tv Fox News Democracy 2024 FOX Business November 6, 2024 3:00am-4:00am EST
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[laughter] >> he will be back in just a few hours. he did tremendous work going through all of those numbers. we did not think we would have a call tonight. we thought this would extend just when we first got our poll numbers. but the fact that this is all coming to an end, trust us, commercials will come to an end, the text messages will come to an end. there will be a lot of digesting what happened tonight which is history. this is history. don't forget where you were tonight. >> people i spoke with said i just want there to be a decisive outcome. i think that that is a gift to the country and i hope that we can all wake up in the morning and move forward with our great country. >> thank you for joining us for democracy 24 election night coverage. >> good night, everyone. >> good morning. [laughter] ♪
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♪ trace:good morning, welcome to fox news special election night coverage breaking tonight, the greatest comeback in electorate story, two impeachments, two assassination attempt and three underestimated presidential campaigns we can say against all odds donald trump projected to be the 47th president of the united states. kamala harris encountering the failure of the vice president to become president, the vp will not be making an appearance tonight and she hasn't officially accepted defeat. we begin with senior national
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correspondent kevin cork in dc with more at the big board. >> reporter: we talked at length throughout this process about what might be the pathway to victory for donald trump and the pathway to victory for kamala harris. tonight a virtual sweep of the blue wall, 277, still with a few states on the board, great state of michigan out there on the board, still too close to call, 77%, leading 52 to 45. i want to point out sometimes we will get a look at a state like that, 77%, how many votes are out there, this is the remaining vote, the darker the color of the more votes out there. as you take a look you see some of these areas nice and bright
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which means no more votes to count but the ones that are more magenta, pink in color still some votes out there. what about detroit, lane county, down in lane county still some votes. 30% in. that's remarkable about that is sort of traditional, you know how this goes a big state and all the smaller counties report their votes and the big cities hang onto their ballots until the last moment and unveil these ballots. this time detroit has done a little of that but take a look, you see other areas here, they have got votes out there for the former president. this is appear, obviously read county here, 70 one to 26, still a lot of votes out there, still some more votes as we get close, you peek, emmet county hasn't begun to report. my point is there's still some votes out there. it is entirely possible as we look at michigan that the
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former president could possibly win the great state of michigan. of that were to happen we would be looking at a virtual sweep of the so-called blue wall like trying to advance this map. we can see as we go back to the national map, we talked about michigan, arizona, i want to show how he is doing, we predicted he might do very well in the canyon stayed in so far it is a tight race 50-forty eight. kamala harris hanging in but goes without saying that if you are donald trump you like where you are and i can tell you quickly the same goes for nevada, trump has a lead and alaska, could be looking at 300 electoral votes before the night is up. we keep an eye on it and break up more later. back to you. trace: thank you. let's bring in kayla magee
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white and the giano caldwell and steve hilton. rnc national spokeswoman elizabeth pepco and former house oversight committee staff director julian epstein. welcome to all of you. steve hilton, are you can say is wow, where do you begin, what an absolute historic comeback. >> reporter: it is amazing. people may have seen i was cut off earlier. i have never been so happy or proud to have been cut off by the announcement of this incredible result. as i was saying before, it is a victory for common sense, the good sense of the american people to see you through the nonsense and media propaganda and fakery that surrounded the kamala harris campaign and they voted for someone who delivered the results the previous time, clear and direct and authentic and told the truth about what he did before, what he was
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going to do and in that sense justice was done, justice was done, this was the right result not just in terms of policy and substance but feel such an amazing moment and we have to acknowledge the cultural significance. it wasn't just the or realignment in terms of the latino vote and the class and working class people, joe rogan, the sense of a real movement here, epic resultant i think we have to conclude by saying what an incredible result in terms of the personal triumph are donald trump tonight. it is an amazing amazing night. >> is 78 years old, he has the ear of young america and this is something we have never seen. >> i'm jens he in predicting for a while that trump was going to do better among young adults than people expected him to and the only person who's having a better night than donald trump tonight is hillary clinton because now she's not the only democrat to lose to
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donald trump so thank you. kamala harris, for that. moving forward there's going to be a lot of introspection and a democratic party about what went wrong, specifically with kamala harris's campaign, a lot of talk about josh schapiro, him getting passed over for the vp nod, a lot of talk about whether joe biden should have stepped aside in the first place, whether kamala hearst was a uniquely weak candidate but what steve said points to a bigger truth here, none of those factors explain just how big of a victory this was. this was a massive realignment of a generational proportion and it cannot be explained away by one bad vp picker one bad candidate, the democratic party has some real soul-searching to do and the question is whether they are willing to do it. >> tomorrow lago, elizabeth is at all lago. what is it like that there? you can see it but can't feel it through the television screen. what's the feeling like in
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trump world right now with this amazing victory? >> reporter: the feeling is pretty good. we were at mar-a-lago earlier and realized we had won the election, over to the convention center, everyone heard his speech and realize he is again going to be the president of the united states was the feeling is something i cannot describe. i'm holding back tears with you. this has been such a movement. i can't tell you how lucky i feel to be part of it, how blessed for the american people to show us the way because no matter who tries to stop you or what they try to throw at you, when the american people need something and they know they are right they can get it. >> breaking down the demographics, we talked about a lot tonight. it was important in certain aspects. >> on the issues, the data doesn't lie, the media does. we saw that when it comes to them saying black voters are
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going to go to donald trump in any real measure, any measurable impact, we saw that wasn't true, the same about latinos, they said the same about working-class whites and many others but what we saw is union members came through, there's been a realignment and certainly there's a new republican party here, one which i'm a proud member of. i think now as we move forward we are going to see the republican party move much differently especially as they try to attract these voters the keepers coalition together which is going to be extraordinarily important for the future of the races as we try to unite the country. >> you talk about the future of the race, young people, you work as a law professor and wonder, i'm amazed when i was talking to baron trump's best friend about getting involved in the joe rogan podcast and other podcasts, this is something spectacular. >> she did not have any charisma, didn't move people
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and she said but i'm going to do is illuminate the daylight between me and republicans on policy. i'm going to say oil, strong military, bring lose cheney on board, create a little space between us as possible and then run on i am not trump and that's going to be enough, don't have to come up with any policy and a lot of young folks and middle-aged folks and older folks want to hear policy too along with the rest of it and she wasn't delivering that. promises made promises kept is what trump said. >> the republican party celebrating, the democratic party has a lot of self analyzing to do. your thoughts on what happened tonight. kamala harris not coming out and conceding or even giving any kind of speech. what do you think? >> what i've been discussing over the last 18 months very few of us in the democratic party have been buried and interfacing this kind of result. this is vote realignment, more
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than a political realignment, this is a cultural realignment, sort of the closest thing we've had to a marie antoinette moment where you have across multiracial working-class movement that is coming together to reject the professional elite, not just the democratic party that tried to keep donald trump out of office, tried to put him in jail, try to keep him off the ballot, this is the news media, hollywood, wall street, silicon valley, the working-class standing up and saying we are tired of the professional elite, self-righteous elite which has become the democratic party and what i've been saying for the last 18 months is the democratic party needs a wake-up call, the policies of the professional elite and left only, coastal elite have been very unpopular. on economic issues, 25% of the economy being run by the government, things like evs which have been a disaster in the midwest particularly for
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the auto industry and go down the list on cultural issues, crime, immigration going down the list so i think this is the best thing that could happen for the democratic party because the very few of us who have been warning about this now say you have the evidence that until the democratic party separates itself from the intersectional elite, activist intersectional elite that have been driving policy on immigration, deficit spending, crime, you name it, coddling the anti-israel community in an absurd way, until the party can reject that i think they will be seeing more nights like this. >> you might be right. kaylee was talking earlier about can't wait to see the view tomorrow morning, realignment talking about maybe a realignment in the media, they lied to us again and again and again. >> there should be exactly as you were saying but i am not sure we are going to get that because you already are seeing some of the really offensive excuses being wheeled out,
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racism, sexism. american won't vote for a woman. if i could offer a perspective on that as a new american from the uk, the british conservative party has produced three women prime ministers, has just elected a black woman as its leader. the idea that america is somehow uniquely sexist and uniquely racist, won't vote for a woman is so offensive and ridiculous, the reason america didn't vote for kamala harris is because she's a terrible candidate, because she didn't make clear where she stood, because she was all over the place on policies and was not credible and not authentic. all these other reasons and that we had a good record from donald trump versus a very poor record on the issues from the biden/harris administration so to blame it all on sexism. i'm afraid that is where they are going to go because they can't disown this elitism that they've been living for the last decade or so.
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it is baked into their identity. they are captured by this far left ideology. it will be very very difficult for them to actually confront the reality that we are seeing tonight. doug emhoff you said on the show that you would walk over broken glass after the assassination attempt to vote for donald trump but it was more than that. more than the attempt on his life and lawfair and so forth, people said enough is enough. >> he won people over. he won people over on the issues and that's another thing the democrats are going to have to re-examine here. they put a lot of weight into the abortion issue, they thought that was going to be their hail mary, the issue that saved them in florida, we saw an abortion amendment fail, in nebraska and abortion amendment failed and it did not help them in the swing states, maybe because abortion is not on the individual ballots of those states or just not a very persuasive issue at all. meanwhile other issues democrats thought they could force to the public ended up
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being very persuasive to independents such as men playing in women's sports, that was a huge issue and congressional races down ballot and in some of these senate races so they need to do some soul-searching which cultural issues are worth pursuing. >> as you go forward if you think i'm not saying it is the end of welcome but is it a step back from woke? do we take a step back culturally in this country? >> what we saw demonstrated here, when you go woke you go broke. from ever trump saying that and that is the narrative, we see woke prosecutions throughout this country, we've seen woke policies, you just mentioned men in women's sports, numerous things people find offensive especially men who are raising daughters, they don't want their daughters competing against biological men and they made a strong statement tonight and democrats if they are smart would re-examine this but many, i fear will just say this is a
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donald trump thing, we are not going to change anything for the next run. >> i'm just wondering, talking about this, giano fits into this mold but you are among the younger people hanging out at mar-a-lago tonight, this new generation, the generation donald trump, to move the ball forward, do you believe that you will see this grow? do you think this young movement will grow? >> i definitely believe the maga moment will grow. people learned you cannot stop what the american people believe in. they tried absolutely everything to stop donald trump's movement, when he launched his movement in 2015, look where we are tonight in 2024, no one believed this can happen, look at the kind of voters who brought in. these are records for a republican black americans, jewish americans, young voters, he started a movement no one
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could compete with and no one saw coming, from a man who never run for political office before and i know that when he is done in office in four years we will all have this light and all of us and all the american people as well because if you believe in yourself and you believe in your country you can do anything. doug emhoff if you are looking at politics in general and you are a democrat right now you are worried because it might not just be four years, this could be the start of something, jay dee vance is 39 years old, they could control the button here for a long time. >> have to take a hard look in the mirror and engage in critical self reflection and say what went wrong here. either i need to become more to the right, move to the right or i need to find myself in a more distinct way and not try to just play the kind of personality charisma game because frankly i lost it that. i lose at that very often, lost that in this case so a lot of
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the young folks want to see real policy. you saw in los angeles people saying i don't want politics of pigmentation anymore but i want to know what your substantive policies are. liz: i wonder if you think this for kamala harris is the end of her political career, she does something else, or do you think she regroups and comes back? >> i think she had an opportunity to perform, democrats were worried she wouldn't be able to perform. that's why they didn't put her into a lot of cross-examination interviews. i think it is going to be hard to resurrect herself but if the media tries to make the identity argument about gender or race they will further dig themselves into an unpopular place. when president biden was running you could look at the same issues, democrats were in
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deep deficits on the economy, immigration, crime, foreign policy and if you paul inside or talk to black americans on the street about what they think about immigration particularly working-class black americans for which immigration has been wage theft for them, if you talk about defund the police, you will find they whole very unpopular early, the democratic positions have been unpopular. of the democrats are putting together a multiracial coalition among the working-class it is hard for the news media that was really in the tank for harris to start virtue signaling here. the signals about this have been around for a couple weeks, pollsters got this wrong. for the third time. as i said on your network last night, you could see this coming weeks ago because the early vote was so bad which is an indicator of enthusiasm.
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this should not be a surprise. if the democrats are smart they will learn from that. trace: 15 or 20 seconds to each of you. or big take away. >> very upset you don't include me with the younger people. i want to say one thing. we could also be seeing a turning point in california. you have a massive defeat for george gascon in los angeles, the conservative republican commonsense position looking like it is going to win handsomely on the crime proposition, taxes, the minimum wage, the recall of the failed mayor of oakland, district attorney, a rejection of this far left ideological policymaking and the desire for change in california. >> not to be confused with the bugs and hats. >> for those looking forward to the continued victory lap just from a camel harris has to be
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the one to certify trump's victory. in congress as vice president, she has to be the one to certify it. >> to my fellow african-americans welcome to the republican party. we are in a great place now to really change this country and move in a direction that's going to be positive for everyone. >> real vote for sincerity, authenticity, trump came off more authentic and harris didn't. >> elizabeth, your take away. >> donald trump has gone through whether it is the impeachments, indictments, mug shot, assassination attempts, he still here, still standing, still smiling and the next president of the united states because in america you can do absolutely anything. >> final comments on this. >> teachable moment for the democrats to move back to the political center and get in touch with the working-class, black, brown, and white. trace: special election coverage of trump's historic
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comeback continues. we check back in with kevin cork for the latest fox news voter analysis. . it's our son, he is always up in our business. it's the verizon 5g home internet i got us. oh... he used to be a competitive gamer but with the higher lag, he can't keep up with his squad. so now we're his “squad”. what are kevin's plans for the fall? he's going to college. out of state, yeah. -yeah in the fall. change of plans, i've decided to stay local.
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oh excellent! oh that's great! why would i ever leave this? -aw! we will do anything to get him gaming again. you and kevin need to fix this internet situation. heard my name! i swear to god, kevin! -we told you to wait in the car. everyone in my old squad has xfinity. less lag, better gaming! i'm gonna need to charge you for three people.
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trace: welcome back to continuing breaking news coverage as donald trump becomes the 47th president of the united states. what voters are saying as they exited polling places around the country today, let's get to the senior national correspondent kevin cork with the fox news voter analysis numbers. >> interesting looking at the numbers, we've not only been tracking what different groups of been thinking and talking about but how the breakouts ultimately went. let me share this. some of the key groups and how they voted in this national election.
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black voters 13% might not sound like a lot but when you consider when he ran in 2016 the former president and future president rolling right around 8% at that point maybe 9% in some key demographics at least among black voters, pretty solid but when you look at 15, that's a lot better. hispanic voters 40%. a lot of people said that that was going to be the differencemaker in this race. it may have been in particular as we look at the state out west. whites with no degree 62%, whites college degree educated 53-43, that's a bit of a surprise for some people, typically that demo goes heavily democratic. older voters 49-49 under the age of 30, 52-44. a lot of people thought that would be a heavy democrat leaning demo, didn't turn out that way.
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and and other men, with a nice little budget, it among hispanic voters, 55-40 one. we talked about this in nevada, tight race ongoing get. and the future president of the united states, we talked about the blue wall, now we call it the redwall, look how they did among black voters in the blue wall states, michigan 10 persons, wisconsin 14% for the former president and future president, that's in line with what they were hoping for. look at this. 17% among black voters in wisconsin. that was a real surprise and may have been a major differencemaker as they came away with a victory among young men, not a surprise, 55-43 about what we will be looking at as we look at the exit polling, as we look at data moving forward, what were the
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turnout numbers among that group, with joe rogan and this concerted effort to get men to vote, that may have made a huge difference. whatever you think about the former president coming into this race, you have to acknowledge it was impressive when you consider the hurdles he had to clear just to get to this night and it would appear he is going to come away with a big victory, pretty incredible. >> let's bring in pollsters, the cohost of the polling plus podcast, chief pollster robert haley. thank you for coming on. i hate to give you kudos here because you were spot on, the polling as we were talking about last night, we didn't know at the time the polling was terrible. the polling was terrible you
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had different polls, you had a different way of doing this and it was spot on like what we are going to talk about with the others. >> i had a little help from my friends a wonderful lanterns in this world of fog and the key thing here is we saw exactly how the electorate would turn out and we had a working premise the 3 of us that trump at inverted the republican party into a broader spectrum, middle-class, working-class party that attracted minorities, african-americans, latinos, latinos with exuberance and precision and his message is resonating across the spectrum and this is why he came out tonight with an extraordinary victory. this is historic. this will have legs as long as the president elect will continue to enact policies and act on them.
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>> what were you doing differently than the rest of the pollsters? because again they undercounted trump. >> i just listened to robert. we've always been able to find those trump voters, craig did a great job with his forecast, you need to become the new forecaster. what happened is it is hard to get these people to tell you because there's so much negative towards trump, they feel they are on a list or people won't talk to them. they were afraid to talk. the way robert and i collect information is more anonymously, we don't put people on the spot and we get very brief surveys so we don't ask 60 questions. nobody political a political expert will hang in for 60 questions these days and that was the difference and i agree with everything the others have said, the demographics, the groups we have in our polls whether it was
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african-americans, hispanics, women, white voters in general all ticked up in our tabs and that is the way the selection turned out. >> you are going to see the pollsters in the next 5 minutes start giving you their excuses why they screwed it up. it wasn't their fault. it was this. what do you make of the bad polling again? >> the media elite called quality pollsters, credible pollsters and yet again in a presidential race for the third time in a row they have gotten it wrong because they don't understand people. the polling is about more than numbers. you have to understand the fact they are not going to answer long questionnaires and maximize what they can do on their time schedule. with all that was going on, a smart decision to not listen to
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the voice, suburban women. the minorities, and sliced them, craig and matt and i are a team on this to figure this out. >> will they decide they will heard with each other, so they don't become an outlier? >> >> it is hesitant. they have been doing this for a long time. you penetrate deeper than most. >> as you look at numbers.
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if it makes it better this time around, you've got the secret sauce, you and craig and robert, grasping for. >> you've got me laughing, i won't do this again. but me say something about the hurting. we were beaten up for allegedly hurting because we didn't have trump winning by 4 and 5 points in some of these states, they ended up being within one or half a point of where we were on every one but we showed who was going to win at each of these battlegrounds are states. that's where people are afraid, they did not want to face the reality of this election and it was very obvious. >> what do you think? are you going to keep doing this? we need some consistency.
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>> i will let my doc holliday go off and do this thing. >> and we were at home plate when everybody else was scattered around the bases and i'm wondering, give me one big take away, 15 or 20 seconds for you, what is your thing you want to tell people that they missed about the polling. >> people are scared, scared about law isfair, being targeted and looking for a way to tell you what they were feeling, always knew there was a hidden vote and it showed up as we thought it would and the article about that a few weeks ago spot on. >> you are spot on.
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we appreciate your time. coming up the border crisis remains one of the biggest issues in the country. sheriff mark lam is here in studio tonight. he joins us live on set. ♪ i got this $1,000 camera for only $41 on dealdash. dealdash.com, online auctions since 2009. this playstation 5 sold for only 50 cents. this ipad pro sold for less than $34. and this nintendo switch, sold for less than $20. i got this kitchenaid stand mixer for only $56. i got this bbq
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impacts the balance of power in both chambers of congress, senior national correspondent backlogged that side of the story. >> we've been showing you the senate. this is the one that i think will get a lot of people talking tonight. you need 50 want to have the balance of power go your way. look right there. republican zara got the 51, how did that happen? there is more. they not only have a 50 one, they have balance of power, they may up their numbers before the night is over before the week is over to as high as 54, fifty five. let me show you the key races we are keeping an eye on in montana, john tester is in trouble trailing 47%, obviously too soon to call but if you're a betting person, you're putting your money on tim she he making it 52 and it gets worse for the democrats because there are a number of other races that are very tight that are leaning the republicans
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way. let me take you to know that. 80% too soon to call but the republicans leading in that race, say he hangs on, now you could be looking at 53 and there's more. across the country to pennsylvania. another very tight race. dave mccormick leading, but casey trailing 96%, can republicans hang onto that? supertight you never know. if they do, you could be looking at 54. the numbers keep going. there's a bit of good news if you're a democrat and went to see how things are turning out in arizona, 52% too soon to call. ruben gallego is leading kari lake, it might look more like 5455, mike rogers will likely
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win this one. another republican 80% too soon to call but a done deal. as we look at that, that is an incredible number. makes for an incredible night in the senate. i want to take you back to what is happening on the house side. the house race is more complicated, 218 is what you need for the majority, the ones in yellow, we have interesting arrayss, let me take you to nevada. congressional district number 3, see how things are looking at this hour. suzy lee in a battle withdrew johnson, too close to call, 50-forty nine. it has been like that all over the country. we've been watching races everywhere and all over the country we are seeing 50-forty eight, fifty-forty nine. it has been that kind of night especially, very divided country. let me take you back out here,
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the great state of texas. should have mentioned it ted cruz. the big win for him on the senate side. take it to congressional district 15, show you of this one. monica delacruz 57-42, that kind of night, not saying it's 218 or more but looks that way. you could be looking at all the balance of power on the right which would be quite a return to the white house for 45. trace: doug emhoff -- they spent so much money trying to defeat me, two other republican senators in the mix. he might be right about that. back to you in moments. let's bring in mark lam, great to meet you in person. what do you think of arizona? did it go the way you thought? >> we didn't have a great night in arizona, we lost some local
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battles. my guy that ran for sheriff won, congrats to him but trump is going to win the state. if you look back four years trump was trailing and trying to cover the ground in the next few days after the election. he's leading at the start and it is getting bigger and bigger so i think it will trend to a victory for donald trump. we would love to have picked up a senate seat, we might lose a couple congressional seats, wasn't a great night but in the end trump will win. trace: the number of immigrants allowed to seek asylum, put them on screen, favor 67% oppose, 32%, it seems to me like immigration wasn't the number one issue but it was a big issue and it moved a lot of people. >> in arizona they passed a ballot measure for abortion by 60% or something but at the same time they passed a ballot measure making it illegal to
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come into the state illegally. that passed by 60%. that shows you the border was a big issue for arizona and a big issue across the country. dan newlin in florida, we did a lot of ads in pennsylvania for the border, i was on those ads as it made a difference, people in pennsylvania saw the importance of the border as well. trace: in his speech he said this about the border. >> we have to seal up the borders and let people come into our country. we want to be able to come back in. but we have to let them come back in. >> what we are doing here.
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>> this election shows you that americans believe that. we've got to have laws, trump is the best person to to it. the last four years has been a disaster. i'm looking forward to getting back to the donald trump policies and securing the border because we owe it to the american people. >> everybody will applaud the country. you become an american citizen and we stand up and will applaud you. the whole tone and tenor, a lot of violence from illegal immigrants, the parents, it is offputting. >> when i listen to kamala harris, she never talked about god, didn't talk about the constitution, care for the
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victims that were victimized by people who came into this country, or for people getting this money that came to this country illegally, we had americans struggling. ultimately americans saw through that and they held her accountable. >> didn't talk about god, didn't talk about things. she was pilloried for not talking about her religion as much as she should have or different things. she just avoided subjects so she could please everybody and nobody knew where she stood. >> very few principles and she was exposed and they tried to craft a certain message and they struggled. they were being fed a bunch of lies and we want substance to take it back, get it back on
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track, fix the economy. it was a great night for america and for donald trump and his family. congratulations to donald trump and j.d. vance and they will do a great job. doug emhoff the liberal media not happy with trump's big run but we showed the ads kamala harris ran on israel with two different messages, dinner lack of clarity cost her in key battleground? did it cost her in the battleground states? we will have our panel talk about that next.
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doug emhoff in his third presidential election donald trump has come to count on the crucial faith vote. let's bring in pastor paula white cane of the national faith advisory board. great to have you on the show. what is your reaction to the former president and future president's victory tonight and how important and how significant was the faith vote involved in that? >> reporter: this great
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victory, i predicted this last monday when we were in powder springs, georgia the national faith advisory board's annual summit, we had 27 pastors and faith leaders by invitation only. i was able to interview him and talked about some statistics, the polls how people of faith won't show up and i said i don't believe it, working with the coalition of the greatest army, hundreds of churches who did voter registration, never did voter registration, and pennsylvania we had two simultaneously, get out the vote and my husband jonathan cain of the journey, i was touring with him as well and i was with every day people, people of faith, people who
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love this country and they got out and we are getting the statistics with ralph reed and others. we turned out in droves. i think we will have historical numbers for the faith vote. trace: what are we looking at when you say statistics, what are we hoping for? >> in 2016 -- and then we went to 85 in 2020. ralph and i believe we will hit 87 and when you begin to look, we already know because we are following this in real time, faith and freedom alone, knocked over 9.8 million doors. when you look at what churches have done, the people they talked to and registered it is unprecedented. when you look at conservative catholics and you see the
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number makes up 8% of the electorate, that is more than the black, hispanic and union put together, we know everything turned out, hispanic vote, black vote, union vote, we won the popular vote and that says something. and anti-god agenda and policy being implemented that does not align with the values of our nation and the values of millions of people. trace: put your finger on why people of faith are drawn to donald trump? >> implements policies we value and we care about, promise made promise . . i've known him for 20 years and been with him and been privileged to open the door and
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we put 10,000 faith leaders through the white house before and they know him personally, they worked with him and they know this is a man who stands for their values and policies and we will not allow this anti-god agenda for our children or grandchildren. that's why they showed up. trace: appreciate your time, best of luck to you and all the people who voted for the former president was a big issue in this race the war in edward: surge in anti-semitism at home. let's bring in the host of the aaron cohen show podcast, along with rnc creator and pro-israel activist emily austen. thank you for coming on. to you first. we are talking politics but got to talk breaking news as well which is the defense secretary, israel's version of the defense secretary fired by benjamin netanyahu. what does that mean? there were protests in tel aviv.
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what does that mean for israel and is it a significant move? >> years what it means. there were three major sticking points, galant a little softer than bb, very winston churchill this campaign since october rate. galant pushing ultra orthodox jews to enlist in the idea. and inside gaza after operations were finalized and hostage negotiations a big one and getting temporary cease-fire and bb has been all about speaking that strength language of the middle east which is we cannot allow a negotiation would award hamas and this has been brewing for a while, bb cut the strings but galant is a decorated 35 year
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israeli seal and there's a ton of respected military leaders, israel's foreign minister who is a friend, israel is going to be fine. in the general staff, he knows terrorism, counterterrorism, israel will push in that direction. trace: maybe kamala harris was hurt by her equivocation where she wouldn't stand and back of the israelis or back the american jews, wouldn't stand anywhere on this issue. >> he doesn't stand anywhere on any issue. she wouldn't stand behind israel, she was always proven wrong, greatest example was don't go into rafah or we will
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withhold aid to weapons from you. they find the hostages in rafah, they are rescued without america's permission, constantly putting israel in a chokehold knowing through an arms embargo. on the opposite side, tells the muslim community and flip-flops but kamala's policies in the middle east have always been wrong. besides the fact she won't be respected about foreign leaders. thank god trump won, israel is in good hands now and i am confident. trace: i wonder if the people of israel have the same sentiment, they thank god trump won. are they happy with this victory? do they think this might move towards ending wars in the middle east? >> i think israel is ecstatic. 70% of israelis support trump. prime minister netanyahu posted in a tweet congratulations on the greatest comeback in history. he and trump were very close. bb has been in the political
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sphere forever. trump assassinated general soleimani, he understands the language, trump doesn't speak a word of hebrew or arabic but he understands the language of the middle east and bb appreciates that and the israelis feel relief the trump is back in office and i think it was an incredible comeback and it is going to help get this war ended sooner because there is going to be some tough rules set in place where they are not placating to hamas, to these protesters and to the terror organization itself. we will see some dramatic operational plays here. trace: senior hamas official saying we urge trump to learn from biden's mistakes like -- what do you think of that?
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>> we pray trump does not copy biden's mistakes, the reason we voted for him and not the harris administration. it was in iran's best interest, hezbollah's best interest at hamas's best interests for kamala to win so she can continue biden's botched foreign policy which was put israel in a chokehold and lose this war, trump, it's no black or white, your for terrorism or against. has always shown strength and resilience when it comes to ending terrorism, showing who america is, they say it is israel first. trump knows that and he will not let it get that far. he will not be repeating the same mistakes as joe biden.
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trace: hamas giving orders telling trump what to do? >> hamas needs to put down their weapons and end this thing. the big dogs in the office, we will see some ground to pound here. trace: we are coming back. continuing our breaking news coverage. election, the day after. see you in two minutes. ts. this ipad pro sold for less than $34. and this nintendo switch, sold for less than $20. go to dealdash.com and see how much you can save.
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