tv Varney Company FOX Business January 21, 2025 11:00am-12:00pm EST
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yeah! i can play soccer because of your support. thank you, your support is changing our lives. your monthly gift right now at loveshriners.org makes moments like this possible for kids like me and me. thank you for giving. help a kid get their first set of wheels. let's roll. join the movement. please call or go online now. if operators are busy, call again, or go to loveshriners.org to give right away. thank you! >> i think president trump gave the most revolutionary state of the union yesterday of any american president. >> the guy means business. this is the golden age for america.
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yesterday was liberation day, and that's what it feels like. it feels like our country has been saved. >> these people never had a opportunity to be proud to be a american. long live america. >> we'll see border security, established up controlled and reestablish the entire southwest border of mexico. >> we need president trump to come out with an executive order or smug that says bitcoin is a regulated asset and institutional inflow and bitcoin prices double from here. >> one optimism he's having a funmy moon he didn't have -- honeymoon he didn't have last time. >> a level of organization and urgency in this administration that i don't know that i've ever seen. ♪ ♪
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stuart: made in america, toby keith. great voice. lauren: great guy. stuart: it's tuesday, january 21st. have a look at markets and plenty of green for the dow and up 328 and that's three quarters of 1%. s&p up 0.4% and fractional gain for the nasdaq. big tech, mostly higher i think, certainly last tyke we checked. alphabet, amazon, nvidia up and microsoft down and apple now down almost $9. the yield on the 10-year treasury, still below 4.6%. actually moving lower at 456 at the moment. any moment now, president trump will head to the national prayer service at national cathedral inway. we'll make sure to -- in washington and we'll monitor and bring you updates. there you have it, left hand side of the screen. now this, when donald trump began his first presidency, it was chaos and media and democrats hated him and did everything to bring him down. he didn't have a clear set of policies, and he didn't have the right people in the cabinet.
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it was a mess. it's very different this time. first of all, trump won a solid victory and backing of the voters and we all know what he intends to do and not vague about the border or energy or inflation. it's hard to tear down the policies of a man doing what voters wants. this time he is popular. it's not as if the democrats are poised to stop him, they are bitterly divided. kamala harris is upset with biden, and she's not too happy with barack obama either. there's no love lost between biden and obama. and jill biden has not forgiven nancy pelosi and democrats don't speak with one voice and different last time when they could unit around trump hatred. how do you unit when you're at each other's throats and the problem of leadership. democrats don't have a lieder. in fact, they can't agree on baseball games ick policies. really, is aoc going to convince her party to keep going with dei or biological males in girls
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sport s? can bernie sanders rally his party? not a prayer, thank heavens. gavin newsom, the hapless governor of california and he's pushing california values and thinks the rest of the country should be run like the formerly golden state. senator schumer? no way. he's consumed with trump contempt. it's so yesterday. if you thought that trump's second term will be a replay of the first, you can think again. it's different this time. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: a panel on msnbc slammed the number of tech ceos at trump's inauguration. they can't stand it. watch this. >> kr kristi noem, the nominee r homeland security next to apple ceo tim cook. >> only is america. >> how is this happening? why are people with tons of
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money sitting with cabinet nominees and family member s? >> it is a message. >> it is a message, and i think they're up there for the very reason that you probably think they're up there. >> it is a pivotal moment here. stuart: they seem a little confused. it's like a nonplus they don't to want say. jimmy, i did a my take on this, seems things are truly different this time around, jimmy failla. >> yeah, 100%. that's why msnbc looks like a well-dressed group therapy session. that wasn't tv session. that was coping cathartic session and they were moping and this pretend concern that big tech would be aligning with the president after the last president pressured big tech to do censorship bidding and had no problem with that and didn't call it out. to the point of billionaires, okay. kamala raised a billion and a
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half and have the dark money in politics and the problem is because the first amendment is back. people are free to call them out on their bs, and they haven't gotten the memo yet that no one takes them seriously anymore. it was amazing. yesterday was just such a great day and can we acknowledge how fitting it was that biden's final day in office was a half day like all of his other days in office. well played by the administration. stuart: cruel but good, jimmy. presidential story on cnn claim that had president trump was a dictator on day one. watch. >> he was is decide to make good on his promise to be a dictator on day one. in a sense, we had far right international represented at inauguration and the president of the united states for the first time since 1901 in an inaugural address talked about how this country is going to acquire new territory and threatened sovereignty of another country. that's a signal to the far right in the world that america will now play the game the way the other far right countries play,
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which is what we take from it. stuart: think he's going a little far, jimmy? >> yeah, so funny because he could get hired to go to parties and just like do that thing again where you pretend trump is a dictator. maria, come see it. he's doing the dictator thing. it's absurd that the president has ambition for his country is not dictator stuff and bigger than that, if he was a dictator, he'd not be allowed on air to criticize the guile. the military would be controlling and denying you your speech rights, that's what makes it so farcical. we're on fbni , and i hate to sy it but i tell me friends to watch msnbc or cnn on a day like today because it's funny and they don't know what to do. taxpayers source of humor. stuart: we'll watch you on fox news saturday night at 10:00 p.m. eastern. you're the best. >> thank you. stuart: plenty of green for the dow industrials and plenty of
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stock inside the dow that are up sharply and that's accounting for 381 point gain. mike murphy with me here. are you prepared to say categorically it's the trump bump extended. >> this is spirit and exceptionalism and american entrepreneurialism at its best. here we go. stuart: executive orders and help the economy, helping the economy grow and all of them. it's energy. >> helping the economy and they define that there's only two genders, which i think you have to throw in there's a good one also but, yes, this is pro business administration. stuart: how far does it have to go? the run? >> this does not mean that we're on taking off on a rocket ship and we're going to go up for the rest of this year. that i promise you will not happen. there'll be bumps in the road along the way. i think what individual investors want to look at is
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their money better treated to be invested in the u.s. stock market today than it was three months ago, six months ago, four years ago? and the answer for me is a resounding yes. stuart: you're on vied owe tape saying the market will not expand this year and not going straight up. >> every day. write it down. i bet you. stuart: did you say every day? >> i did. i did. you get my point, for investors, they don't want to say we're too high or waiting for a pullback. they want to be invested in this market now because the deregulation that's taking place and the orders that are coming out of president trump's office are good for business and they're good for the economy, which means they're good for the stock market. stuart: got t thanks, mike. stay with me for the hour. ahead of the inauguration, president trump said he spoke with apple's chief tim cook. madison, do we mo what they talked about? >> we sure do because tram subpoena open and tells us everything that's gone on. a potential investment in the u.s.. trump said tim cook of apple is
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planning to make a massive investment because of the big and cook was a member of the work force advisory board and if this happens, apple will be the latest company since the win and it's costing $100 billion to create 100,000 jobs and trump of course pushing for 200 billion, not enough for him. the second is a $20 billion commitment from them to build data centers and many ceos break bread with trump since his win. stuart: come back here, mike. what do you think of big tech? >> they're doing it to help
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their businesses but i disagree. when i listen to a long video mark zuckerberg and joe rogan and talked about his feelings on the biden administration and business and feelings on trillion trump and the trump administration and these guys are successful and multibillion dollar success stories running massive businesses and they realize a trump administration can be helpful to their business. i think they love for hunting it, and what tram subpoena doing helps everything single one of them become bigger, better businesses and to be able to keep more money with tax cuts. stuart: can grow the economy and everybody wins. no losers in a growing economy. >> absolutely. stuart: thankers, mike. coming up, right after trump was sworn in the department of government efficiency, doge, was sued. trump hopes they can find common ground over the next four years. watch this. >> i think it's time we all start getting along a
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the way i approach work post fatherhood, has really trying to understand the generation that we're building devices for. here in the comcast family, we're building an integrated in-home wifi solution for millions of families like my own. in the average household, there are dozens of connected devices. connectivity is a big part of my boys' lives. it brings people together in meaningful ways.
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doge was hit we lawsuits as soon as trump was sworn in. hillary vaughn on capitol hill. what's the new it had anostation doing to defend dog if she recollects reporter: stuart, multiple lawsuits were filed before president trump signed the executive order making department of government efficiency agency officially a part of the executive branch. it's that executive order that may make these lawsuits essentially dead because the lawsuits are based on the idea that doge would be an outside advisory committee and subject to federal rules governing advisory committees. but now that doge is a efficient part of the governments the lawsuits are a big swing and miss for the doge critics. one of them complaining "not a single member of doge is a federal employee or represents the perspective of federal employees but in the beginning that was the trump". trump picked outsider elon musk to cut through all the layers of
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fat built up in a loaded government bureaucracy. >> no, musk is getting in office for about 20 people that we're hiring to make sure that these get implemented. reporter: doge will have federal workers in every agency assisting in the mission and trump's eo establishings agencies for their own doge team with four employees and doge is celebrating the win with shuttering of government dei offices as trump calls to return to merit-based hiring and there's a shakeup in staffing happening at doge. cofounder, vivek ramaswamy, stepping down from doge to possibly run for elected office or expected to announce a run for ohio governor as earl police officer as next week. stuart. stuart: thanks, hillary. do you think these lawsuits, mike murphy, will stop doge from getting things done? >> absolutely not. not a chance they vow them down even.
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what they're doing is you've heard people on both sides of the aisle talk for years about government waste and overspending from the government. we all know we have a spending problem in washington, and now we're putting together arguably the the most successful man in history to put a team in place to reign it in for all american taxpayers. we should be celebrating it completely, and it'll be a huge win for the country. stuart: you can't suppress elon musk, can you? we saw him in the clips, dancing around the stage and king of the world. >> i think he's feeling right now like he can really make a difference, and i think he doesn't need more money. he doesn't need more companies, but now he can make a huge difference on the american people and generations of americans to come, and i think he really takes that seriously and he's embracing it. madison: i was going to say he has a lot of companies and wealthiest man in the world and someone you can argue does care even based on his companies about people with neurolink and tesla and electric vehicles,
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getting people into space. his companies he's made a ton of money on all improved society. love him or hate him, he cares about people, and i think this idea that he can make a real change in a country that he's immigrated to, you see it. stuart: i just wouldn't want to work for him. madison: absolutely not. i like to sleep and have personal time. stuart: that's true. billionaire manager will do it. president trump wants better relationships between democrats and relationships. watch. >> i wish we could have had a better relationship. i wish we could have had a better relationship between republicans and democrats. i was with senator schumer and said, chuck, i think it's time we all start getting along a little bit because it doesn't make sense. i mean, we literally never get a democrat vote, they never get a republican vote almost. and there's a bill coming up shortly that there's a lot of democrat votes; right? that's going to be a very beautiful bill. we're going to have a signing within a week or so, i think,
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and it'll be a very good bill. stuart: congressman byron donalds, congressman from florida joining me now. congressman, any chance of getting help from the democrats on a real big scale on trump's big, beautiful bill? >> i think so, actually. here's why. everything that president trump has been talking about on the campaign trail obviously focused on the american people, securing our border and actually having a way to repatriate people back to their home countries and making sure the department of defense has the resources it needs to shift our fighting force into the future, which is desperately needed. we're going to have to deal with debt ceiling and there's going to have to be mandatory spending reforms and cuts from bloated overspending of joe bind, make no mistake. the biden era covid funding has to be pulled back and very expensive for us. if not impossible to finance that as a nation into the future. then you have his tax policy, energy dominance policy, here in
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the united states. these are things that democrats should be working with us on. i understand it, all of them are not going to come our way, but there are some democrats who do agree with these agenda items, and they should come our way and vote for the packages. stuart: is trump strike ago new tone this time around? he's still feisty? do you see a new tone? >> i don't think it's about a new tone per se. donald trump is kind of always been this way. as long as you are nice to him, you don't have to agree but if you're cord yule with him, he's cordial with you. if he feels you're trying to take him out, he'll drop a sledge hammer on you. that's the bottom line. even before politics, the democrats that now said he was a threat to democracy, these are the same democrats that were at his wedding when he married melania, the same democrats that would go and meet with him at trump tower in new york so he's been consist. it's the democrats who have been so thirsty for political power they've really divided the country, and i think that what
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donald trump is saying is this a a golden opportunity in the golden age of america for us to unit as republicans and democrats and do what's best for the american people. stuart: during last night's rally, president trump singled you out. he said you have a lot of future ahead of you. does that mean you'll be running for florida's governor? >> look, that remains to be seen. the biggest thing right now, stu, we have a major agenda in fronted of us and i talk about that a little bit and a lot of work happening up here on capitol hill and my focus is to make sure we get that through to the house and colleagues in the senate and president trump's desk because we have one opportunity, we have been entrusted with majorities in both chambers by the american people and simply cannot fail. we must deliver and so my focus is to make sure we get that done. stuart: but to be the governor of florida surely crossed your mind at some point recently? >> i mean, everything crosses my mind. we've had other conversations like that in the past.
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stuart: i'm just trying. >> we have to focus on the job and when the job is done, stu, we can focus on other things. stuart: i'm just having fun. thank you for be with us, byron donalds from the great state of florida. thank you. >> thank you. stuart: madison, did biden stick with tradition and leave trump a letter in the oval office? madison: yes, in the resolute december and can tradition that the out going president leaves letter for successor there and all the activity of the first day back in office, trump needed a reminder of this tradition. >> president trump, did president biden leave you a letter? >> he may have. wait. don't they leave it in the desk? i don't know. oh. >> was it there? >> could have been years before we found this. madison: yeah, that was fox's peter doocy reminding the president of the letter. you see it there. tram new mexico traditional trump fashion teased opening the
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letter and reading it right then and there for everyone but then decided against it and said he'd read it in private first. trump said he also left a letter for biden when he left the office the first time, it as tradition that started with reagan and carried on ever since then, stu. stuart: quick check of the markets, the dow now up 400 points. modest gain for the s&p. nasdaq a modest gain up 23 points. but the dow moving sharply ahead 400 points higher. coming up, president trump took sweeping action on the border on day one. >> all illegal entry will immediately be halted. i will end the practice of catch and release. ly send troops to the southern border to repel the disastrous invasion of our country. stuart: so has the flow stopped at the border? we'll ask border czar tom mo ho, he's nexted ♪
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it. >> we talked about uber a lot and since the start of the year at one time, uber as we sit here is roughly $140 billion market cap. i think there's so much upside it could go to a trillion dollar market cap at some point. they've got the ability to generate enough earning toes support that price higher and pullback from 87 to where it is today in the 60s. i also think, stuart, on top of that, some other company like an amazon could look to acquire or a tesla, could look to acquire an uber. there's a lot of upside as a stand alone but if other big corporations see the upside here, someone will like to make a run at them. >> it would be interesting and they don't do it. system of articulation stuart: google hit an all time high.
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>> yeah, but google not getting enough bang for ai buck and there's a lot more for going toll do and all more up site for going and will they have so much different brands within under their umbrella and going to be multibillion dollar corporations as stand alones. if the company is broken up, there's a lot more value this, but i think the ai push alone for google can get this stock 20% higher for the year. stuart: i'd take that, mike, thanks very much indeed. a border agent shot and killed near the northern border. molly line is in vermont for us. do we know if the suspects were illegal migrants? reporter: they're working on confirmation of all the details, but the border patrol agent was killed in the line of duty and sources say his name was david mayland and served for a dozen years and experienced agent killed at age of 44. one of the suspects involved has been identified by a source as a
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german national, a visa overstay and that's beening reported by the washington mahomes the shooting happened at quarter past three yesterday afternoon and it's south of the canadian border during a traffic stop. the images of the scene shot by the fox news digital team. the fbi has taken over the investigation into what they're calling an alleged assault of a federal officer in connection with a fatal shooting and fbi albany rep reports that one borr patrol agent was killed along with another subject. another subject was injured and is now in custody and the deadly incident happening in the border patrol sector that encompasses vermont and parts of new york and new hampshire and the area includes 295 miles of international boundary with canada. last year the border patrol agents in the sector reported they apprehended more than 19,000 subjects from 97 different countries. more than 17 fiscal years
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combined. acting secretary of homeland security issuing a statement at the depth of u.s. border patrol writing every single day border patrol agents put themselves in harm's way so that americans in our homeland are safe and secure. our prayers and deepest condolences with the department and agent's family, love ones and colleagues. the last time a border agent was killed by gunfire was in 2010 in arizona. agent brian terry killed in a gun battle with drug traffickers. we came to highlight the saboteur fieses and dangers that agents on the board border face and going to be on the northern border. stuart: border czar tom homan joining me now. tom, am i writing saying this frees up ice agents to go to schools, hospitals and other institutions to arrest illegals?
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>> the officer haves a great deal of discretion depending on the location, sense of location would be getsing approval from supervisor in the station and with a office and there's approvals going on but not a blanket saying we can't go in the locations at all but there's going to be a process put in place where there's discretion used but it's decided by higher level ice officers to make sure we're doing the right thing. pretty significant public safety threat or a significant national security threat to do something like that. stuart: if and when ice went into a school to arrest someone, that would be highly contentious, wouldn't it? >> absolutely and national security worry and walking on college campuses to get them, that's something we have to do. stuart: president trump declared a state of emergency at the border. watch this.
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>> all illegal entry immediately halted and we'll begin the process of returning millions and millions of criminal aliens back to the places from which they came. they'll remain in mexico policy. i will send troops to the southern boarder and repel the disastrous invasion of the country. i'll direct a full and immense power of state law enforcement to eliminate the presence of all foreign gangs and criminal networks. stuart: tom, as of now, the flow of migrants at the border stopped. >> significantly but we're repealing other actions and cbp-1 that brought thousands to port of entries and we stop that had and many of those will be going between the port of entry. that's why declaring a national emergency and biden administration have been putting
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them out and simply false and thousands coming into the country and dividing them into three buckets, stuart. going between the port of entry, thousands through the cbp-1 app that's an illegal program and thousands through the chp program and 2.2 million known got aways through the biden administration that we don't know who they are or where they came from and got to seek them out too and the declaration was the right thing to do. >> stuart: cbp-1 app, that's no longer functioning and the flow has got to stop the people thigh over the border and going across it and they're flying over it. that stopped, that's a big deal. >> absolutely. cbp-1 app has an app for trade in the country and using to bring in thousands through the port of ent entries and stopped. stuart: any deportations scheduled today that you know of?
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>> ice officers starting to do their job they've been not allowed to do for your fears and public safety threats and going for public safety threat going to do tafanely now. stuart: going around the country and is it popular? what are you doing? >> president trump trying to take on border security serious and illegal alien crime crisis in the country addressed by arresting those who are public safety threat to the commune it. before i stop, just a shout-out to the fallen agent. stuart i know many border patrol agents and high agents in the country and it's a sad day for america and sacrifice he made. stuart: it is a sad day indeed. thank you, tom homan. >> thank you. stuart: california's fire ravaged neighborhoods are bracing for high winds. this is going to be the costliest fire in la's history. more on their insurance crisis. crisis,
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stuart: look at dow for a second, up nearly 400 points and united health, caterpillar, home depot, 3m, sherwin williams, all dow stocks and all up sharply and taken together, they account for 245 points for the dow's 400 point gain. transformed to dais for crews at eaton fire. what are the first responders doing today to guard against the new wind threat? reporter: hey, stu. fire fighters finished up with the morning briefing and they're going to be spread out around
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the eaton fire and getting down to fire fighting work and expecting winds upwards ward of 60 miles per hour and seeing strong wind gusts and down to the south of us in san diego county and that's where fires have popped up but the good news is that there's so many fire fighting resources here across the state and country they're jumping on the flames. meanwhile here at rose bowl, it's kind of a surreal sight, a surreal scene here. statue of jackie robinson and iconic images and places where you might be used to tailgating for big sporting events and all around us are fire fighters set up sleeping in tents and this is a city that's been set up for the fire fighting efforts on the eaton fire. now this fire at 87% contained and currently there's around 2400 fire fighting personnel on sight site here and -- on site here and need all the facilities needed for all the fire fighters
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and cooking facilities set up and they can eat. they've got laundry facilities and sleeping trailers and have a landscape filled with tents and need places for these folks to sleep of course after long days out there on the fire line. but again, the good news here on the eaton fire, fire fighters are getting this one under control. currently at 87% containment just around 14,000 acres, a welcomed sight for folks. so much damage to see and looking forward into the future, the big concern mud and debris flows because nothing is holding the hillsides in place right now with all this burned veg station. stu. stuart: thank you, max gordon. now this, a red flag warning issued for parts of sand you owe county and, madison, the fire fight heading to the south now.
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madison: yeah, this is bad news we have red flag warning ands we're getting ahead of it and saw certain issues in los angeles and turning off power for communities at highest risk of fire. san diego gas and electric issue that had public safety power shutoff and estimating that over 82,000 customers could be impacted. we have four school districts that have also been closed because of the high winds and lack of power. red flag warning, that is going to go till tonight in san diego and that means conditions are favorable for rapid fire spread and extreme fire behavior and exactly what we saw in los angeles and dry land, strong winds and low humidity. it's in los angeles for days and max said there's a lot of fire fighters on the ground and. cog up from mexico and canada and sleeping in tens and going on in los angeles and hope it doesn't get worse in san diego. there's no capacity for that .
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stuart: the insurance battle that los angeles homeowners are facing and madison: the fair insurance plane could be on the hook for up to $8 billion in losses from the fires and as of january 10th, they only had $377 million to pay claims, huge gap there. and more than 3,600 fair policypolicyholders in altadenad pacific palisades are going to struggling toll get money and having losses up to $2 billion collecting money from policyholders and everyone going to be paying more because of this and they're uninsured and there's so many people that were dropped from their fire insurance and they're just at a loss at this point.
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stuart: whoa. mike murphy, you're a financial guy, what will they do? >> the state that misappropriated the tax dollars should be responsible in some way. i'm not an insurance expert, but the state should be responsible to the homeowners so they had insurance and it was dropped and now they don't have a home. the state has to pay. stuart: got to step n. thanks, madison and mike. the dow 30, looks like a lot of buying. there's a lot of buying and dow up 400 points. trump declared a national energy emergency and promised to unleash domestic energy production, watch. >> i will also declare a national energy emergency. we will drill, baby, drill. america will be a manufacturing nation once again. stuart: he wants to energize america. we have the full report next. climate change fade pattern fanatics are threatening the world. how about that? we have bjorn next.
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permits and drilling and pipelines and delivering oil and gas. trump said it'll bring production up and prices down. >> something no other manufacturing nation will have and largest amount of oil and gas and any other country and we are going to use it. we will bring prices down, fill our strategic reserves up again right to the top and export american energy all over the woworld. reporter: in addition to that, president trump signed an executive order to unleash american energy and it says it is now official u.s. policy to encourage energy exploration and production on federal lands and waters to eliminate the electric vehicle mandate that president biden put into place and to safeguard consumer choice on home appliances like washington
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machines, gas stoves and water heaters and trump withdraw the u.s. from the paris climate accord, which the administration says will save the country $1 trillion. he indicated the u.s. will stop buying venezuelan oil too . democrats are not happy with these day one moves and ranking member of the house natch resource committee jared hoffman accused trump of instilling fear with fake emergencies and rolling back climate progress. stu. stuart: grady, thank you very much indeed. environmentalists bjorn lomborg joining me now. is trump right to leave the paris accord? >> first of all, evs are not helping very much with climate change and that incredibly expensive way to try and cut carbon emissions that e vs can be great and let them compete on the market. cut that subsidy. leaving the paris accord, yes, probably. fund in thely, the paris are
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accord is not working and filled with vague promises we're all going to do nice things. that's not how you solve climate change. solve it through innovation and that of course is one of the things that tram subpoena focusing on. let's spend more money on making sure we get better energy technology in the future and then eventually green energy will be so chief, china, india and africa will want it as well. stuart: climate change fanatics want to bankrupt the entire world for little or no reward. take issue with the word fanatics but we get the point. how bad is it? >> i didn't pick the headline but fundamentally, yes, climate alarmists are telling us this is such a big emergency we have to cut carbon emissions down and costing the world upwards of 25% of gdp. that's just not viable. that's not going to happen. most people are going to rebel way before that and trump is probably one of those examples.
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we need to find a smarter, cheaper, and more effective way to tackle global warming. they're trying to solve a 2-3% problem spending 10-20% of gdp. not a smart move. stuart: before we leave, i've got 30 seconds. you're danish and what do you think of trump wanting to control greenland? >> oh, good luck with that. but i think greenland don't want to have that happen so i don't think it'll happen. stuart: all right, bjorn lomborg, we like your opinions anyway. come back and see us real soon. time for the stu tuesday trivia question, which political party had the most presidents, republican or democrat? the answer when we return.
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stuart: which political parties had the most presidents? democrat or republican. madison: i will go democrat. stuart: micah? mike:i think it is a trick question but i will say republican. we when i agree it is a trick question because before the civil war there that is the answer came up in front of me on the prompter. the answer is republican, 19 presidents have been from the republican party, 16 from the democrats. let's see this.
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stuart: i've got to say is something, at the washington national cathedral. later he meets house and senate republican leaders at the white house and waiting for the trump announcement on infrastructure. that is at 4:00 pm. not dropping the pace at all. it is going real strong and there he is, national prayer service. check the markets fast. zoom up 435 points, nasdaq up 65, nasdaq up 58 points. that is it. thanks for being with me. it is time for david asman. david: you gave me three seconds. you are a good man. as the clock strikes noon donald trump is completing his firs
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