tv Varney Company FOX Business November 6, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EST
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democrats in so many of these key areas. >> this is what lower regulation and lower taxes look like, stuart. i wouldn't chase this up immediately, but i think that this is a sign of great things to come. >> you're looking at those stocks going up and that is a lot about trumponomics, but also about knowing we are going to have stable rule of law in this country. >> there was a repudiation of this narrative that women are only going to vote based on abortion and that that's all they care about. very clearly, it was not as compelling of an issue. >> last night was an indictment of the system itself of everything the democrats have done to people, of everything we've experienced for the last decade. ♪ stuart: okay, what's that song? "winning"? santana. why not? trump won big, you know? 11:00 eastern time it is wednesday, november 6 and look at this.
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that's a huge rally on the market following yesterday's election. donald trump is the president-elect. the 47th president-elect of the united states. more on that in just a moment but look at that rally. 1,200 points up on the dow look at big tech off to the races. alphabet, google up 3%, nvidia up another 2%. how about the yield on the 10-year treasury that's been going up. you've reached 4.45% right now, and no impact on the market though on the stock market from these higher yields. show me djt. another big jump today, after trump won big last night up another 7%. now this. the other big story of the day is the money. trump's win has set off a huge wall street rally. 160 million americans have a piece of the stock market's action. even for democrats they should be happy today. trump has won the white house, and the gop has won the senate. think about what that means
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for investors. no tax hikes, instead, trump's tax cuts will stay in place. in fact, he has proposed even further cuts in corporate taxes. investors love that. no more punitive regulation. instead, deregulation. you might actually be able to do stuff without the dead hand of government on your back. no more bureaucrats pushing us around. if you want a gas stove trump will let you have one. no more big is bad. harris approved of the ftc stopping tech mergers, grocery store mergers, retail mergers. remember the handbag merger they tried to stop? ridiculous. well hopefully, that's going away & companies will be able to expand and innovate again. where is the best place to put your capital now? america. the money is going to come pouring in. no more hold-ups to making cryptos mainstream. that's why bitcoin hit a new high this morning. no more restraints on energy production. that's why the drillers are looking so good. one last point. it has nothing to do with money
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but will drive democrats crazy. with the gop controlling the senate, trump will be able to appoint more supreme court justices, but i digress. trump supporters are celebrating a spectacular political win. investors are celebrating the trump rally. third hour of "varney" starts now. this is the perfect time to bring in charles payne with whom i'm having a little laugh. charles does this rally have legs? charles: it has legs. this is the reawakening of animal spirits because that's what this election was at stake with this election. it was pretty simple. do you believe in the system that made us the greatest most powerful economic force in history, or did you want to be more like europe? did you want to drift towards socialism, large government, open borders, and the irony is
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like if you look at markets, the answer is simply, let's stick with what we've got. we're like 60% of the world's stock market. we're 2.5% of the world's population. name it innovative company that's come out of europe in the last 30-40 years. you've got a couple that have done okay. novo accidentally found a weight loss drug, good, props to them but the fact of the matter is all of the great things driving human innovation right now that's changing the entire world, emmy mate from this country and the people who know how to live in other countries come here to do it. stuart: and they bring their money here too. charles: and their intelligence and elon musk couldn't have done what he did in europe. stuart: or south africa. charles: why would americans make the choice because they have always romanticized that. they don't do that in europe. good. for me that's a buy signal, and the small caps looking well. everything is looking pretty good here. stuart: listen to this. this is cnn van jones, criticizing the harris campaign for failing to separate from biden.
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watch this. >> if you look at trump's ads, bidenomics is working. whoever came up with bidenomics needs to be put in a corner some place, so then because she doesn't separate herself, she says nothing comes to mind, so she doesn't separate herself from biden and the whole transgender thing. stuart: um, i say that democrats failure is their own fault. what say you? charles: yeah, this is, you know, listen this circling the wagon around kamala harris saying she didn't somehow, i heard joy reid say she ran a fantastic campaign. she was a flawed candidate. the democrats themselves rejected her in their own primary. she was the first person out of the presidential race. even her own party rejected her. she had no ideas and she was put together by the image makers and they brought in people from hollywood and madison avenue. they cobbled together someone who, you know, hey you're a prosecutor, you're this but she's never had any true ideas and the fact of the matter is she might have been further left
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than joe biden, so you know, some of this stuff, you know, from a policy perspective, she might be more dangerous to our country than joe biden was. stuart: it occurs to me that your show, "making money", with charles payne, is a pretty good title for today's show. charles: it's a pretty good title. stuart: a lot of people making a lot of money on wall street as we speak. 2:00 p.m. eastern this afternoon. thanks. i want to get back to the election. donald trump's victory speech in palm beach, watch, please. >> this will, forever be remembered as the day the american people regained control of their country. many people have told me that god spared my life for a reason. >> [applause] >> and that reason was to save our country and to restore america to greatness. stuart: well if you were watching election last night you were probably watching martha maccallum because she anchored
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it through with bret baier. martha is with me this morning. how are you still awake? >> well you know what? it's a lot of adrenaline and a very big night and we have a wonderful team and a great decision desk, and we've put together, i think, a night that we're proud of and i think that everyone really enjoyed going along this ride with us last night. it was pretty extraordinary evening in american politics and american history. stuart: it was but you went on the air with brett at 6:00 eastern time yesterday afternoon. was it very quickly apparent that the momentum the trend was with trump? >> i would say in some ways, yes, but i think that the inclination is to sort of, you know, i think of braveheart. it's like hold, hold, hold. don't do anything, you know, we had people texting us, why aren't you calling this state, why aren't you calling that state? i think we just wanted to be sure. it's more important to be right than first, and i think that was
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our feeling throughout the course of the night, that you want to just make sure that everything we're doing, we've done at the i's and crossed the t's, and races still aren't called yet and it took us a while to call georgia and north carolina. we don't make that decision. they understand when it's statistically impossible situation for it to go another way, and that's when you make the call. stuart: pennsylvania did it, didn't it? >> yeah. i mean, pennsylvania, we always all felt that it was about pennsylvania, and i think we thought pennsylvania be the last state, we called pennsylvania on saturday in the biden election in 2020, and i think it was a little surprising that pennsylvania was ready to go and it was clear when that happened that wisconsin came in right after that and made it very clear. stuart: issues that suddenly
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appeared? >> you know i think that what's the most interesting thing about last night is that you look at the coalition that elected and re-elected this president, and it is a very diverse group of people, and i'm a big fan of organic diversity, when people want the same things, it doesn't matter what color they are, it doesn't matter what their religion is. they are drawn to the same dream, that charles just talked about, and i think that it's time that we stopped putting people in boxes, based on where they're from or what color their skin is, because americans want the same thing and we see that with latinos, and black families and we saw it with surprisingly stronger margins in places like he didn't win but places like the bronx and queens, where we saw these events early on and then the madison square garden event can people portrayed as a failure which obviously it really wasn't in the end. stuart: it was a night to remember. >> it was indeed a night to remember. stuart: i'm envious.
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>> i fell asleep for a little while but woke up and watched the rest so i'm envious of your sleep. stuart: [laughter] well, we'll be watching you this afternoon because you're back on at 3:00 p.m., fox news. >> thank you always great to be with you. stuart: lauren tell me about amazon. i'm pretty sure it's up today. is it not? lauren: 2%, founder jeff bezos writes this. big congratulations to our 45th and now 47th president on an extraordinary political comeback and decisive victory and he goes on to wish trump a success. this is a coming together moment and the realization that trump is good for business and his business, because biden's ftc is suing amazon. stuart: possibly that's one of the reasons the washington post did not not make an endorsement. lauren: the president appoints the commissioner to the ftc and the senate confirms that and it's looking good right now for republicans. stuart: show me united airlines, please. lauren: way up. way up. look at this. 7%. stuart: why is that?
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lauren: investors anticipate a pro-business trump administration could boost corporate travel, support m&a activity, and then lower oil prices, reduce their jet fuel costs which help their margins. stuart: eli lilly? lauren: rival novo nordisk said ozempic sales in the quarter missed expectations, echoing what eli lilly said last week. investors may think this weight loss drug market is overestimated, and just to point out the power of rfk jr.. he wants to make america healthy again, and interpretation could be well go on a diet and exercise, stuary varney. don't take a weight loss pill or injection. stuart: you have not forgotten that have you? >> no. stuart: i'll get the pill if it comes my way. i would do that. thank you. coming up some people in the media want to blame harris' loss on sexism and racism. we have leo terrell to respond to that. donald trump says these winners a victory for common sense. >> it was a historic
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realignment, uniting citizens of all backgrounds, around a common core of common sense. together, we're going to unlock america's glorious destination. stuart: look whose about to arrive on this set. the man who is constantly on television. his name is charlie hurt. it's great to see you. come on in.
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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. 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. stuart: got to check the markets because we've got a significant rally on our hands. the dow is up 1,300 points, can't remember seeing a 1,300 point gain and the nasdaq is up 400, s&p up 113 points as we
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speak. that's a rally folks. check the cryptos. trump was seen as the more pro-crypto candidate. that's why we've got, actually 75,000 bucks a coin earlier on bitcoin. jason katz coming on the phone for us. all right, jason. the markets like less regulation and no tax hikes. is that how you see this rally? >> i see , stu, the animal spirits completely being unleashed here. when you and i sat on set on monday, we both said this market would rip in the event of a red tsunami so it's not a surprise. positioning was completely and utterly off size. everyone thought we would have a delayed or contested outcome and to your point we're celebrating deregulation, tax cuts and the encouragement of entrepreneurialism. stuart: so does the rally seriously have legs? >> i think so. first of all, big won't be bad as you said earlier this morning, you're going to see an onslaught of m&a
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activity, and when the euphoria dies down a little bit, yes, the attention will focus back to tariffs and the potential inflation; however, fundamentals will take the spotlight, where we're very constructive right now. i think inflation remains contained. i think the job market remains robust. i think now earnings are going to get a major lift as a result of this red tsunami. stuart: fascinating. it's a rally and a half. jason katz thanks for johning us we'll see you again real soon. kamala harris expected to give her concession speech today. peter doocy at the white house. do we know if she's called trump yet to concede? reporter: we don't know, we've asked officials with the harris campaign and with the trump campaign. that is something that would typically come overnight, and we would love to play a sound bite of the vice president talking about last night's results, but we don't have any sound bites of that. shortly after midnight, as the results were becoming clear, instead of the vice
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president leading the naval observe a for toy go to this big setup they had at howard university here in washington d.c., they sent a campaign co-chair just to say this. >> we still have votes to count. we still have states that have not been called yet. we will continue overnight to fight to make sure that every vote is counted. she will be back here tomorrow to address not only the family, to address her supporters but to address the nation. reporter: somebody else who hasn't spoken yet, president biden. he was watching the returns come in. officials have only read out a handful of the calls he made and a majority of them were to candidates who won offices in delaware. where he will retire to soon. the president doesn't have anything else on the schedule for the rest of the week and we don't know exactly when the vice president or governor walz are going to talk. we expect them to accept the results because last night,
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officials who had gone dark for a few hours started texting me back, and they are essentially saying, the question i was asking these guys is whether or not they were worried about what they said for days ahead of time that donald trump was going to prematurely declare victory. they basically came back online and said, um, suggested without quoting anybody, that they knew it was over. stu? stuart: good stuff, peter doocy right there. thanks very much for joining us. now, everyone, listen to this. liberal media pundits like whoopie goldberg and james carvelle war positive that kamala harris was going to win the election. >> we're going tariff take outt the trash in washington d.c. and her name is kamala harris. >> the next president of the united states. >> [applause] >> i think it's going to be a blowout actually. i don't think it's a close race. i think there are going to be those republicans that just vote for harris. >> could be tied on election day as always the polls will be tied and he will lose.
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>> harris over 270 electoral votes. she's going to win. >> trump is toast. do you stand behind that today? >> even moreso. i feel the same way that i felt a few weeks ago that trump is toast. stuart: i'm sorry. i should resist laughing. >> [laughter] stuart: i really should but i did want to see that kind of thing and i want to see the reversal too. this gentlemen is charlie hurt, whose been on the air all night. >> we couldn't be laughing at better people than those clowns. stuart: to think the media will ever give up on their trump hatred? >> i don't think they will have a choice, because you know, democrats and the media have spent every single thing they have against donald trump already, and they've got nothing left, and i think that what we're seeing, what we've been seeing over the last couple of weeks is they are so deeply invested in their own bs and at some point, you spend that much time calling a guy fascist, and you know, it kind of, it sort of hard to wrap your brain around
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accepting the fact he's going to be president. stuart: i'm looking at the headlines in the new york times as they came through this morning. the way forward to an authoritarian future for america. what is going on? >> and what i'm finding very gratifying about all of it is that they laid, they could not have turned the amp up higher on all of that stuff, and voters even democrat voters, even independent voters, latino voters, african americans voters, they looked at all of it and said this is nonsense and they said we don't believe this. what we care about are the issues and by the way he was not campaigning on like right wing conservative issues. these are common sense, centrist issues. he is not some sort of conservative idiolog. he is a common sense centrist and that's what got him elected just like 2016. stuart: he promised a golden future, come on. one last one. an msnbc host calling out
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the democrats for replacing joe biden. watch this. >> [laughter] >> i will just note that it is probably not the best idea that democrats orchestrated a very public stabbing in the front of the sitting president of the united states of america and didn't use him in his hometown of scranton, pennsylvania. stuart: do you think the democrats are regretting their decision? >> maybe. perhaps. i don't know that joe biden would have won. there's an argument to be made he might have done better but i do think it's kind of interesting. the media is only regretting this , and complaining about this now that they realize that she lost to donald trump. what about when the democrat party throughout their entire primary and hand picked somebody, the democrats had previously rejected for the position, and plopped them in and it was a basic -- stuart: what do you think joe biden is doing this morning? >> probably laughing in his oatmeal right now. stuart: charlie you're all right thanks for joining us. this election broke fundraising and spending records. how much did the harris campaign
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spend? ashley? ashley: a lot, stu. back to you. no, since harris entered the race, i've always wantedded to do that. since harris entered the race in late july, democrats spent nearly $460 million more in advertising than donald trump. the data shows between july 22 and november 1, the harris campaign dedicated 646.3 million to paid media while outside democratic groups spent 726 million. that's where you get the total 1.37 billion compared to trump's mere combined spend of $913.9 million. democrats also out spent republicans on facebook, google, snapchat, while republicans directed more dollars to the x platform than their opponents. apparently, it's a strategy that worked. stu? stuart: apparently, it did. all right, thanks, ash. coming up, the media can't get over trump's win.
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some are continuing the narrative that his allies, like florida governor desantis, are fascists. >> it's a pure project 2025 in florida, and that kind of extreme sort of extremist right wing fascist-type government in florida. stuart: she's angry. this message didn't resonate during the campaign so why is it still being pushed? mary katharine ham will take that on and we can't ignore the rally. markets are surging after trump's win. we're keeping tabs on your money, all morning long.
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leaving you lost. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. sponsored jobs on indeed are two and a half times faster to first hire. visit indeed.com/hire stuart: the markets still very much in rally mode. dow is up 1,300 points. now, lauren is looking at one particular stock, several actually, which are down because of china. lauren: yeah, and some are down big in such an up market. look at dollar tree it's down over 8% in february, trump said he would slap a 60-plus percent tariff on items that come from china. they have china exposure. if trump follows through with
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that, it's margins get squeezed. nike is another name. nike doesn't manufacture in the united states. if there's a tariff that would hurt nike. home depot is down 4% today. lowe's is down 3%, dollar general is down 4%, chinese exposure. stuart: what about djt. lauren: so this stock was a referendum on donald trump's prospects of becoming president, and now, i guess, it's a prospect on how he's going to do as president of the united states. it's up 6%. he owns 57% of the company. that stake overnight has made more than $1 billion richer. stuart: [laughter] i'd call that a pretty good investment. more en thank you very much indeed. now this is just coming at us. this is new. two sources confirm to fox news that the harris campaign has been radio silent this morning. they have sent zero talking points to surrogates, donors, or influencers. one source says they got no
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answer, even after reaching out. okay? radio silence from the harris campaign. now this. donald trump was declared the winner in swing state north carolina. jonathan seri is in ra raleigh for us. reporter: 5.7 million voters cast ballots in this election and the big surprise in all of this was the heavy turnout in the storm-damaged western part of the state. a lot of interest there. other than the blue dots of asheville and boone this is a reliably conservative region and it delivered for president-elect trump but the battleground state has a tradition of electing governors and presidents from opposing parties. such was the case last night when democrat josh stein defeated republican mark robinson and stein will become north carolina's first jewish governor. >> tonight the people of north carolina resoundingly embrace division. it's optimistic, forward-looking
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and welcoming. >> i'm disappointed for you because i wanted this so bad for you. i wanted this for the people of north carolina. not for me. i wanted it for them. reporter: robinson who currently serves as lt. governor will spend the rest of him term helping western north carolina to rebuild. stuart: now msnbc host joy reid took aim at florida after they failed to pass an amendment to protect abortion rights. watch this. >> it'll be interesting to talk about what florida's future looks like as a place that can attract corporate headquarters, and investment, in a state where the governor routinely bullies companies, routinely sues companies that displease him. it's a pure project 2025 in florida and that kind of extreme sort of extremist right wing fascist-type government in florida does not make it a more
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attractive place or does it make it more like some of the other southern states. stuart: fascist-style government in florida. [laughter] mary katharine ham joins me now. what do you make of joy reid, fascist-type state? >> oh, my goodness. let's put california up against florida in the last couple of years. i think you'll find that florida's business climate welcoming to other people is so bright they got to have shades down there. so, look. i don't think that this kind of talk as illustrated last night is going to help them win the voters they lost last night. latino voters don't want to be told that they love illegal immigration and that a joke should make them mad, suburban women don't want to be told that liz cheney and abortion is all they care about. black voters don't want to be told they are being taken-for-granted but they should be grateful. stuart: they don't want to be talked down to. these are not the things that work and more of this fascist talk won't help either. stuart: i know all about class-based society. i'm an englishmen, we invented
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class warfare and i know what it's like to be talked down to by people in upper classes. people object to that language, fascist, garbage, like hitler. they aren't going to stand for that. >> no it's constant lecturing. this is part of the problem, there's a bully problem on the left and sort of so blinded by their own self-regard as the sort of intellectual and moral betters telling us what to do they can't figure out how to community with normal people and normal people voted to tell them to get better at that. stuart: mary katherine thank you very much. charlie i want to get back to something we just reported. radio silence from the harris campaign this morning. not making calls to anybody, surrogate, donors, what's going on? >> it's hard to know what's going on inside the campaign but it does make me wonder about whether or not maybe the campaign has been sort of hanging by a thread for a while now, because if you look back at the last days and weeks of that campaign, she came increasingly
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sort of unhinged about things. she went from joy to anger. she went hard in the last week, talking about what a fascist he is, and it makes me wonder if maybe, the wheels weren't kind of coming off this whole time in realtime and we didn't really recognize it because the media was kind of propping her up and she just didn't know what to do and she doesn't, you know, she doesn't know how to respond. stuart: mary katherine can you come back because i'd like to know what's going on inside that campaign. i know you don't have sources. >> you don't think i have sources in the kamala harris campaign? stuart: i don't think you do. >> look, i think charlie is right. this was a campaign put together on the fly. she doesn't have loyalists. that's the interesting thing to me about kamala harris, because everyone has left her office over the years, so she has biden people and she has obama people and both of them have access to grind. the incentives for biden certainly are that he be the only guy whoever beat trump and i'm sure he is not too upset about it right now so i don't know what's happening
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behind the scenes but i don't think they have had it fully together. stuart: oh, to be a fly on the wall. thanks. back to the big board. major rally on our hands. dow is up 1,334 points. better than 3%. okay, remember when leo terrell and i made a bet on the election? roll it. you say that trump will get 18% of the black vote and i say he probably won't. is that bet still on? >> i have already got my menu. three states, yes. you're my buddy you're going to lose. stuart: we're going to tell you which one of us owes the other lunch. leo is next. ♪
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stuart: you can't getaway from the market surg. you don't even try to getaway from it. dow is up 1,300 and nasdaq is up 427. mike murphy on the phone with us this morning. all right, mike. straight at it. does this rally have legs? >> good morning, stuart, great to be here. it absolutely has legs. look at how we started out of the gate strong, and now we have volume picking up. the markets are right around our highs for the day, so a lot of legs, and the big thing is the lack of regulation that's going to, the over regulation is going to disappear. that's why look at the way the financials are moving today. i think that gives you a big hint. stuart: okay, the control of the senate by the gop. that adds power to trump in the white house. correct? >> it does, and you know, we touched on this yesterday. you know, it turns out where there's a full sweep, senate and
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house, you know, i think that might be viewed as maybe a little too much power, where too much of one side got done, where almost lost government is sometimes better for the markets, but i think the markets speaking right now, stuart. i'm a little surprised by the strength of the rally here, but you asked the right question. does it have legs? it absolutely does have legs so i think the market likes the trump presidency. stuart: i think it does. mike murphy thanks for jumping on the phone. we'll see you in the studio shortly. got it. this is just coming at us. the former attorney general bill barr is telling fox digital, "prosecutors should do the right thing and drop trump cases. respect the people's decision. ". charlie hurt that's a new development. if they follow barr's advice, trump is off the hook. >> and not is it only smart politically because all these things backfired on democrats in a terrible way but just from a
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government standpoint this is the right thing to do. it's not the way to run our politics and using the justice system is appalling and it shouldn't even be something that is in the realm of things we think about using against our opponents. stuart: absolutely and here is another one for you. msnbc host, he thinks identity politics is to blame for harris' loss. he says people are telling him that their kids are afraid to speak in class for fear of being canceled. >> i didn't hear it from republicans. i didn't hear it from trumpers, i heard it from democrats over the past three or four years. their kids were afraid to talk in class and say something unpopular because they be canceled, and it's an epidemic. stuart: joe scarboro seems to see what's going on here. >> welcome to the party. i hate to agree with him because he is so late to everything i think, but it is true, and even if he can see it, it's obvious
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but i mean, identity politics is one of the things, there are a couple of things that are really took a beating and maybe dead now. one is the dominance of money and politics. for the second time, donald trump has broken. it used to be whoever had the most money wins. automatically. trump has beaten that twice now and the second thing is, the dei stuff and identity politics, and if that's all we get out of trump's victory, america will be a better place for it. stuart: charlie thank you very much indeed. show me the dow 30. i expect to see a lot of green and there it is. we do have, let's see , nine stocks down, 21 up. the dow is up 3.2%, 1,350 points. what a day. world leaders reaching out to could in congratulate trump.
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stuart: the rally continues we're up 1,300 points for the dow, 400 for the nasdaq and by the way the cryptos are doing well as well because trump lines cryptos. senate minority leader mitch mcconnell just wrapped up his post-election press conference. he congratulated donald trump on his campaign, but said that one of the most gratifying results was the presumed republican control of the senate. now, the filibuster will stand and he told the press conference it was a hell of a good day. that's mitch mcconnell. america's allies and adversaries are reacting to trump's win. jill ran turner at the state department. what are world leaders saying? reporter: stuart around the world, so far this morning and overnight support from foreign leaders pouring in for the president-elect, but not everybody as i'm sure you could guess is singing his praises or even offering former president trump their actual congratulations. somebody who very much is though is israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. take a look at this. he was among the very first leaders to congratulate trump.
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he called him my friend on x this morning and writes, "your historic return to the white house offers a new beginning for america and a powerful recommitment to the great alliance between israel and america." the british prime minister also emphasizing his personal relationship with trump. he says they recently had dinner together. he opened parliament this morning with this. take a listen. >> mr. speaker can i begin by congratulating president-elect trump on his historic election victory, as the closest of allies, the us will continue to work together to protect our shared values. reporter: but you can't be friends with everybody. china's government today avoiding any congratulations saying only in a statement out of the foreign ministry beijing will continue to handle relations with the us based on mutual respect, peaceful co-existence and win-win cooperation. now, in russia, a kremlin spokesperson says they have no plans for putin to congratulate
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trump since the us is "an unfriendly country." and in ukraine, apprehensive about what a trump victory means for american support in the war, ukrainian president zelenskyy tweets his appreciation for trump foreign policy and the doctrine, which he describes as being peace through strength. obviously, the other big question mark in all this , stuart is how the western europeans are reacting. so far, the leadership out of nato says that they look forward to reinvigorating alliance and continuing to work with trump and a lot of trepidation though as you well know among some of those western european leaders. trump's signature policy issue in his first term vis-a-vis nato and the alliance was pressuring everybody to pony up and pair their dues they owe. stuart: we remember it well and so do the europeans. look whose here now, nigel farage.
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he's got a thing or two to say about what world leaders are saying about trump. how about the europeans? they can't be happy to have trump back can they? >> no, they can't believe it. they are in a total state of shock. they didn't think this could possibly happen. i mean, who could have foreseen, you know, the greatest political come back since winston churchill because that's what it is. trump was down n' out in the eyes of everybody politically. no, they are obviously very worried. as you know, western europe is becoming incredibly liberal including my own country, the united kingdom. almost all of the leaders have been personally abusive about trump and now they are scared. they are scared because do you know what? they might have to pay the membership fees of nato if they want american protection. and they're scared because trump has talked about a tariff regime that could make life very difficult for them. and they are all scratching their heads thinking how on earth do we talk to a man that we have been so rude about in
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public? stuart: we saw prime minister stand up in the house of commons and welcome the trump victory, and as he was doing that i could hear a lot of boo's and cat calls in the background. to a large number in britain, trump is not popular, is he? >> no, he's not and particularly not with the labor party. don't forget the feud that's gone on with the mayor of london and we've got a foreign secretary who said things about trump though i won't repeat it's too early in the day on live television, and the prime minister that's been less than graceful and even the british conservative party. most of them were anti-trump certainly in 2016, and well then i was an mep, and now of course i'm an mp, and i am in palm beach but it's not much public support for trump. stuart: that was funny. because you said oh, now i'm
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an mp and i'm hear in palm beach. what was it like, because you were with the president-elect? >> it was epic. epic. the evening began in the ballroom at mar-a-lago with cautious optimism but i was bullish. i was bullish all the way through. i've stood outside polling stations in pennsylvania, that morning. i could see a shift, a change in attitude. i felt it strongly and the amazing thing was people were hollering and cheering as each n each announcement camn fox and trump just sat there, as cool as a cucumber, totally calm, just taking it all in as if, no big deal really, i just won the presidency for a second time. he is a remarkable human being whether you like him or not he is an incredible man. stuart: we liked your color commentary there, nigel. good stuff about the ballroom in
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mar-a-lago. nigel, you have a good day in florida before you go back to britain. we'll see you later. thanks a lot. all right, trivia, wednesday trivia question here we go. which president founded the university of virginia? george washington, john adams, thomas jefferson, james madison? charlie hurt will play this with us and he laughed at me because i don't know the answer. lauren: it's easy. this one is easy. ..
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stuart: this justin. it is official. kamala harris will speak today at 4:00 p.m. eastern time at howard university. the second gentlemen, her husband, will attend. we don't know what she will say, she speaks at 4:00. we asked which president found the university of virginia, george washington, james madison, i don't know the answer. what is your guess? ashley: i am there with you, adams, number 2. stuart: lahren. lauren: it is thomas jefferson. stuart: charlie. >> thomas jefferson. we when i say george washington. we are out of time. it is david.
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