tv The Kelly File FOX News October 29, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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spin stops right herewq%@ are definitely looking out for you. breaking tonight, a new showdown over the ebola disease involving health care workers, state and federal officials and a public that wants to know they are being kept safe. welcome to "the kelly file" everyone, i'm megyn kelly. nurse who treated ebola patients in africa now ordered to stay in quarantine but threatening to walk out. late today the state of maine deciding to seek a court order to try to force kaci hickox to make sure she stays inside of her home. it comes just hours after she appeared on a pair of national television shows suggesting her rights are being violated arguing she's not a threat to public safety and she's not going to do what they want her to do.
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listen. >> you know, i don't plan on sticking to the guidelines. i remain appalled by these home quarantine policies that have been forced upon me even though i am in perfectly good health. >> you have the joints chiefs of staff recommending to the department of defense that troops, u.s. troops coming home from ebola fighting missions in west africa, be quarantined for 21 days. why is it so abhorrentnjnñ to yo put yourself in that very same position? >> you know, i truly believe that this policy is not scientifically nor constitutionally just. and so i am not going to sit around and be bullied by politicians and force today stay in my home when i am not a risk to the american public. >> you have to remember that just a couple days earlier dr. craig spencer returned from guinea where he was treating ebola patients. he moved freely about the new york area. then he developed symptoms and was diagnosed with ebola.
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do you understand what that did to the psyche of public officials in what is a metropolis of 9 million people? >> of course, i do understand that it is created a lot of fear. but we still have to make policies based on evidence. >> are you prepared to take legal action not only against the state of new jersey but now the state of maine if they decide to enforce this quarantine period? >> if the restrictions placed on me by the state of maine are not lifted by thursday morning, i will go to court to fight for my freedom. i do think there's a compromise. i don't think it's being that right now because currently i'm the one that's suffering. >> trace gallagher picks up the story from there. trace. >> and, megyn, even though you just heard kaci hickox threaten legal action if maine doesn't lift the quarantine to walk that back telling us they would only pursue court action if the state physically prevents her from leaving her home. the quarantine is voluntary, so
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it's unclear if the state is willing to detain her. t police cars in front of her fhf,9me. ju paul la page says the police are "for her protection and the health of the community." and maine's health and human service department says if hickox plans to take legal action, she better hurry because maine is doing the very same. listen. >> there are lawyers involved at this point. we are committed to the importance and the value of the protocol that we have set forth. >> so it's very likely a judge will decide. new jersey governor chris christie who started this standoff by forcing kaci hickox into quarantine in his state was also asked about facing legal action. listen. >> whatever. get in line. i've been sued lots of times before. get in line. i'm happy to take her on. she had access to the internet and we brought her takeout food. >> but many health officials have criticized the strict
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quarantine guidelines. the new england journal of medicine says the the equivalent of "driving a carpet tack in with a sledge hammer." kaci hickox saysxf>z she underss the concern over ebola, but she's relying on science not emotion. here she is. >> i haven't seen any scienceuo that says this is a huge risk. and i have seen science that says self-monitoring works. and self-monitoring is a humane understandable prudent solution. >> and for now she claims to be symptom free. in a moment we will be joined by a doctor who actually had ebola. and hear what he has to say about kaci's confinement. first, there are new developments tonight with the leaked state department memo concerning the possibility of bringing ebola patients who are noncitizens to america for treatment. the document was leaked to fox news yesterday. and argued for flying infected patients to the u.s. saying "we
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need to show leadership and act as we are asking others to act by admitting noncitizens into the country for medical treatment for ebola virus disease during the ebola crisis. the state department today played that down. >> the document referenced was drafted by a mid-level official but not cleared by senior leaders. it never came to senior officials for approval. >> essentially what you're saying is that one guy somewhere in this building came up with this idea and put it on paper, but it never went anywhere? is that what you're say sng? >> correct. >> mike emanuel reports on that tonight from washington. mike. >> hi, megyn. state department officials say this five-page memo was not discussed at the highest levels and suggests it never went very far in the process. and spokesperson jen psaki says the idea of bringing sick noncitizens to the u.s. irrelevant. >> the important point here is
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our european partners since several weeks ago when that was written have addressed this by providing a garn teen to health workers that they would be flown to europe or receive high quality treatment on spot. so it's not applicable at this point. >> in the memo marked sensitive gi detail saying there are four medical e situations situations. one, medical evacuation capacity, two, overflight, refueling andn;ñ landing permission, three, a hospital able and unwilling to treat the patient, and four, backstop reimbursement art $200,000 for medevac and $300,000 per treatment for case. plus note the need for 24-hour care with up to seven medical professionals on duty attending that one patient. [yu bob goodlatte is furious saying "it's alarming that seniorçó oba
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vehemently denied the existence of any plans -- for treatment document shows such a proposal indeed exists. iowa republican senator chuck grassley says the best way to keep ebola from coming to the u.s. is to attack it in west africa, not here. believe this was some random bureaucrat drawing this up on his own. they note it was sent to the department of homeland security to start the interagency process. megyn. >> interesting fact. mike, thanks. in august of this year dr. rick sacra was a medical missionary working in liberia when he contracted ebola. he was flown to the united states, he recovered. and he's now criticizing these calls to quarantine exposed health care 9!d÷workers. dr. rick sacra joins us tonight from boston. thank you for being here with us. we've got kaci hickox saying she does not deserve to bepm9i quarantined, finds it's appalling, she's the one suffering and that
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self-monitoring works and that this quarantine is an overreaction. do you agree? >> you know, she's not ill. she's not sick. she doesn't have a fever. she doesn't have other symptoms. and the science suggests that she's really not a risk to anyone at this time. so in that sense, yes, i support her contention. she's not a risk. >> okay. >> the reason you confine someone is because they're a risk. she's not a risk. >> here's why people are concerned about her and other 2 workers, i think. because first of all in 13% ofv% ebola cases you have no fever. so not having a fever isn't the end-all tell-all about whether you have ebola, right? >> i think, you know, you can't take a statistic like that in the absence of contextmk[m somes people with ebola at the end of their lives will no longer be
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able to mount a fever because they're so weak. so when someone arrives at the tent for treatment in west africa and they're about to die, they may not be having a fever. generally healthy people likenv ms. 7[h?hickox, when they deve ebola, they willxdu have a ko. >> understood. here's my next question. one of the reasons people think these people need to be quarantined is for example the case of dr. spencer who came to the united states, was running around new york, claiming to authorities according to a report inñr "new york post" tod that he l"i3self-quarantined bs metro card according to officials proved he'd been running around the city and then as it turnskço out i went to brooklyn, i roder:e a-train, l-train and number 1 train and i took an uber car and i went to not one, but two bowling alleys and out to a restaurant ands'%w that 11 hours before i had to go into a hospital room where people couldn't get near me
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unless they were wearing full hazmat gear. so people say how could it be you want to approach him at 11:00 in the morning, you want to put the protective gear on, but 11 hours earlier it was fine to bowl next to him, eat next to him and ride next toxd him on t subway car. >> i think the -- you know, let's remember the case of mr. duncan in texas. he lived in an apartment with multiple other family members for two and a half days while he was ill, sharing the same furniture, being in an apartment together. none of those other people -- >> but then that same guy gave ebola to two medical workers who were covered head to toe. >> right. when he was much sicker and they were dealing with his blood and bodily fluids. i don't think anyone was dealing with dr."n spencer's blood and bodily fluids. >> well, then how did the cameraman from nbc news get it when he wasn't dealing hand-to-hand with ebola
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patients. >> he was directly filming and sometimes assisting teem who were doing -- dealing with burials. let me finish. wait now. let me finish. >> these are the stories that getxuva people concerned. >> at the end of life when people are dying of ebola, that is whentd+ñ they are most contagious. mr. mukpo was filming and documenting the activities of a burial team -- >> when they were most contagious. >> that's the time when they are the most contagious. >> i'm telling you what our viewers tell me and what has them concerned and why they think the quarantine is good and don't much care about the nurse's inconvenience. here's what dr. frieden said about the nurse, remember amber vinson, the second nurse in dallas the one we found out flew from ohio to dallas and back, when asked whether that was appropriate and keep in mind she was not showing the symptoms, she was starting to feel ill, but the cdc had given her permission to fly back initially
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because the fever was there but lower than the standard, this is what he said in retrospect about her travel. listen. >> the second health care worker reported no symptoms and no fever, however because at that point she was in a÷ióqp kjc0td individuals known to have exposure to ebola, she should not have traveled on a commercial airline. >> isn't that an admission that putting yourself in a crowded field whether it's a commercial airline or a subway train or a restaurant is potentially dangerous and should not be allowed and therefore supports a quarantine of the type imposed? >> again, i don't feel there's any science to back this up. i don't know how many people on the flight have become ill now.
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do you know how many? from the plane? >> i'm questioning you what dr. frieden -- i'm not a medical doctor. he's saying she had no business on a commercial airplane. >> that's because she did not have a normal temperature. she was 99.5. >> he didn't say that. he said she had no fever. he said she shouldn't have been doing it because she had been exposed to ebola patients. >> right. because she was part of a group of people -- because we already knew one of those>íje nurses ha become sick. so we know that there was not just potential exposure or of someone in a hazmat suit doing everything properly, but we know that somehow there was an exposure with that patient. >> so she goes into a higher risk group. >> dr. sacra, thank you for joining us. we're sorry you contracted the disease. we're glad you're well tonight. thanks for being here with us. >> thank you. we have a new bombshell leak new warning
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from the attorney general himself. >> whoever the sources of the leaks are need to shut up. >> oh, well, okay. up next, we will go live to missouri where things are getting increasingly tense as we await a grand jury ruling on the police shooting of michael brown. w%á plus, in an already nast take the cake. that story just ahead. >> stand your ground law cause the shooting death of trayvon martin. now consider democrat kay hagan. . what are you doing? dish issues? ... ... get cascade complete. one pac cleans better than six pacs of the bargain brand combined. cascade. now that's clean.
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breaking ñrtonight, a serie of new bombshell reports out of ferguson, missouri, as açó decision could come any day now from the grand juryt( deciding should be charged in the shooting death of michael brown. this is just the latest in the series of events that attorney general ericçóp;w/ holder now needs to stop, the leaks, he says, needs to stop because he says they're being used to sway public opinion. listen. >> we have an ongoing pattern o' practice investigation that we have announced with dep. so i don't think it would be appropriate for me to commentlpn any specifics that you have just mentioned. but i will say that i think it's pretty=ñ queer that the need fo wholesale change in that department is appropriate. exactly what the forms of)xá]ñ change will be i think we'll wait until we complete our inquiry. >> joining me now, mercedes
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kolin, fox news legal analyst start with you, mercedes. is it appropriate for the attorney general when being asked about leaks in the case to go right to, let me tell you, i've got an investigationñi6z into this police department and problems that i'mxw6c going to care of.lp basicallyw3 what he said. >> how completely inappropriate. if you have an open investigation, you do yousó due diligence and then you infer with your conclusions. but to say i have all these changes that have to be made at the department. they're already condemning the department when you start off,ó this by saying i haven't>(0áw completed my investigation. so your investigation is biased from step one. >> uh-huh. mcgraw, there's been criticism of this prosecutor who's taken the case before the grand jury from people who want to see an indictment saying the fix is in, he's got a bunch of cops in his family, he wants to prosecute a different defendant in a similar case, the fix is in.
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where are the people saying the fix is in with the attorney general of the united states who seems very determined that the ferguson police department is incredibly messed up and he's the man to change it? >> not only did he say that, but remember when this thing first started he came to st. louis and met with michael brown's family ÷ justice for michael brown. at that point you can say the federal investigation was tainted because he didn't meet with officer wilson'síene famil say i want justice for officer wilson as is. so from the beginning many people have said his investigation has been skewed. >> mercedes, what can he do if the grand jury doesn't go after this police officer? can he, eric "eówholder, go aft him? can he go after the whole police department? >> he can. he can do both. he can bring federal charges, criminal charges against officer wilson. and he can also monitor the police department overall with the agency powers he has.
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you can prosecute someone on a state local level and also federally. >> mcgraw, how high are tensions right now? i've asked some schools to ask the prosecutor to release the grand jury on a sunday or after 5:00 p.m. to protect children. they're talking about bringing in the national guard and so on. >> yeah. attention is high. and it remains high. and i would sayedráeuju+(tk regardless of what side of the issue you're on on this thinks that the worst is yet to come. and that we have not seen the worst of it. and quite frankly i think a lot of people applaud the school districts to take action. would you rather your school district not anticipate what ]:fuu the kids o to school in something that might be dangerous? >> are there leaders out there now saying maintain the calm no matter what the grand jury decides? >> no, actually, just the opposite. many of those in support of
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michael brown's family saying the çóopposite, if he's not indicted you're going to see 6í seen before. 6í lacy clay has said that. elected leaders are basically watch ou'r?s@r(t&háhp &hc% >> we'll continue to follow it. thank you both so much. >> thanks, megyn. coming up on "the kelly file," major fallout after obama administration officials suggest the prime minister of israel is a coward. plus, new details on a nasa rocket explosion raising new questions about america's decision to outsource our space program. big day? ah, the usual. moved some new cars. hauled a bunch of steel. kept the supermarket shelves stocked. made sure everyone got their latest gadgets. what's up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping the lights on. (laugh) nice.
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doing the big things that move an economy. see you tomorrow, mac. see you tomorrow, sam. just another day at norfolk southern. (receptionist) gunderman group is growing. getting in a groove. growth is gratifying. goal is to grow. gotta get greater growth. i just talked to ups. , special discounts, new technologies. like smart pick ups. they'll only show up when you print a label and it's automatic. we save time and money. time? money? time and money. awesome. awesome! awesome! awesome! awesome! (all) awesome! i love logistics.
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>> december 1972, the last manv just one momentazp)q long line of-ecdzd(kñ america's successfu historical missions until budget cuts forced2e our spacen!+ñ$#l program a few things seem to be okay until last night when an unmanned space station supply flightt)ñ k off in eastern virginia and exploded saw seconds into the flight. now they are looking at some old russian engines mounted on that rocknk trace gallagher has more from the west coastç/rbureau. trace. rsp'ufacturerer of thosejf engi denies any blame for the=%ñ ñ the united states. those engines were originally todayp-
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in russia. and when you look at it, there are not very many other options in the world in terms of using power plants of this size ands7 certainly not in this country, unfortunately. >> but orbital science chief rival spacex that also subcontracts is building its own engines. in fact, spacexxnve÷ founder el chris sized for using -- quoting here, it uses russian rocket engines that were made in the '60j&ss. i don't mean the design, they start with engines literally made in the '60s and like packed away in siberia somewhere. spacex is now the only american commercial space company able to commercial space company statio and that has a lot more scrutiny on nasa's decision to retire the space shuttle without a backup spaceship, forcing it to rely on private companies. nasa, which now says the
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explosion didn't damage its wallops flight t=2ity as much as it feared says it has full confidence in orbital science and remember russian engines also now carry american astronauts to the space station because we no longer can. megyn. >> trace, thank you. also tonight, a marine corps dad learns his daughter is getting lessons in islam at a school where they don't teach and things went south from there. we'll bring you the story. the north carolina senate race getting a whole lot of attention. the star of this spot is exclusively here next. >> in north carolina the poverty rate for blacks has risen to 34%. you see, black people are just being used by limousine liberal who is have become our new overseers. we've only traded one plantation for another. ed except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing.
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headquarters of fox news, it's "the kelly file" with megyn kelly. new details tonight on the north carolina senate race which is being called one of the nastiest contests in the midterm elections. the latest polling shows senator kay hagan and republican challenger tom tillis neckbxz a neck. and now an ad that's been described as grossly misleading. the radio adnv÷n accusing the republican of championing the type of law that "caused the death of teenager trayvon martin in florida." listen. j t(qhe made it harder to vote by restricting early8í&ñáj% and voter registration. tillis -- stand your ground laws that caused the shooting death of trayvon martin.
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>> senior national correspondent john roberts live in charlotte, north carolina tonight. john. >> reporter: megyn, good evening to you. the gloves are all in this race because it's one of several highly competitive seats the republicans hope will lead them to control of the senate next year. tillis even with th incumbent senator which is why those attacks are increasing. hagan has been hammering tillis for being too conservative for a purple state. tillis firing back that hagan's senate career has been less than distinguish. >> what do you think her biggest liability is? >> the fact she hasn't gotten anything done. and the promises she's made are broken. broke her promise on obamacare. broke her promise on fixing the v.a. broke her promise on fixing the debt. >> reporter: even supporters of hagan share that view, _ r(t&háhp &hc% hagan has been hurt by her association wihi barack obama,
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she's managed to keep her head above water by tying tillis, the state house speaker, to a very unpopular legislature. >> it is very much tom tillis as the candidate of the north carolina b$ddez assembly. kay hagan has been able to shift the campaign dynamics to basically make it a race about him and the general assembly that's very unpopular in the state among democrats and particularly unaffiliated voters. >> reporter: this is likely to go down as the most expensive senate race in history $100 100,000 megyn, after all that, at this point it's anybody's race. >> going to be an exciting night on tuesday. john, thank you. well, with black voters a key part of this contest, this senate race. here is louisiana state senator albert gillery with his message for voters up in north carolina. listen. >> in 2008, 95% of black folk in north carolina voted for k
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kay hagan. the democrat created the illusion that they are the salvation of the black community. px among us hav saved? in north carolina the poverty rate for blacks has risen to 34%. you see, black people are just being used by limousine liberals who have become our new overseers. we've only traded onehet plantan for another. you are not kay hagan's cause and you'rexd certainly notq her you are just a vote. she has stepped off yourát()jlp to fame and fortune and left you behind on food stamps, deprived of the american dream. 50 years of this so-called great society has nearly destroyed the black community. but now we have a chance to return the favor. it has come time to send k kay hagan home. >> joining us now a "the kelly file" exclusive, republican louisiana state senator albert
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gillory. joe trippi is also here but going to begin with the senator. senator, good of you to be with us tonight. thank you so much. already you are getting pushback i cite for example "the washington post" reporterçó who says focusing on food stamps and welfare6ó9&s and slavery imager common among black conservatives african-american community away from the democrats. it's a political strategy that's utterly counterproductive and actually attracting black voters see for every presidential election for the last 50 years. your thoughts on that. >> when democrats are not able to attack the veracity or the accuracy of the message, they attempt to smear the messenger or to smear the message. what i have said is absolute truth. communities every four years or every six years like they come with a beer in one hand and a chicken sandwich
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in the other. they kiss us and then they go away. and they don't do anything for us. we don't hear from them until the next election. we have to stop that. uu absolutely accurate and absolutely truthful. >> you used to be a democrat and then you turned republican. do you believe that there is a commonly held perception among the african-american community that democrats are better for blacks,k59gp for the african-amn communities in this country? >> i think that republicans have not done as good a job getting to communicating with the black community. republicans will never be able to communicate with anyone that we ignore. so we have to get to the black community and to all the new communicated with before. and this message is an attempt to do exactly that. >> so you think -- you argue in
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used by them. that you're just a vote. you get left behind stuck on food,rqnq stamps. it almost impugns a negative motive to the democrats. do you believe that there's an ill motive? or do you believe it's just a lack of caring? >> either ill motive orwn-%b certainly an ill result is the same. the result is the same. what happens is that their policies have suppressed my community tremendously. in the community where i live, where i grew up. today you can find young men standing around all day. men half my age, able-bodied men. when i was growing up you couldn't find a man during working hours because every man was at work. those young men who receive a few dollars from the government every month will never be able to buy a home, never be able to
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have a family, never send their children to college, never buy an automobile because they are stuck in this plantation, this few dollars a month that they receive from the government. and it hurts our community terribly. >> senator, good of you to be here. thank you, sir. >> thank you. >> great to see you tonight. joining me now, joe mumtd()ñjey manager, fox news contributor. joe, i mean, it's a powerful message from someone who's walked the walk to say i'm telling you as a lifelong democrat, as an african-american man, the democrats don't have the best policies for us and folks like kay hagan has left us behind. how does she combat ñithat? >> well, i e1mean, look right n this thing's gotten obviously pretty ugly. but'%r/9 i'm not sureçó@jtz has combat that. languageñi -- limousine liberal and i think sort of signal -- that's language that the
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republican party has used. and i think that's not going to help bring african-americans over tofá a vote for tom tillis. what's going on here is in 2010 african-american vote in north carolina was 20%. megyn, it's been 27% of the vote. so it's actually going vuffup. and this sunday they were 50% of those who voted this sunday. >> so they can turn thisónasw t i think that's why you're seeing these different ads. the senator, everything going the senator, eve ything going everything aiming at this constituency because they are,ñi think, probably going to decide who the winner is. if they turn out for kay hagan, she's going to win, i if they decide to either vote for tillis or stay home, that's his best shot at this point.
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that's why there's so much focus on it. >> he talks about -- the state senator talks about in the ad left behind. you're not a cause forñ9"' ka kay hagan. you're just a vote. you look at the stats in north carolin!÷ the unemployment rate ofñ&r african-americans in@>ow3p how! m÷oodoesq/z he pene numbers? his argument is that the black
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by kay é7ifñhagan and alsoñiñi argd past barack obama. how do they respond to that? >> look, democrats are the ones trying to raise minimum wage and do other things. and the republicans are the ones that are trueing to stop that. i mean, the african-american community, trust me, they want this is very complicated. there's all kinds of different with where this community wants to be. you can argue that democrats have failed them. i don't agree with that. but i understand the argument. but, you know, look at the alternative for them. it doesn't work. >> it's interesting as you point out to see both sides coming out community. there's a lot of power in the voting box. joe, great to see you. >> good to be with yo&ty megyn. j+s night we have a
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kelly file special on the midterms called the democrats last defense. then, next tuesday, special coverage of the election anchored by yours truly and my w co-host bret baier. that's tuesday night beginningñ at 6:00 p.m. eastern right here on fox. and up next, an ugly fallout shaping up after some obama administration senior officials suggest the israeli prime minister is a coward. and that's not all. bret stephens right after this bret stephens right after this "tqp)ip r(t&háhp &hc, [ femal] hands were made for talking. feet...tiptoeing. better things than the pain, stiffness, and joint damage of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. before you and your rheumatologist decide on a biologic, ask if xeljanz is right for you. xeljanz (tofacitinib) is a small pill, not an injection or infusion, for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can relieve ra symptoms, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis.
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you kind of don't care who leaked that story thatpím might have -- insulted the prime minister of israel. you've gone after reporters again and again in this administration to find out who leaked information to them. and when it comesóí>ki insultin the prime minister, you don't seem to care who leaked it. >> again, i don't think that's an accurate reflection of the administration's policy and certainly isn't an accurate mi >> that was fox news ed henry pres74i8 the white house spokesman on choosing not to find out which senior obama administration official referred to benjamin netanyahu that rhymespq.m with chicken spit. >> megyn, bottom line is an already-icy relationship between the president and prime minister went into an absolute deep freeze today. an unforced error at ahsoñ time great léhçtimult in the mideast.
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calling him a coward and worse in the atlantic magazine in the story one senior u.s. official saying "the thing about bibiñi he's a chicken blp, the good cf1 o he's scared to launch wars, the bad thing about him is that he won't do anything to reach an -- susan rice, the president's national security advisor insisted there'szx> translator: were i not to defend the state of israel? were i not to insist vigorously on our national security interests, they'd not be attacking me. >> the relationship is not in crisis. the relationship is actually respects than it's ever been. >> one of these anonymous obama administration officials claimed netanyahu too scare today go forward with an attack on iran.
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for his part, netanyahu has allegedly written the white house off altogether. megyn. >> joining me now with more, bret stevens of -- >> it brings into the open what ar8m3 lot of people already kn. but i think it raises or diminishes the relationship in a way that we haven't quite seen before. and it's happening, megyn, at just the moment whenf;ip the un states has a lot of problems in the middle east in iraq, in syria, with the pending iranian nuclear negotiation in yemen, places by the way where the united states is going to need major cooperation from the israelis. so it's such an unforced error, and by the way it's just not true that this was just the statement of a -- >> one senior obama official. >> someone in the white house. this follows a very calculated snub by both secretary of state
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john kerry and joe biden, the vice president of the defense minister of israel who just visited washington an,$vpññ2hu( and who he was refused meetings by both kerry and biden. that's blown up in the )jjráhface. him but the fact they publicly announced that on the last day of his visit. >> right. in fact, they leaked it to an moment the defense minister was returning toiet@ israel to max the humiliation. so it was this very carefully contrived personal vendetta against the defense minister of a state that does have the capability if it wants to attacx iran. >> so in this piece in the atlantic they say not only do they call him the chicken word but that over the years they've described netanyahu as ñi recalcitrant, obtuse, pompous, he's got no guts. túatrj going to upset a
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contingent of folks for good reason. this is what jen psaki said about it today. >> does that individual think that? perhaps.zk"ñ but does the secretary of the united states, president of the language in those words as appropriate or accurate. >> again, that's just not the case. president obama was caught in a hot mic moment with the former french president sarkozy s@ñ ñrnetanyahu. sarkozy it's not a secret that these two men really f9cúxdetest each oth. now there's this very conscious walkback. another thing thatmjqrñ amazes midterm election where foreign? policy for the first time in midterm history maybe isçó real playing a large tv+role. ìáhp &hc% administration to go after our administration to go after ojñ s week. >> john boehner cameok out and said sometimes it's tough to tell z3w he's talking about whn
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new fallout tonight after a marine corps father complained ÷ydaughter's sca homework assignment on islam. trace gallagher has the story from our west coast bureau. trace. >> megyn, he considers himself a patriot and admits he was very unhappy when he went to speak with the vice principal about an assignment given to his daughter a three-page paper. >> i don't agree with it.
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i said they can't study god or christianity in school. you've got atheists suing schools for saying god in the pledge. and not being able to say prayers before football games. but we can force-feed our kids >> wood claims none of theñgbb) parents were notified about the '=buz asked the school tox="r g his daughter an alternate assignment, but the school refused and even defended the subject matter. listen. >> we're not teaching religion. we're teaching world history. he was threatening toçó cause a disruption or possible disruption at the school. >> so they banned him from school property. his wife says he was simply trying to make a point. here she is. jtñ guess that's the problem is that people do not understand what he endured when he was over in iraq. and he lost friends. and he lost brothers and sisters to these people. and people are not understanding where he'sçó coming from.
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>> the wood family has spoken to the school board andrf2c superintendent and in the p r(t&háhp &hc% but ithe daughter is today do the assignment, they say she won't and will take an f. >> we'll be right back. helps reduce the risk of heart disse. keep hrt-healthy. live long. eat the 100% goodness of post shreddedheat. doctorrecommend it. flabbergasted when wen regecreamed a $300 cream.eam,
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it's tuesday night begins at 6:00 p.m. eastern time right here on fox. here's the question of the night, dol4ñ you care about the midterm elections? go to xdqfacebook.com/thekellyf. let me know what you think. (4f$anks for watching everybodyf this is "the kelly file." welcome to "hannity." #a82j5ñ a fox newsht alert. we are six days away from the highly anticipated 2014 midterm party continues to gain momenta=ftr(t&háhp &hc% ¿uags$rgputñ mind, will the gop be able to win back the u.s. qdwsenate? back withyrvx us tonight with a billboard, bill hny+%ey >> nice to see you. i'm doing ].well. we/7s.dp@v canvassed headlines throughout the day.y+;c÷ we were with you last night, and we saw a few tweaks today. buthhz again j we are $z)55-45,]%[;e six da away. republicans still feel good about west virginia and montana. >> and south dakota.
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