tv Varney Company FOX Business November 7, 2024 10:00am-11:00am EST
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stuart: a look at new york city. the weather has been like this for 8 weeks straight. every single time i say look at the weather in new york city, haven't had rain except a little shower in the last 38 days. absolutely beautiful. it is 10:00 eastern. straight to the money, no selloff after yesterday's rally. dollars up 50. look at the nasdaq going up another one%. one%. the tenure treasury yield coming in at 4. 37%, down just a little, the price of oil $71 a barrel, bitcoin hanging in at 74,900, close to its all-time high. we just received a new numbers
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on home prices, going up still? lauren: the national association of realtors says 87% of metro areas, or one hundred 96 of 226 measured to solve home prices rise in the third quarter, the good news is down from 89% in the prior quarter, as for the median price, 418,708 over 3%. stuart: some homeowners like to see the value go up. but i've got more equity in the place. i could borrow against it. >> you to go to government. stuart: we are worried about home prices going up, some of us who own homes are not worried about the price going up, we love it. >> this is the baby boomer problem, they need to purchase and can't go up in any rational way. stuart: we need to open up some houses. thank you very much. now this.
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donald trump off to a fast start. within 24 hours of his big when checking out possibles, this is going to be a different administration. this is a list published by the washington post, for a start say goodbye to identity politics. biden made a big deal about diversity, clearly trump doesn't much care for that. he wants talent and there's plenty available, chief of staff, two possibles, susie while to lead trump's successful campaign, we didn't see much of her until she stood on the victory stage for his victory speech and brooke rawlins leads the america first policy institute which did a lot of the planning for a second trump term, treasury secretary, billionaire john paulson who has been talking about cost cutting, very much in line with trump's thinking on this. the other possible treasury
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secretary, scott messit who has been advising trump on economic policy for some time, securing state, senator marco rubio who wants the job, or rick grenell, or of acting director of national intelligence, tom cotton was being considered for defense a very but this morning he politely dropped out. he wants to stay in the senate. doug bergram for commerce built a billion-dollar business. vivek ramaswamy looking for a roll. elon musk will probably not be in the cabinet but he can still cut the bureaucracy and a cost-cutting department. rfk junior has crusade into make america healthy again. not on the washington post list, tom homan who would love to come back to run the border. he controlled the border when he was in charge and wants to do it again. he's moving quickly letting everyone know what kind of theme he is leading and where it will take america for the next four years. second hour of varney just getting started.
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will cain joins us, what you think of these possible candidate pics? >> let me start with what would excite me, perhaps the most unrealistic in some way but quite realistic when we look at the way donald trump campaign. i would be most excited about robert f kennedy junior and elon musk having a significant role in the trump administration and let me tell you why. every single one of us knows the government is incredibly inefficient. have you ever been or tried to book an appointment with a dmv, everyone knows that is typical of what goes on in the government. we are terrified what happens to government jobs or government spending and the economy. elon musk has a department of government efficiency either official or unofficial because this can be done. it doesn't have to be unrealistic. look argentina, look what they have done and how their economy has boomed.
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secondarily we know we are an unhealthy nation, we are a fat obese nation eating processed fake food and i want to see someone with some real brass like robert f kennedy junior have power to put us on the right track. i will defer to you on treasury secretary and commerce. we want two good pics there who would shake things up. elon musk, rfk junior. next one for you. the ladies overview wore all black funeral attire for their postelection show. listen to how they reacted to trump's victory. >> i'm profoundly disturbed. i'm worried about mass deportation and internment camps. >> i grew up in a tenement. we did not have money, still voted for the party that was looking out for me. and my family. we were not voting for a party that was looking out for rich people. i grew up exactly like they are growing up today. >> why do you think an educated white women voted against their reproductive health freedoms?
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stuart: did you hear that? uneducated white women? when will the media realize people don't being like talk to down to? >> so much there in one click. joy behar missed the last decade plus shift of the political parties about who looks out for the working class, still a limousine liberal revisiting nixon, an old lady with legacy television job that highly overpaid. sunny austin is a racist who'd quadruples everything down on race and if you view the world through the lens of skin color that makes you a racist. the real question is america -- this being able maddock of stuff that's happening in different levels on cbs, nbc, abc, cnn, america has tuned it out, it doesn't cut, it's a joke, they are important. they long-lost credibly, they've now lost influence. but isn't there someone in comcast, isn't there someone with some sanity in time
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warner, disney, it is time for accountability. talk about bad processed food, this is bad processed information, this is making america fat and lazy in their mind. time for some accountability. there need to be pink slips, some you are fired in the media. stuart: you turned that nicely around, you and i agree on this. of pleasure, see you again soon. we have some harris campaign officials blaming biden for the election loss. lauren: because he dropped out too late in the game. >> one thing we are clearly already starting to see take place is finger-pointing and blame game and a lot of that is going to be directed at president biden. this is even coming from some folks inside the harris campaign. one senior official said biden will hold a lot of blame ford and frankly, they said he should.
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and it just goes back to the simple decision, a second term in the first place. >> he campaigned on being a transition president. that means kamala harris's understudy, she should have been in every meeting, done great things at the border but she never rose to the occasion. then she became the candidate, this hundred day sprint to do something but never distanced herself from joe biden. how could he be the change candidate when the country wants change you don't rise to the moment. stuart: it was a mess and they are trying to figure it out. stuart: back to the market, david barneson has his two cents worth already. i want to show you the belcher index, this measures the value of all listed trades, listed stocks i should say.
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yesterday, one day alone it was up one. $5 trillion, that is astonishing to me and it shows that that is the trump rally. >> bond yields going up, indicates expectations of progrowth trump rally and what went up the most? the bows in big tech, financials, industrials and energy. cyclicals that benefit from growth in the economy, that's a bullish sign. a little ahead of itself, overpricing in some things, usually it does but still a positive optimistic sign. stuart: that is what the market wants, growth, they want economic growth, they want that. >> it is all people who wanted, society wants it, it is what we desperately need is growth. stuart: they might get it with trump, better than they got with biden. >> that means removing impediments to growth. government can't create growth
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but they can hurt it and he can laminate those things with high taxes, high business burdens and regulation. stuart: stay with me for the hour, lauren is looking at the movers, i would like to see what you've got to say about stellantis. lauren: they are laying off workers, 1100 energy plant in ohio, down 34% from pre-covid hi. stuart: under armour. neil: away up. 30%, they raise their annual profit forecast because they are touting their cost savings initiatives under their founder, kevin plank who returned as ceo to right the ship. he is also pushing the company to sell more sportswear at full price which is good for margins. stuart: why are you gritting your teeth? >> my dad said i can't say anything at all if i don't say something i said i can't stand that guy but writing the ship, he sells $500 million of stock, goes down 80%, then he comes back to right the ship and the company is a money loser and i
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have a personal thing on this. stuart: interesting -- >> i was not going to say anything which i was going to sit here and snicker. stuart: it is my fault. the match group. lauren: tender parent projected their fourth-quarter revenue would be below estimates, stock is down almost 15%, the message being sent to investors, this dating apps turnaround needs more time. >> with the trump when, dating isn't working because people are mad at each other about politics. stuart: your best shot. stuart: all right. coming up, special counsel jack smith is winding down the two federal cases against trump, what happens to the rest of those cases? we are on it. msnbc's chris matthews now acknowledges illegal immigration was a big problem. >> migration has been a terrible decision for democrats, working people especially feel they've been betrayed, that their country has been given away and i don't like it. stuart: that is for sure.
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slightly as the bitcoin, calls over just slightly, crypto plays it down too. yesterday donald trump spoke on the phone with benjamin netanyahu, one of first calls he's made with a foreign leader after winning the election. julian turner at the state department, what to the trump when mean for the war in the middle east? >> i don't think this is going to be news to you but it is highly anticipated that a second donald term presidency is going to entirely shape dynamics in the middle east, the likeliest first impact is going to be felt in gaza where hamas is issued are threatening menacing statement targeting the former president, look at what they wrote overnight, the us administered and must realize our palestinian people will continue to resist the hateful zionist occupation and will not accept any path that detract from their legitimate rights to freedom and the establishment of their independent palestinian state with jerusalem as its capital.
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that's contrasted with the congratulatory message that came in from israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu, who wrote a message to the incoming president and first lady, he writes congratulations on history's greatest comeback, you're historic return to the white house offers a new beginning for americo and a powerful commitment to the alliance between israel and america. trump and netanyahu spoke yesterday, one of his first calls with foreign leaders since his victory, trump's cabinet had tried to make middle east peace the cornerstone of his first term foreign policy by recognizing jerusalem as his relapse capital and securing the abraham accords. so a lot of our viewers expressed concern as well about what this means for the plight of the palestinian people,
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civilians who suffer greatly. general jack keane is the perfect person to tell you this, most military experts tell you a swift and decisive military victory winning the wars how you prevent suffering for everybody involved. stuart: you are right. the general is with me. i will go back to mike pompeo and listen to what he said about trump's big win. >> they will once again have respect for american leadership. there will be a leader on stage to understand the deterrence model that delivered good things for the united states who put america first for four years, didn't have these wars we are suffering in the people and the police are suffering. americans suffering. a lot will change. our allies and friends will
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trust us once again. stuart: do you think our standing in the world will go up? i do because the rest of the world is scared to death of trump. >> what has happened, what donald trump will face as he assumes the oval office again in january that he didn't face four years ago is the fact that china, russia, iran and north korea are colluding and cooperating to gather and have become aggressive because they believe american leadership has been weak and there's not a political will in the united states to confront them. it's not isolated that russia invaded ukraine, or iran operationalized its proxies to destroy the state of israel and drive the united states out of the region and president xi is threatening war in the indo pacific. all that has happened in the
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last four years. this is a restoration of america strong leadership and when american leadership is strong the world is a safer place. when it is week as we have seen the world is more dangerous as a result of week american leadership. stuart: do you think we need a reagan style military buildup? in the early 1989s ronald reagan became the president and immediately increased defense spending and normally, do we need the same thing again? >> we do. the other thing our adversaries recognize is an erosion of us. i keep ability, not the same military we used to be. the wars, 20 year preoccupation with 9/11 wars and serious budget cuts with the obama administration kneecap the military when we should have been rebuilding it at the reality is the biden administration, all four defense budgets are flat, no
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increase, no rebuild going on as a result of it. to answer your questions specifically, yes. we need to rebuild and we need to fix the business practices of the pentagon and get them to be more effective and proper up the defense industrial base. it is nowhere near where it needs to be in the event we have to go to war. what we are going to be about is restoring deterrence which secretary pompeo mentioned to prevent a war. that is what the buildup did. that is what reagan did. he prevented a war with the soviet union who was becoming more aggressive. we need to do that here again. stuart: can you tell me what north korean troops are doing in ukraine? they clashed with ukrainian forces, north korean troops, what's going on? >> they get money for this, from russia and they need money, they provided on a regular basis.
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this is all about the shared partnership. i believe the ballistic missiles that north korea has given to russia and tens of thousands of artillery shells more valuable on these troops, 10,000 troops, special operations forces from the 11th army corps that were never battle tested, they are in the first encounter, a number of people killed. 10,000 is not decisive in this war. this is the beginning of a pipeline where they will be providing 10,000, that would be decisive. the russian suffer 30,000 casualties on average a month. october it was 57,000. if they got 10,000 troops from korea in a pipeline on a regular basis that would help, 10,000 by themselves, not decisive. stuart: good information, general, thanks for sharing. still ahead. democrats blaming each other for kamala harris's loss but
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did they learn their lesson about lawfair? >> spoke to andrew cuomo today, said that you revived donald trump when he was no longer a factor by pursuing the cases against him. >> no response to comments from the former governor. >> there's a chance the charges will just go away and we will get into that. trump's second term all about growing the economy, 3% growth now. can he do better than that? stephen more on that next. ♪
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managers in this space, 4% yield they are growing, doing data centers, pipelines and utilities so they are building get infrastructure profitably and well. stuart: the department of j and j. >> consumer staples group which is 1/3 of j and j's business for decades, they spun it off into its own company. some of their famous products mother's activist hedge funds involved with an earnings number that is up 3% today. we are heavily in it at 18 up to 23, 4% yield and growing. stuart: have they got a track record on dividend growth? >> j and j has grown it since the 1940s and it spun off last year. stuart: thank you. it is fed day, the fed expected to cut rates for the second time this year. edward lawrence joining us, you
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are our fed water of the day. do the election results have any sway on today's decision? >> the federal reserve chairman will tell you know. markets are coming up all cherries on the slot machine, the market anticipating two regulation policies and the tax cuts and we could see a cut in the federal funds rate, the fed chairman hinting there could be a 25 basis point cut today and another rate cut of the same in december, the federal reserve trying to get the federal funds rate, eventually around 3.5%, currently it is at 4.75 to 5%. when you look at how the bond yields are reacting, some market analysts not concerned yet. >> the move is more predicated on better growth, inflation expectations are moving higher, that's a concern about breakeven rates whether it is the 2-year or 5-year, so as we look at the fed, the job next
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year might be more challenging. >> there will be an across-the-board government shift once donald trump's policies start to roll out on paper. financial expert say the federal reserve will have to reassess its positions next year. >> once we hit 2025 and see how the fiscal side of the equation is going to evolve we do think the fed is going to have to factor some of that in going forward. perhaps they come down a little more but at some point they have to reevaluate. stuart: donald trump said he will not reappoint fed chairman jay powell to the position, the fed chairman has said in the past to that that will not affect job performance that he's doing. stuart: thanks very much. stephen more joins us now. trump has got to have economic growth. he has to really gross economy. that's what we need. we've got 3% growth now, how can trump go beyond that, how can he get a stronger growth rate, will he manage it?
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>> good to be with you. i'm still kind of euphoric about the elections so i'm still on a big high right now but let me say a couple quick things about what happened yesterday if i may because i've been chomping at the bit to talk to you about this. remember, three or four weeks ago, all of these economists including the nobel prize economists kept saying if trump is elected we are going to have a stock market crash, remember that? they all said the market would crash like they said in 2016 and yesterday, the market, investors saying we think trump's policies will be much much better for our 401(k) plans and stock market plans and i think that was born out but the other thing that happened yesterday that's important for people to understand, it wasn't just applause for the trump policies. it was also a breath of relief
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by the markets that these ideas like taxing unrealized capital gains, raising the corporate tax rate, raising income tax rates which would have been disaster. those are good things. we are not at 3% growth, we haven't been anywhere near 3% and the report that just came out, the private economy was at 2. 5%. we have to get to 3% growth, trump is totally focused on that. he would like to see 4% growth and i'm here to tell you once you get the growth rate up that high you will start to see the economy bend the curve. david van's son knows this to be true, in terms of reducing is that burden of the debt. stuart: you can respond later. steve, big tech leaders are congratulating trump after his election when. are they cozying up to trump?
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>> this has been the trend in big tech for six or nine months, they've been mugged by reality and they were so much against conservatives, so much against the trump agenda but now they are starting to see conservatives are for free markets, getting the government off of our backs so we can grow the economy, tech companies, we have five of the six largest companies in the world in the united states in the tech sector. we want to see those explode but we want free speech on the internet and don't want to tech companies using their platforms to silence conservative voices like mine and david barneson. steve, i got to go, i know we will see you again soon. what do you think of these big business leaders cozying up to trump? >> i want to know where the ones are that aren't doing it.
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out of patriotism, you are a big leader, shareholders, employees, statesmenlike to say congratulations not to mention there's pragmatic benefits to getting on the good side, it's the way it works. i think it is very understandable, a diplomatic congratulation but there's something wrong with people who didn't even if i would say the same thing on the other side. stuart: thank you. still had, some on the left blaming racism and sexism for kamala harris's loss. watch this. >> you cannot ignore there is still a lot of racism and gender bias in this country. >> this was a referendum of cultural resentment. >> racism and bias had to have played a role. stuart: that is all it is? racism and sexism? we will discuss that.
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what are party leaders saying? >> reporter: they are making sure they are polite about this as they give the results, 20 minutes we will get president biden's take. summer pointing fingers at the president, others say the party needs to look at its messaging. >> what i want to focus on specifically is we have to be honest as democrats. we have a problem connecting with working-class voters. the started to emerge a decade ago and was focused on white working-class areas. that has now spread. >> bernie sanders, self described socialist who won his reelection released a scathing letter insisting the party is out of touch. he writes as it should come as no surprise a democratic party which is abandoned working-class people would find the working-class has abandoned them. fox look at our voter analysis
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to see the most pressing issue, it was the economy followed by integration. the issues vice president focused on, abortion ranks well below what donald trump focused on and some pundits think democrats need to look at what has people outraged. >> democrats would be smarter on the women's athletics, 85% of americans oppose men transitioning after puberty and competing against women. >> reporter: we are hearing concerns about messages put out by the campaign that they had a huge war chest and outspent the trump campaign. the question is where did that money go? stuart: inquiring minds want to know. the boston globe editorial board member joins me now. democrats lost some key races and even prominent democrats who won like elizabeth warren had smaller margins. what does that tell us?
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>> elizabeth warren's challenger won by four extra points than the last republican ran against her almost getting 40% of the vote. might not sound like a lot but in the deep blue, that's quite the victory. that goes to show how out of touch democrats are with basic issues. like the graphic shows, it's the economy and immigration and all democrats talked about was abortion and donald trump. stuart: which prominent democrats won with sharply reduced margins? >> reporter: up and down the ballot democrats struggled. if you look, where they struggled the most were those prominent blue state governors or senators, mara healy was in new hampshire with joyce craig against kelly ayotte and all she could talk about was
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abortion, and being aligned with donald trump. republicans kept on the issues, the slogan was don't mess up in new hampshire, don't adopt the tax and spend policies they champion. stuart: late night hosts went into meltdown mode after trump's victory. >> what are you doing? >> i am packing. >> are you going on vacation? >> i'm not going on vacation. i'm leaving the country. >> it happened again. after a bazaar campaign fueled by a desperate need not to go to jail donald trump has won the 2024 election. donald trump has won the 2024 election and he will be president again for four more years or 8 or 12 or whatever.
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stuart: they don't understand why they lost. >> they don't. not that many people are laughing with them. stephen colbert has lost 32% of his viewership. people watched comedy to laugh, not to be lectured. all great comedy is migrating south to austin and joe rogan's show or is going online, podcast, people aren't tuning into these shows. stuart: the times are changing. thanks for joining us. see you again soon. still ahead. the elites have been living in a bubble, trump just burst that bubble. trouble is they don't understand why they lost. that is "my take" at the top of the hour. ♪
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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: what happens to those court cases against trump. are those court cases going away? >> essentially yes.
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donald trump said he would fire special counsel jack smith, trump won't have that chance. to end the prosecutions against trump. and and he is appealing it and he will drop at the second the efforts to overturn the 2020 elections in dc court room. stuart: always a question of what is in the best interests of the country. no doubt in my mind the best interests of the country are served by them dismissing the case. >> reporter: they have to be dropped because it is long-standing justice department policy, doj cannot and will not prosecute a sitting president. smith indicted trump in 2023,
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trump was supposed to go to trial, he faced an uphill battle with delay after delay thanks to the supreme court, the cases never got off the ground, we don't know, paperwork will have to be filed and there will be a formal notification process the cases were dropped and we expect smith to release, considering he prosecuted both cases in open court and produced page after page of court filings. stuart: interesting stuff. look who is here, matt whitaker. we hear new york attorney general leticia james is continuing the fight. can she do that? ps. good yes. good to be with you.
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it is disappointing she wants to continue her unprecedented pursuit of donald trump and continue to press her novel legal theories that are going to ultimately crumble once the appeals court issues a decision. obviously all of these cases, whether they are jack smith, and once they meta-court that didn't have anti-trump judge. the american people spoke loud and clear. they have elected donald trump and -- stuart: until next tuesday, tossing out trump's felony conviction. it is possible trump could go to jail?
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>> it is impossible at this time. that case as he reviews it, he allowed evidence from donald trump's time in the white house, could not be admitted in a court of law. they are watching the trial. at the time he was not a fair and honest judge but if he can find a modicum of fairness he would toss the case because he did violate the supreme court's ruling. stuart: jonathan turley describes what the supreme court might look like under trump. >> the supreme court dodged a bullet in that you had democratic senators saying they wanted to pack the court, one said that kamala harris was a supporter of that plan. now you have a little more
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breathing room for justices like clarence thomas who is getting older and maybe samuel alito. they have a safe harbor period in which they can get a replacement who will be similar in terms of their jurisprudential views. many things they've done over the last few years are going to be cemented. stuart: interesting idea. the two elderly justices are indeed 75 years old. if they walked away now, trump could appoint two conservative judges in their place and as the attorney suggests, cement 30 years of a supreme court that is conservative. >> alito and thomas are the ideological bedrock over the court.
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strict constructionist rule of law conservative justices, i would expect donald trump, i don't speak for him but i would expect he would find two good replacements for those folks but they are really impressive, and they will have to choose a time that they will no longer be effective. stuart: donald trump's impact could be enormous. thanks for joining us. thank you very much indeed to. david, thank you for sticking around. i stole that from you. >> no problem at all. jonathan turley had come up with it. >> might want to do the next two years. stuart: still ahead, brian brenberg on bernie sanders saying the democratic party has abandoned working-class people. how trump won in pennsylvania.
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research and called coventry direct. they explained life insurance is a valuable asset that can be sold. we learned we could sell all of our policy, or keep part of it with no future payments. who knew? we sold our policy. now we can relax and enjoy our retirement as we had planned. if you have $100,000 or more of life insurance, you may qualify to sell your policy. don't cancel or let your policy lapse without finding out what it's worth. visit coventrydirect.com to find out if your policy qualifies. or call the number on your screen. coventry direct, redefining insurance. >> this week the people of america stood up and basically gave
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