'll bring you the latest as it develops. we're on it. take a look at this, former president trump just met with
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ukraine's president zelenskyy. trump previously said he could broker an end to the war very quickly. we'll tell you what was disclosed and discussed. we'll find out. israel's prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, spoke at the u.n. today. the he received thuntd rouse applause and delivered a stark warning to the general assembly. >> iran's aggression, if it's not exec check -- checked, will endanger every single country in the middle east and many, many countries in the rest of the world. stuart: senator ron johnson will be here to react to netanyahu's warm reception and his warning to the world. the senator is next. ♪
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stuart: this just coming to us, former president trump met with ukraine's president zelenskyy. they both agree that the war needs to end and quickly. they agreed on that, but they did not disclose any details. trump has said that if he wins, the war will end rapidly. more on this coming up in just a moment. secretary of state antony blinken facing calls to resign from republicans and democrats. gillian turner joining us. walk me through why they want plunken gone. >> reporter: so, stuart, the state department during the war in gaza has gone to quite painstaking efforts to convey a balance as they call it between supporting israel's right to self-defense and criticizing their conduct in the war in gaza. but now president biden's left flank is just strike out on their own ask calling for the secretary to step aside. rashida tlaib is the latest to join this call. take a look at what she posted on twitter or x, excuse me.
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secretary blinken rided, people went hungry and some died, he needs to reion now. >> the government as we know has a deliberately and systematically blocked food, medicine, medical supplies, fuel, tents from entering gaza for almost a year now. they've been forced to eat grass, animal feed just to survive. >> reporter: the reality though on the ground is a lot more complicated. the truth being closer to hamas is actually blocking international aid a from reaching its very own people as netanyahu just reminded the world a moment ago. >> hamas steals the food, and then they hike the prices. they feed their bellies, and then they fill their coffers with money that they extort from their own people if they -- people. they sell the stolen food at exorbitant prices, and that's how they stay in power. >> reporter: so these calls from democrats and even some republicans for blinken to step
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aside come after a highly publicized propublica report that alleges blinken toned down the findings of an internal u.s. government report that was delivered to congress in may which found that israel had blocked some deliveries of humanitarian aid into gaza. the report's findings were delivered to blinken. they would have required by law that the u.s. cut off weapons shipments to israel entirely. but here's what blinken said. >> in our judgment, this is not and has not been a deliberate attempt to deny people what they need. >> reporter: so, stuart, it's no secret that progressives on capitol hill stand firmly against israel in this war, but now it seems the democrats are taking things a step further. they're going on offense against their own party's official, biden administration officials, who are not openly denigrating israel's right to exist. stuart? stuart: got it. gillian turner at the state department, thank you. prime minister benjamin
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netanyahu spoke at the united nations earlier today. he was greeted at some points by thunderous applause. watch this. >> i heard the lies and slanders leveled at my country by many of the speakers at this podium. i decided to come here and set the record straight. [applause] i decided to come here to speak for my people, to speak for my country, to speak for the truth. i have a message for the tyrants of tehran. if you strike us, we will strike you. there is no place -- [cheers and applause] there is no place in iran that the long arm of israel cannot reach. stuart: wisconsin senator ron johnson joins me now. mr. senator, i was surprised by the applause. then i saw the empty seats for many of the delegates there. they just didn't show up.
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i thought he was going to get a hostile reception. i was pleasantly surprised at that. what say you? >> well, apparently, the people who would be hostile to him had already left, wouldn't even hear him out. i'm glad he got a warm reception for telling the truth. and the truth is, you could have peace in the middle east overnight if these countries would stop attacking israel. if they would stop lobbing thousands of missiles into israel. you know, if they would acknowledge israel's right to exist. if you know, israel's not the aggressor here. israel's on the defense. they're fighting for their survival, and the u.s. role should be to support israel in defense of its people and its nation. stuart: but it's not. that's not what we're doing. we're urging israel to do a ceasefire first with hamas, and now with hezbollah. a ceasefire would just allow hezbollah time to regroup and start the attacks all over again. am i wrong on this?
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>> well, that's because joe biden is president and democrats are in charge. you know, pretty much if the same thing played out during the obama administration where they coddled iran, the largest state sponsor of terror, sent hundreds of billions of dollars into iran's economy which means into their military and terrorist operations, and then joe biden, you know, took off where or, you know, continued where president obama had, you know, started it. so, no, it's completely misguided policy. i know the obama administration was trying to change iran's behavior by coddling them. they changed their behavior, it got worse. they became emboldened. they're even, they're rushing toward becoming a nuclear power even faster when you coddle them. donald trump took the exact opposite approach. he tried to starve their military of money which means, of munitions and their ability to support all this kind of
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terrorism. remember, all these attacks are occurring on joe biden's watch, on the democrats' watch with, on kamala harris' watch. putin invades ukraine, hamas invades and, you know, brutalizes and butchers israelis. i mean, this is happening under democrat governance because they are weak. and when the world seas weak -- sees weakness in america, they take that opportunity to strike. stuart: zelenskyy has just met with donald trump. they both say, look, we've got to end this war and quickly. america is delivering $8 billion worth of advanced weapons to ukraine. does -- are you in support of that? are we creating here anen endless war? is that what we're supporting? >> well, that's what we have been supporting. i have a unique perspective on this, stuart, because i was the only member of congress that attended zelenskyy's inauguration. i went back a couple of months later with senator chris murphy. i'm quite sure it was at that meeting, zelenskyy was telling
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us he wanted to do a peace agreement with putin at that point in time. there was no war or invasion at that point in time. this was in 2020. but he wanted to do a peace agreement with putin because he realized he couldn't dislodge russia from crimea or from eastern ukraine. he recognized that reality. he knew it wouldn't be popular, but he was willing to acknowledge that reality. my guess is the united states egged him on, basically told him, oh, we'll help you dislodge putin when it's completely impossible and an unrealistic goal. and that resulted in the war, and that resulted in the continuation of this war. it was the literally boris johnson at the behest of joe biden, we are told, that flew into the peace talks in istanbul a few weeks after the the war started and blume those peace talks. now we have this bloody stalemate. vladimir putin will not lose in this war. he will not lose it. the only way this ends is in a settlement. i'm not going to like it, but every day that goes by it gets worse and worse because more
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ukrainians, more russian conscripts, i take no joy in the fact that they'll be dieing as well and the more ukraine gets destroyed. this war has to end, president trump is exactly right. stuart: i'll leave it right there. senator ron johnson, thanks for joining us. always a pleasure. >> have a good day. stuart: better hit that market again because the dow has hit another all-time high. now up 431 points. minor if loss for the nasdaq, it's down 54. coming up, kamala harris has been touting her record as attorney general in california to prove if she's a law and order candidate. but many of the policies she supported are directly responsible for the state's decline. leo terrell chomping at the bit to take that one on. wine makers in california, a big problem there. there's a huge drop in demand. they're trying to bring customers back. we'll tell you how they're going to try to do that. a live report from the vineyard next. hub if ♪ ♪
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you're at 422, 600 right now -- 4 4 the -- 422,600. let's take a look at novo nordisk -- lauren: and eli lilly. jpmorgan says sales of wegovy might be weaker than expected, and that analyst is worried about earnings that come out early november. so as you can see, both stocks down on that. stuart: we're not used to that, are we? lauren: no. these are stocks that have always gone up apparently, especially this year. stuart: what's with vail resorts? lauren: so the stock is down 4.5%. they operate 42 ski resorts around the world. they have a 2 2-year transformation plan that includes are cutting 14% of their corporate jobs. they also reported a loss in the quarter of over $175 million. stuart: all right, move on to this, wine makers in california are struggling with a drop in demand. max gorden at a vineyard in clarksburg, california. max, okay, first of all, how
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much is demand down, and or what are they doing about it? >> reporter: well, globally wine consumption is down around 9% year-over-year. now, wine makers, they are trying to attract new customers, younger customers, people who generally haven't been as interested in wine in the past. and they're also trying to make more non-alcoholic versions of wines really just trying to get people inspired in the wine making process. and it is a very interesting process, indeed. we're here at bogel winery here where we're seeing load after load of grapes being dropped off. we're right in the midst of california's wine grape harvest, essentially 6-ton bins of grapes being dropped off into this hopper where they're destemmed, they're crushed, and the wine-making process all a begins. this is one of the largest wine makers in the country on track to produce about 2.a 5 million cases of wine this year. but, again, globally wine consumption is down about 9% according to numbers from the
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wine industry analytics company. there's been a new focus on drinking less alcohol. baby boomers are buying less wine, and younger generations don't seem to be as interested either. and that's having a big impact on both wineries and wine grape growers here in california. there's an oversupply of wine on the market, and the price of wine grapes has been crashing this season. >> it hurts a lot of you are small family grape growers in california. if you have less desire for volume, then we have too much supply of grapes on the market. so we've already seen anywhere from 30-50,000 acres of vineyards being pulled out. >> reporter: now, this has led some wineries to innovate, non-alcoholic wine is growing in pop lair -- popularity, and bogle is trying out new eco-friendly aluminum bolts that appeal to younger can be bottles that appeal to younger
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consumers. >> you're seeing multiple reasons why there's been down turn in the industry and, you know, as a family wine grower and wine maker, it's our job to figure out who's drinking wine, who's not drinking wine, how we can bring them into this industry that is just so fantastic. >> reporter: now, a few bad years isn't going to knock out large wineries like bogle. really the concern is about smaller, family-owned wineries. those could go out of business if this trend continues. now, we all want to do our part though, stu, so what kind of bottles should i pick up for you in. [laughter] stuart: that would be telling, wouldn't it? a bottle of chas, how about that? >> reporter: there we go, i got you. stuart: be careful how you deliver it, you know? max gorden, that was a fine report. well done, young man. see you later. kamala harris promoted proposition 47 which made law
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enforcement harder, now she's refusing to answer if he will endorse proposition 36 cracks down on criminals. lee. leyna: -- leo terrell joins me now. is harris truly a law and order candidate as she would like to be seen? >> absolutely not. look, she's chairman of the board when she was the district attorney, she was chairman of the board of progressive prosecutors. he supports gascon. we know what he's doing to los angeles. let me give you some exacts about -- facts about kamala harris. she won't support prop 36 because it would put her voting bloc in jail. criminals are allowed to steal up to $950. migrant crime is rampant in california. if someone asks her if she supports prop 36, she's going to duck and hide and talk about how she's from a middle class family. she is against i.c.e. she called i.c.e. kkk, and when we had the riots in the summer of 2020, she supported a bail fund to get criminals out. he loves criminals, she loves
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migrant criminals, and she is not going to support prop 36. stuart: well, now we know exactly how you feel, leo. don't ever hold back on a friday morning. [laughter] on sunday i believe harris is attending a fundraiser in los angeles. that's going to bring in a ton of money, isn't it? >> millions of dollars, and i'll tell you why. she's going to get the money from the hollywood elites, the julian roberts, the meryl streeps, from silicon valley. she's going to get people who are pro-open borders. and you know what, tu? the problem with california is -- stu? they want to turn the united states of america into california. they want to turn california into the united states of america. they want a socialist country, and that's why she's going to raise a lot of money in california, because there's an agenda to basically destroy traditional democrat values in this country. stuart: leo, i just get the feeling, i get the impression that just california, los angeles perhaps if in particular, hates donald trump, and they will open their wallets because they want harris to win
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at all costs. they hate trump, don't they? >> i think, i think you have the left-wing whackos who will, who hate trump and will give money to kamala harris. but i will tell you, stu, in honesty there are pockets of trump supporters in california. maybe not as many as the whacko liberals, but there are trump supporters, here's one included. stuart: got it. one more for you, leo. biden's education secretary, miguel cardona, he's defending his record despite a string of setbacks for education in this country. as a former teacher, how do you feel about secretary cardona? >> i've been waiting for this question all day. i used to be a schoolteacher. i provide him with an f-. let me give you the evidence. look at the proficiency rate of minority children in baltimore, in oakland. zero proficiency in math. let me talk about the situation with jewish-american students and university and colleges
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being terror oized. the implementation of dei, critical race theory. this, this cabinet secretary has only one friend in education, the teachers' union, because this is the only organization that has prospered. everyone is suffering as far as being part of the school systems has suffered under this education director. he can't leave soon enough. stuart: okay. is biden ands doing anything right? you're -- you've got 30 seconds. >> no. and if i'm wrong, i would like to see the evidence. we have them on tape for the last three and a half years. the bottom line question that kamala harris and joe biden will not answer, are you better off today than you were four years ago under the trump administration. they duck that question. you know what they say? they say i was raised in a middle class family. the answer is, absolutely not. this country needs a change, it needs trump, in my opinion, and guess what? i'm going to get you that bottle of wine, and i'm going to hand
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deliver that california wine to you personally in new jersey. [laughter] stuart: sounds good to me. come on over. leo terrell, appreciate it. i like your energy on a friday morning. >> thank you. stuart: coming up, the task force on trump a assassination attempts had its first hearing yesterday. congressman pat fallon is on that task force, and he's going to tell us what he learned. kamala harris finally heading back to the border after three years. donald trump says she's wasting her time. >> she should save her airfare. she should go back to the white house and tell the president to close the border. stuart: bill melugin will join us shortly previewing what he expects from harris. that's next. ♪ where were you when everything was falling apart? ♪ all my days were spent by telephone -- ♪
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♪ stuart: for the first time in more than three years, vice president harris will vet the southern border. -- visit the southern border. bill melugin, any idea what she's going to do and say today? >> reporter: stuart, she's likely going to attack donald trump for the killing of the bipartisan border deal, but this is going to be vp kamala harris' first visit to the southern border since june of 20 to 221, back when she visited el paso, texas, more than three years ago. well, today she's going to be at the border here in the battleground state of arizona. take a look at this, brand new fox news polling shows that trump's got a slim lead here in. in a poll of likely arizona voters in a head to head matchup, trump leads harris by 3 points, 51-48%. however, that is within the margin of error. fox news polling also shows registered arizona voters trust trump to do a better job on immigration than harris by a large margin of 15 points as the
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border continues to be a vulnerability for hearst. but it's a topic she feels she can potentially flip back on to trump. take a listen. >> donald trump got word of the bill, realized it was going to fix a problem he wanted to run on and told them to kill the bill, don't put it up for a vote. he killed a bill that would have actually been a solution because he wants to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem. >> you will hear kamala claim is the reason the border is not secure is that congress has refused to pass her atrocious border bill. it's the worst bill you ever seen. it would allow people to come in here at levels that would be incredible and would allow them to get citizenship. but it was not a border bill, it was an amnesty bill. >> reporter: now, harris' visit is going to be here in border patrol's tucson, arizona, sector. this sector has had the most illegal crossings anywhere along the southern border so far this fiscal year. it's also a place where our fox news camera as are repeatedly
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capturing scenes of mass illegal crossings. the union wants to know why it took harris more than three years to come down here and visit telling fox news in part, quote, after years of not just ignoring the problem, but helping create it, vice president kamala harris is finally heading down to the border. this is nothing more than for her to check a box, but what it is in reality is a slap in the face towards the men and women that put their lives on the line every day. and also a slap in the face to the american public. where has she been? back out here live, that's a question the local sheriff out here is wondering as well. the sheriff and his deputies have been on the front lines of this border crisis for years now. he's grateful that kamala harris eventually accepted his invite to come down here, but he's frustrated that it took so long. harris is expected to get out here later on this afternoon. she will be accompanied by democrat arizona senator mark
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kelly. back to you. stuart: bill melugin, thankings. texas congressman pat fallon joins me now. congressman, if harris blames trump enough for the border chaos, do you think it might if stick? i mean, if you repeat something, repeat nonsense often enough, you're going to have someone believe you. that's the way it's going to work, isn't it? >> stuart, that's certainly her strategy. but the thing is you have to ask yourself, why in the world did this border bill, why did it take the democrats three and a half years to present it? they had unified government. they had the house, the senate and the white house for the first two yahoo! years of -- two years of the administration. they're only doing it now because the american people are vote anything a few weeks. that would have allowed, we'll take the border seriously every day when the illegal crossings reach 4,000. when you extrapolate those numbers, that's nearly a million and a half people coming in every year, and then we're going to take that it seriously are. and, by the way, mayorkas and
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sheriff -- and/or biden concern it was just a piece of trash. they didn't cob summit house re-- consult house republicans on it either. stuart: the assassination attempt task force held its first hearing. what did you see and find in. >> well, we interviewed a lot of the locals, and we discussed the situation with local law enforcement. and that what they told us was they found that the secret service was very dismissive, haughty, they were not easy to work with, and they certainly took a lot of things for granted. and we also discovered that why in the world didn't secret service share that there was a nation-state threat on president trump's life? they didn't share it with some of their own field agents from the pittsburgh office, but they didn't share it at all with local law enforcement who would have done things slightly differently had they known there was a heightened threat. that is inexplaining applicable -- inexplicable. stuart: iran has directly attempted to interfere with our
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election with an assassination attempt. what should we do about it? >> yeah. you know what we do? there's a lot of things we can do as far as cyber goes, and we're very good with that, and we should be certainly meddling -- [laughter] making sure tehran computers don't work all too well. let's just say that. and how about this, stuart, enforce the sanctions that exist already. they're making an extra $35 billion a year in oil revenue. they're causing a lot of murder and mayhem with that much money. stuart: you don't want to enforce sanctions because that would raise the price of oil and gas before an election, and president biden doesn't want that now, does he? last word to you. >> huh-uh. [laughter] i'm surprised they haven't tapped the strategic petroleum reserve -- [inaudible] stuart: i think it's half empty. congressman pat fallon, thanks for joining us this morning. have a great weekend, sir. see you later. >> thanks, stuart. stuart: show me the dow 30. look, we've got an all-time high, intraday high, for the
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dow. 42,6000 and, yes, there's a great deal of green amongst the dow 30. don't go anywhere, friday feedback is next. ♪ ♪ a whole new world ♪ ♪(voya)♪ there are some things that work better together. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. presentation looks great. thanks! thanks! voya provides tools that help you make the right investment and benefit choices so you can reach today's financial goals. that one! and look forward, to a more confident future. that is one dynamic duo. voya, well planned, well invested, well protected. [coughs] when caroline has a cough, she takes robitussin. so, she can have those one on ones again.
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the moment i met him i knew he was my soulmate. "soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm.
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it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title. ♪ going gets tough, well, the tough get going ♪ stuart: thank you for toby keith, i like that. washington d.c. 75 degrees, but it's cloudy and rainy in the nation's capital. friday feedback, here we go. just you and i, or you and me, lauren. lauren: uh-oh. [laughter] stuart: thomas sowell said what's your fair share of someone else -- of what someone else has worked for? that's a good one. [laughter] okay, i'll do 30. i would willingly pay 30 percent of my income right off the. to i currently pay more than 50%. lauren: it depends -- like, i would take 100% of what you worked for and not feel bad about it, i'm going 25%. stuart: what's your fair share?
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lauren: 25%. i'm cheap. stuart: i wouldn't say that. this is from california. with the growing corruption scandal in new york city, do you have any hope that voters could put a republican in power like they the did in the 199 90? not a prayer, not a prayer. this city has moved so far to the left, it's -- they're a bunch of communists. what have you got? lauren: i think it's possible. i'm not hopeful -- stuart too stuart in my lifetime? lauren: maybe. people are fed up. they really are. stuart: all right, this is from paul. you've discussed the lack of importance of celebrity endorsements in the election, but is there think celebrity whose opinion you do hold in high regard? you're first. lauren: no, i don't. i admire several celebrities, maybe their stance on certain issues, but overall on politics, an endorsement doesn't sway me whatsoever, and i think they should all stay out of it. stuart: i'd go with winston churchill and bobby charlton. she's a -- he's a fooling player, an absolute gentleman. he died a couple of years ago. he was a paragon of virtue, a
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great guy. lauren: i feel like that question was geared toward taylor swift or, you know, like a current -- stuart: yeah. lauren: -- celebrity. stuart: we didn't give the right answer, did we? there's a come for you here. lauren: oh, no. sthawfort stuart louvre -- lauren, you've been verytop lahr this week. here's dan. i enjoyeded lauren at the shake shack. she's so smooth with this shot, i watch varney every morning mostly because of her. i left cnbc because of her, it also did not help that they tried to charge for everything. okay, so -- [laughter] lauren: dan, i love you. stuart: wait, it's not over yet. lauren says, lauren, i loved your report on the fast food key gross withings. did it give you any hope that the robots respect coming for our jobs just yet? lauren: it is not in the data yet, but i think eventually the robots will be making the food and then the whole thing is going to be robot ecs. stuart: it was a good report. people liked you.
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lauren: they like me? they really hike me in. stuart: i'm toast. something very she's here -- serious here. dame maggie smith has died. >> welcome to hogwarts. now, in a few moments, you will pass through these doors and join your classmates, but before you can take your seats, you must be sorted into your houses. stuart: smith was best known for her role as the professor in the harry potter series as well as the dowager countess of gran that many in downton, abbey. smith was 8999 9. 89.
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stuart: time for the trivia question about world capitals. what is the capital of croatia? you should know this. lauren: i am positive number 4. stuart: you are correct. the city has a population of 700,000. you have to say that. lauren: do you know why? stuart: no. lauren: neither do i. stuart: coast-to-coast starts in three seconds
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