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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  June 4, 2015 9:00am-10:01am PDT

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uma: okay. we'll see you back here in an hour. jon: "outnumbered" begins right now. ♪ >> this is "outnumbered." i'm andrea tantaros, here with us today, harris faulkner, kirsten powers today's #oneluckyguy, republican presidential candidate and senator from the great state of florida, marco rubio is here with us on the couch and for the first time in history senator, you're officially outnumbered. >> well, great to be here. >> very happy to have you. i love the show. seen it on tv a few times. i'm excited to be here. >> you watch "outnumbered"? >> my kids are excited. >> all four of your kids. >> hopefully nye ninth grader is taking their last final exam. >> good luck. >> she is watching something
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went wrong. >> your beautiful wife, maybe we can get her on the couch with us as well. >> she would like to do this. she would like to you'd number me absolutely. >> we want to hear stories how you met. she is beautiful. what pickup lines marco rubio used. >> i didn't have any pickup lines. all in my book if you want to buy it, "american son." we would love to have her here. >> single twice will highlight the section. >> take tips. because she is gorgeous. get right to it, the republican race for president is about to get even more crowded. former texas governor rick perry is set to throw his hat into the ring in next 30 minutes. former florida governor jeb bush is expected to officially announce june 15th. the governors will be the 10th and 11th republicans to enter the race for the white house. all this as brand new "fox news poll" shows it's a anyone's race in jam-packed
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republican field. jeb bush and scott walker lead the poll at 12%. followed by carson, paul cruz and our one lucky guy be 7% here in the poll separated by single digits. as who would they definitely vote for, governor walker tops list at 22% and followed by dr. carson and senator rubio both tied at 21%. governor bush and senator cruz round out the top five. after today senator, there will be 11 in the race. what is your plan to break out of that poll and differentiate yourself. >> i have to say being on the show my numbers will go up. it is interesting we never had a race like this before. i tell people as republican i'm glad we have so many good candidates. the democrats are struggling to come up with one. i think it is great to have some good candidates. i think this field will produce the next president, vice president and potentially future president.
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and cabinet officers. competition will drive excellence and ultimately give us a strong nominee. >> you're not fearful growing number of gop candidates will hurt your party. >> i don't. these are quality people. well-financed with a good message. we agree on a lot of issues. we have difference. we'll talk about those. from a competitive process like this, you get better nominee. someone tested. someone who spend time working with people. we fine tune both their ideas and delivery. i think competition drives excellence. so it is a good thing. >> one of the ways which you do stand out with the polling is your ability to scoop up the younger voters. i'm curious to know your thoughts about reaching out to them and who you consider them to really be? >> that is interesting question. that is a major issue in our country. we have a lot of young people in america went to school and got a degree. their whole life they were told if you did that you are
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guaranteed. they got a bunch loans. part of that is a they got wrong decree. that is unfortunate in today's new economy. it is not just about having a degree. it is having the right one. part of it is because america is less globally competitive economically. a lot of those better jobs are created in other countries due to the rapid changes in our economist. we have to address that we need policies that make us more globally competitive again. >> speaking of reaching out to different groups there is an african-american pastor in the south side of chicago invited a lot of presidential candidates to come, including all the republican candidates. rand paul is so far only one to go. he is basically saying, look we always have african-americans just lining up with democrats unquestionably. i think we need to start hearing from republicans. is this something you consider doing or republican party need to be doing? >> i don't know if we received that invitation. something we look at carefully. we want to do more of that. i personally feel if i have a message that appeals to all americans, not a message designed to help one group versus another. i think message we talked about
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and message we outlined will appeal to people of different walks life and different parts of the country who find themselves at different stages in the economic situation today. i would look forward to opportunities to have venues like that to discuss our policy. >> senator what do you say to people who may criticize you for not having executive experience? you're a senator. you obviously do have experience and you know your state very well but what do you say to them, may not have the executive experience like a walker does or maybe perry jumping in today but also what do you do to combat the anti-washington climate. >> couple points of that. that is not entirely accurate. i was speaker of florida house. administratively ran florida house with hundreds of employees and millions dollars of budget. executive experience is about hiring right people to give them vision and direction and holding them accountable to deliver on that. that is something we did in the florida house. something i do now. beyond it i would argue about the washington question. i've been in washington for four
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years but i'm not from there. before that i served nine years in the legislature of the third largest state in the country. i was majority leader, majority whip speaker of the house. that really is where the majority of my public service has been geared. but you also need people that understand what's happening in washington and why it so broken and why our federal policies today are threatening to leave our country behind in rapidly changing 21st century economy and geopolitical threats we face. >> i'm really curious about you as a person getting to know you and what you want america to know about you and your family. is there is there anything in particular you think we don't know about you? >> i don't know by the time this campaign is over both my opponents and my allies will have taken care of that. i always tell my story, because i want people to have insight why it is i'm passionate about both the country and public service. >> yeah. >> my parents came here from another country. they were born in cuba. they refused to accept the idea they could only be what their parents were. so they came to the only country in the world where people like them could have a chance.
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they had no advanced education. barely spoke the language. had no money. they found jobs. my dad became a bartender. my mother was cashier and maid. worked at a factory. working those jobs they were able to achieve the american dream. they owned a home. we took vacation. they raised four kids and left all of them better off and retired with dignity. i know that would have been possible anywhere else. i want us to be the country where that story is possible. i fear in the 21st century it is harder than ever for people to achieve that through combination of bad policies but also dramatic changes in the world. our economy is dramatically different than it was 15 years ago. we're globally competing. technology has changed. it eliminated jobs people once did and replaced with new jobs that require advanced skills. for my parents to do today what they did 25 or 30 years ago my dad would have to become a electrician or my mom would have to be dental hygienist or
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paralegal. we need to make changes because those changes are disruptive. >> maybe we'll pivot to kirsten's side of the aisle right now. a new report of more stiff-arming of media by hillary clinton at one of her events. this time a speech in houston today. a memo to the press from texas southern university making it very clear that mrs. clinton would not be talking to them. reportedly reading quote, you must stay within the barricades once you enter the arena. then in big red letters, there will be no opportunities to interview hillary clinton. her speech will be her interview. sorry harris on roller blades. >> oh, man. >> coming on heels of poll numbers show that hillary's favorability rating continues to nosedive. senator, what do you think is the most vulnerable achilles' heel of mrs. clinton? if you had to pick a question she had to answer what do you think she needs to answer? >> what would you achieve as secretary of state? how do you answer for this abysmal foreign policy approach this white hughes has taken?
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whether teset in russia, pulling out of iraq too early mismanaging the libya experience? i think they have a lot to answer for. one of the reasons why she probably doesn't want to be exposed so early to these questions. >> do you think just the fact she won't take questions is an issue in itself? >> i think for average voter over time will become an issue. maybe not today but certainly over time. people wonder why isn't she holding herself up to same standards of people on other side of the aisle. look her advisors are putting her in a very delicate position because by the time she gets to the general election, if in fact she is in the democratic nominee she will be running against someone who has been answering questions and dealing with all of this for months. practice matters. being experienced at these things matters. she is, i think she will struggle with it as a result. >> clearly gop field sees her vulnerabilities, because you wouldn't think you would see some people jumping into the ring unless they thought they could get her get hillary clinton. you have identified where you think she is vulnerable.
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that is her track record. how is your campaign targeting that? >> i think question that people will have to answer is, now that we're in a new economy, and in a dramatically different world from the one we leave behind 10 or 15 years ago who is the person best capable of leading this country into the future? i honestly believe the time has come for a new generation of leadership that understands the future because they have lived in it, understand what we need to do to embrace the promise of the future. this new century is not just about challenges. it certainly has challenges. it is incredible opportunities. millions of people around the world can afford to buy our products and our services and i believe hillary clinton and her whole party for the most part is going to struggle to convince americans they are a movement about the future. and america is always been about the future. our elections have always been about the future. and i think she is going to struggle and her party is going to struggle to convince americans they have ideas about the future and how to make our future even better than our history. >> can i ask you a question about something makes news today? so there is this report through
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the aides that are talking in journalism speak we mean that is like cheap way of getting a press release out there basically right? she is now going to, hillary clinton is going to push in several states for early voting that looks like this. 20 days early in-person voting. why do you think she would push for that? >> i don't know. >> see something? is she in trouble in an area? >> i think there is constituency in the party on left believes that would impact of outcomes of elections. in florida we have early voting. many cases function of cost. one of the things happened in florida we used to have longer period of early voting, in early days of early voting nobody came but there is costs associated opening up facilities. if you look at most states across the country, you can vote by mail. you can vote before the election day. you can vote on election day. so there are multiple opportunities to vote. most states have that already. i'm not sure the federal government needs to set a one-size-fits-all standard for the whole country, because in many instances depending when
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the election happens there isn't even federal candidates on ball the lo. might be for mayor or county commission or judges. there is costs. i will have to pay for the extra day. >> go back to talking before about the generational issue and hillary clinton. do you think she is too old to be president. >> i don't think it has anything to do with person's age but age of their ideas. we have people struggling to get ahead. the answer can not be we'll raise the minimum wage by a couple bucks. $10.10 doesn't help someone. we need to help people making $9 an hour to make $30 an hour. only way to have economy to produce $30 an hour job an person with skills that job requires. the answer to both of those questions is no. we need to have tax code, regulatory framework that makes america the most competitive place in the world to create that job and we have to have a flexible higher education system that allow as receptionist making $9 an hour to become a
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paralegal making $60,000 a year. i actually know someone that made that journey. if you're working full time you can't just drop everything go to school for two years. we need alternative ways to acquire this education that allows you to get credit for what you know, not how many hours you spent in classroom. learn online, on weekends at your own pace. >> senator there is a lot of questions around hillary clinton and her business dealings and email and server. do you think she is corrupt? >> i don't know -- that is something voters will have to decide after we have all the information. so for me the bigger problem i have with the email situation is there was sensitive information available there. we know that foreign intelligence agencies are trying to get into everyone's -- mitt romney campaign computers were being hacked. obama campaign had that problem. if she had a private server it was most definitely being attacked by foreign intelligence agencies. what you worry about putting all information on there including internal conversations about public policy of a sensitive nature that will be available to
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a foreign intelligence agency. >> i mean it was so sensitive in fact they had to take a look at 296 benghazi related emails that were just released to see if one was too sensitive to be released to american public. that is a reality. >> shows poor judgment. even now as candidate for president and senator, we're always careful what we put in email. any insight you give foreign intelligence agency is an advantage for them. we know they aggressively target american policy makers. >> we have so much more to get too. >> your love of with you tank clan. -- would wu-tang clan. do you have a favorite? >> that was early '90s. >> have you moved it forward? who do you like now? >> yeah, who do you listen to? >> listen to, yes not with my kids there, but pitbull. but i'm really still
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channel back spin stuff from the '90s. make i'm getting old. >> i like that. >> stuff that came out of the west coast and california in the '90s with dre. tupac went west coast and abandoned east coast. that was good time. >> biggie fan. >> biggie is east coast. >> but i'm a west coast fan. >> you're more tupac. >> i don't think they should have shot each other had a dispute that way but i was west coast fan. tupac went over to west coast and went to death row records. produced one of the greatest rap albums ever one dre put out with california. >> california love. >> not on camera. >> maybe we can change that today. all right. >> better dancer than hillary. >> okay. concerns are growing about homegrown terror as we learn new details about the suspects in the alleged boston plot targeting police officers. do the feds have what they need to fight isis?
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when it comes to fighting isis retired general david petraeus who commanded u.s. forces in iraq and afghanistan said it is time for the united states to rethink its strategy. is he right? we'll ask the senator. ♪ you know our new rope has actually passed all the tests. we're ready to start with production. ok, are you doing test markets like last time? uh, no we're going to roll out globally. ok. we'll start working on some financing options right away. thanks, joe. oh, yeah. it's a game-changer for the rock-climbing industry. this is one strong rope! huh joe? oh, yeah it's incredible! how you doing team? jeff you good? [jeff] i think i dropped my keys. [announcer] you work hard to build your company. wells fargo will work right alongside you, bringing the expertise your company needs to move forward. wells fargo. together we'll go far.
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♪ >> welcome back to "outnumbered." there are new concerns about homegrown terror as we learn new details of that alleged boston terror plot. the fbi saying the suspect killed in a confrontation with investigators had planned a beheading, then changed his mine and told a relative he wanted to kill police officers instead. that relative seen here on the left has been arrested on conspiracy charges. this as reports say the person who usaama rahim originally planned to behead, pamela geller, the organizer of a controversial draw muhammad contest in texas. telling lawmakers at a hearing today there could be thousands of people in the united states secretly feeding on isis propaganda through social media. he says in certain cases the agency has no way of monitoring
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or even knowing about those conversations. watch. >> we're past going dark in certain instarses. we are dark. the ability to know what they're saying in encrypted communications situations is troubling. there are 200 plus social media companies. some of these companies build their business model around end to end encryption. there is no ability currently for us to see that. so if we intercept communication all we see is encrypted communication. >> we've been talking about this on the couch for quite some time senator. but i want to ask you, do these social media companies over 200 he cited do they have a greater responsibility to work with the feds to track you know, track down these terrorists and attack homegrown terror? >> part of it they actually designed these applications to be encrypted. whatsapp is marketed to something not just the fbi for purposes of terrorism. law enforcement agencies can not
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encrypt it. this is commercially available things now available for you communicate with people encrypted. even if law enforcement wants to go back because after crime, not just terrorist act would not have access. that is technological revolution that happened. there is a lot of talk about there government spying. most of it is exaggerated or inaccurate but led to people moving in this direction. this threat, this fundamental threat you did a report on is so different from the threat we used to face. we still face that threat too. which is someone from abroad would come here to conduct an attack. these individuals never left the u.s. they are radicalized on line not directed but inspired to take action. that is a much harder threat to get your hands around and deal with. one. new realities of the environment today. >> one of the things we saw with the suspect they shot, usaama rahim he was married to a young woman. she was converted muslim. they belonged to a local mosque. they left the mosque reportedly
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via "the boston globe" because they felt it was too liberal. he began terrorism proselytizing online and spitting out his own isis propaganda in his own way. you can see it. that is not in the dark space. are we able to move on that. >> ultimately the volume all of it. that individual or speakinging to the from the fbi talking about sheer volume makes it difficult in some instances to track it all. it is reminder you have individuals out there radicalized to take action. no one called them and apparently said do this in boston. they decided that was the natural course. because they have access to propaganda online, that isis is very good at putting out english language, well-produced propaganda that is impacting people here at home. you can't see the chatter online many in many instances but the she volume is a big task.
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>> you say the government looking for information is exaggerated are what do you mean about that? i feel they, if i knew how to encrypt things i would. is that wrong for americans to feel like the government is too intrusive? >> first i would say the private sector has much more information than the government does. the commercial information available on every single one of us, what channels we watch, what magazines we subscribe to, what we like to buy when using our credit cards, all the stuff is monetized and packaged and sold for purposes of marketing. people don't know that but it is true. talking about the 215 program which is bulk collection of your phone records, people don't realize, the companies, there is no documented abuse of that program, not one. if there is, that person should be prosecuted and put in jail. number two the only thing they're gathering are anonymous phone records. they're not looking at them. in order to look at it they have to go to court to get probable cause. the reason that is important in instance of that individual who else is he talking to? because they're probably part of
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his plot. the third point people don't realize if your local police department wants your cell phone records they don't even have to go to the court. they can issue a law enforcement subpoena to get access to records. >> i'm talking more about emails. being able to read emails storing them. i think there is a big difference between the government having access and government has more power to affect you, prosecute you. if, company knows what toilet paper brand i buy that is not really threatening to me. >> in order to go after an individual for their information you have to be able to prove through probable cause that individual is linked to a foreign terrorist organization, that is inspiring them potentially or directing them to take action. it is not you or me or somebody else. it is a real threat. we have to confront it. i recognize it makes some people uncomfortable. the notion an isis fighter could carry out devastating attack is more frightening. >> keeping on that, when it comes to fighting terrorists of isis former cia director and retired general david petraeus
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says the united states needs to reevaluate its strategy. he says the situation on the ground in iraq and syria is worrisome, calling the fall of a maudedy an operational and strategic setback. he suggests in an interview it is time to think about some changes. watch. >> i think you sit back and say what do we need to do in the military arena. what also we need to do in the military arena you can't capture and out of industrial strength conventional force. that is what isil has come to be. you need a political component. without that, without that you're not going to solve -- >> political component is -- >> also there are reports that syrian rebels don't fully trust the united states plan to train them to fight isis. one rebel commander saying about america, quote, i'm not sure they're serious but we have no choice. strong words there, senator. do you agree with petraeus? is it time for the u.s. to reevaluate its fight against
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isis. >> absolutely. in the sense that it is not working that the administration has portrayed it to be working. when he is talking about a political solution to this problem or component what he is really talking about the fact we need sunnis themselves to defeat isis. isis is sunni movement. in many instances they were greeted as liberators because they were so upset at baghdad. they're living under isis control starting to push back against it. you need sunni fighters and forces and leaders to be part of the solution to drive them out. you need the united states to make the fight more effective. he goes on in interview the need to embed trainers and operators on the ground to help with the targeting. one of the things has to happen in the short term, isis needs to suffer high-profile, humiliating defeats because that is the only way you will be able to cut off growth in funding and recruits right now they're gaining. they're portraying this image as being invincible. >> senator rubio chris christie rand paul and others come out against the
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democracy efforts of the bush administration recently, setting them apart from some of the 2016 candidates. do you agree that a political solution is needed? we should have stayed in iraq to try to build a democracy there? >> ultimately we can't build a democracy. the iraqi people have to build a democracy. the question what is the pace of that? every country is different. south korea is pretty good example. south korea was not a democracy for a long time. today it is and it is a vibrant economy. there was a process to get there. you had to build the domestic capacity. >> south korea is very different from the middle east. >> some instances there is no doubt. but the fundamental reality is, the most important thing a government has to do initially to be able to actual govern. pick up the garbage. send kids to school, build roads. that cast in the short term is critical. ultimately creating conditions to become a democracy maybe not in year-and-a-half or two. there is a challenge in the pace. they want a democracy they have to build that themselves. all we can do to help them in that direction.
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>> if you were president, endorse the idea nation-building supporting democracy both bush and frankly obama adopted? this idea we have responsibility to spread democracy? >> i think we have responsibility to support democracy. if a nation crest as desire to become democratic nation particularly one we invaded we have responsibility to help them move in that direction. most immediate responsibility we have to build a functional government to meet the needs of their people in the short and long term ultimately from that you would hope it would spring -- >> that sounds like nation-building. >> that is not nation-building. we're assists them building their nation. the alternative to do that is chaos we have now. in fact what happened in iraq under this administration is they rallied around maliki. she was shia leader who used his power to go after sunnis that created an environment conducive for ice is sis to come back in and cause these problems. >> you ask how long do we stay
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and to what end? >> that ultimately is stability argument. you look what happened we left far too early, far too fast and the result this environment led to catastrophe. now we're back in and not quite through this administration strategy what we do about it? >> what iran's role in all? last week they criticized united states saying they're only ones who can fight isis. they're only ones on the ground yet on the flip side we try to do a nuclear deal. how do you see that situation? >> first of all iran is strongly backing some of the shia elements on the ground. >> militia on the ground a absolutely. >> they are the most effective fighters, best armed best trained. they are agents of iraq. the reason why they have the ability to do that because we haven't done enough on our end. they have outsourced it to them. i have argued that is impacted -- i do not. their desire is not to drive out isis alone. their desire is to turn iraq a shia puppet state in iran way they have been able to do in
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lebanon through hezbollah and trying to do in bahrain and syria. >> kind of their own caliphate. >> they definitely want to be regional dominant player. no doubt about it. >> something you know a lot about immigration crisis and stunning number of dangerous illegal immigrants with criminal records sprung loose on to american streets. get this homeland security reportedly could have kept most of them detained but chose to release them. how does that happen? what can be done to fix this? ♪
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>> this is what we told you we would be watching for and awaiting today. the announcement from former texas governor rick perry that he is getting in and expected to launch his 2016 presidential campaign any minute. this is at the airport in
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addison, texas. we'll watch this and bring you that when the former governor actually steps to the lecturn there. meanwhile one of the big issues no doubt facing former texas governor and all of the candidates is illegal immigration. this nation needs to deal with people coming across our borders illegally as well as figure out how to handle illegal immigrants who are already here. the problems run deep as you know. this is as we learn most of the illegal immigrant criminals that homeland security officials released last year were reportedly discretionary. "the washington times" says officials chose to spring the worst of the worst. more than 3700 threat level one criminals flagged as top priority for deportation. let them out into the community as they await for their immigration cases to be heard. we'll bring it out to the couch. this san issue you have been really vocal on. first of all your reaction to just letting these 3700 into our
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neighborhoods? >> that story is one of the reasons why it has become so difficult to deal with immigration. people don't say don't tell us you will enforce the law prove it to us. if you prove illegal immigration is under control and addressed we'll have a reasonable, honest solution for the rest of it but until, we don't want you to just pass a bill that says we'll deal will legal immigration. we want to prove it to you. they were in jail because they violated law. the law has to be applied. how it is applied determines whether the law is working. since we have evidence very dangerous individuals were released probably because of political pressure. groups push against detaining anyone on immigration grounds. those stories make it impossible to move forward on comprehensive approach. >> take this back to garland texas, just for a second and attack on free speech we saw there. local authorities were able to kill the perpetrators. in that instance, they were from phoenix. they had to have taken some form of transportation to get to
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garland. if we track one or two dudes how are we going to track 37 of the worst of the worst? >> after they're released? >> yeah. >> in many instances they will never show up for the court date. that's a real problem. >> yeah. >> this is what undermines any confidence that people have, because in the immigration system because when we were working on this in the senate, we tried to put the strictest possible we could get out of democratic senate, strictest possible enforcement mechanisms. arguement people have, don't matter what you put in the law they won't do it. these kind of stories give credibility to that argument. that is one of the reasons moving forward on immigration is so difficult. >> how do you think your plan on immigration compares with your top contenders? i will throw one out there. hillary clinton. >> i don't know what her plan is. she was u.s. senator. never did anything on immigration of any means. gives speeches b.
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a few years ago she wasn't in favor of giving them drivers licenses. this is dramatic shift on her part and changing her opinion. it is what it is. here is my point. we have to address the issue. it has to be solved but only through a series of steps. you can't do it in one massive piece of legislation. the support is not there. the story you outlined is one of the reasons now. >> jeb bush came out and intimated other candidates in the race changed positions on immigration. maybe he is hinting at you. what do you say i have been consistent jeb bush is consistent. maybe there is a flip-flop? >> i have not flip-flopped. i think we need to address it. we have to enforce the law. we have to prove people we're enforcing it. we have to modernize the legal immigration system and deal with people that are here illegally. only thing i argue from what we did two years ago we can't do it with one major piece of legislation. i speak from experience. the support isn't there. this has been tried three
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different occasions last 10 years. nothing has happened because people rightfully do not trust federal government on the first piece which is the enforcement piece. >> kirsten is chomping at the bit. >> setting aside the story of people who are criminals, do you think the immigrants are net plus or net negative, people living here and working have families? >> i never talk about people as negative. certainly individuals are violating law are negative. by and large you have 10 or 12 million human beings in this country. enormous vast majority whom did not violate our laws other than immigration laws. eventually well have to address that in responsible way. i talked about it. they have to come forward. background checks. start paying taxes. pay a fine for having violated law. get a work permit. only status they have for at least a decade. after that they can apply for permanent residency. my argument is we can't even do any of that until we first prove to people illegal immigration is under control. >> you don't think they need to be punished breaking law. >> they have to pay a fine.
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there has to be consequence. >> eye-opening admission from the pentagon. iran recordly working on missiles that deliver nuclear warheads despite claims interim agreement halted new program. what this means for the ongoing talks and stability in the middle east. stay close. ♪
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you're driving along, having a perfectly nice day, when out of nowhere a pick-up truck slams into your brand new car. one second it wasn't there and the next second... boom! you've had your first accident. now you have to make your first claim. so you talk to your insurance company and... boom! you're blindsided for a second time. they won't give you enough money to replace your brand new car. don't those people know you're already shaken up? liberty mutual's new car replacement will pay for the entire value of your car plus depreciation. call and for drivers with accident
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forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch to liberty mutual insurance and you could save up to $423 dollars. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> all right, we're watching out of corner of our eye some news being made. before we get to the breaking news. i from the bottom of my heart to thank you first presidential candidate declared to be on couch. blesses to you and your family. >> you were a trooper.
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you let us challenge you. >> your music choices. >> didn't see you dance. >> we'll do another show. >> next time. >> oh, man. the commercial are interesting. i hashtagged on twitter rubio's rap picks. talking public enemy. you know a lot. >> we'll do a whole show on that one. >> congratulations to your oldest taking a final right now. >> hopefully doing really well. >> correct? >> correct. algebra. >> come back. >> i'll be back. >> we'll watch a little bit what is happening at lecturn. this is addison, texas. we were anticipating this. as we have with all those who declare their candidacy for president we'll watch and listen to this one as well. the formerly governor of texas, rick perry. >> after the end of a global war that killed more than 60 million people i'm the son of a veteran of that war who flew 35 missions over war-torn europe as a tail gunner on a b-17. [cheers and applause]
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when dad returned home, he married mom, they started a life together. they were tenant farmers. they were raised during a time of great hardship and had little expectation beyond living in peace, putting a roof over our heads and putting food on our table. home was a place called pan creek. too small to be called a town but it was the center of my universe. for years we had an out house. mom bathed us on the back porch in a number two wash tub. she also hand sewed my clothes until i went off to college. i attended pan creek rural school grades one through 12. played six-man football. was a member of the boy scout troop 48. became an eagle scout.
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[applause] i went off to texas a&m where i was a member of the corps of cadets. i got my degree in animal science. i was proud to wear the uniform of our country as an air force officer, and as an aircraft commander. [cheers and applause] after serving i returned home. i returned home to those rolling plains and that big ol' sky of west texas. and i returned to farming. you know there is no person on earth more optimistic than a dry land cotton farmer. [laughter] we always know that a good rain is just around the corner, no matter how long you have been waiting. the values learned on my family's cotton farm are timeless. the dignity of work.
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the integrity of your word. responsibility to community. the unbreakable bonds of family. and duty to country. these are enduring values, not the product of some idyllic past but a touchstone of american life in our small towns, in our largest cities, in our booming suburbs. i've seen american life. i've seen it from the red dirt of a west texas cotton field. from a campus in college station texas. from the elevated view of a c-130 cockpit. and from the governor's office of the texas capital. [cheers and applause] i had the great privilege to
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serve a rural community in the texas legislature and i led the world's 12th largest economy. [cheers and applause] i know, i know that america has experienced great change but what it means to be an american has never changed. we are the only nation in the world founded on the power of an idea that all, that all are created equal. that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights that among these are life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness. [cheers and applause] our rights come from god not from government. [cheers and applause]
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our people are not the subjects of government but instead government is subject to the people. [applause] it is always been the case that there has been this social compact between one generation of americans to the next. to pass along an inheritance of a stronger country full of greater promise and possibility. and that social compact, it has been protected at great sacrifice. it was never more clear to me than when i took my father to the american cemetery that overlooks the bluffs at omaha beach. on that peaceful wind-swept setting there lies nine thousand graves including 45 pairs of
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brothers, 33 of whom are buried side by side. a father and a son. two sons of a president. they all traded their future for our in a final act of loving sacrifice. [cheers and applause] and that american cemetery it is no accident that each headstone faces west. west over the atlantic towards the nation they defended the nation they loved the nation they would never come home to. that struck me as i stood in the midst of those heroes that they look upon us in silent judgment and that we must ask ourselves, are we worthy of their sacrifice?
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[applause] the truth is, we're at the end of an era of failed leadership. we have been led by a divider who has sliced and diced the electorate putting american against american for political purposes. six years into this so-called recovery and i might add our economy is barely growing. this winter it actually got smaller. our economic slowdown is not inevidentable. it just be the direct result of bad economic policy. [applause] the president's tax and regulatory policies have slammed the door shut of opportunity for the average american who is trying to climb the economic ladder resigning the middle class to stagnant wages to
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personal debt, to deferred dreams. weakness at home has led to weakness abroad. the world has descended into a chaos of this president's own making. [applause] while his white house loyalists they construct an alternative universe where isis is contained. that ramadi is merely a setback. where the nature of the enemy can't be acknowledged for fear of causing offense. where the world's largest state sponsor of terrorism the islamic republic of iran, can be trusted to live up to a nuclear agreement. [booing] no decision, no decision has done more harm than the president's withdrawal of american troops from iraq. let no one be mistaken. leaders of both parties have
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made grave mistakes in iraq but in january of 2009, when barack obama became commander-in-chief iraq had been largely pacified. america had won the war but our president failed to secure the peace. [applause] how callous it seems now, as cities once secured with american blood, are now being taken by america's enemies all because of a campaign slogan. i saw during vietnam, a war where politicians didn't keep faith with the sacrifices and courage of america's fighting men and women. where men were ordered into combat without the full support of their civilian commanders. to see it happen again, 40 years later, because of political
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gamesmanship and dishonesty is a national disgrace. [applause] but my friends, we are a resilient country. you think about who we are. we've been through a civil war. we've been through two world wars. we've been through a great depression. we even made it through jimmy carter. we will make it through the obama years. [cheers and applause] we will do this. you know the fundamental nature of this country, our people never stay knocked downed. we get back up. we dust ourselves off. we move forward. we will do it again. [cheers and applause] i want to share some important
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truths with my fellow americans today. starting with this truth. we don't have to settle for a world in chaos and an america that shrinks from its responsibilities. we don't have to apologize for american exceptionalism or western values. [cheers and applause] we don't have to accept slow growth that leaves behind the middle class, that leaves millions of americans out of work. we don't have to settle for crumbling bureaucracies that target taxpayers and harm our veterans. we don't have to resign ourselves to debt decay and slow growth. we have the power to make things new again. to project america's strength again. and to get our economy going again. [applause] and that is exactly why today i am running for the presidency of the united states of america! [cheers and applause]
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time to rye set the relationship between government and citizens. think of the arrogance of washington d.c. representing itself as some beacon of wisdom. with policies that are senatorrerring this vast land. with no regard to what makes each state and community unique. that is just wrong. we need to return power to the states and freedom to the individual. [cheers and applause] today our citizens and entrepreneurs are burdened by overregulation and this unspeakable debt. and debt is not just this physical nightmare. it is a moral failure.
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now i want to speak to the i want to speak to the millenials in just a moment. this massive debt, it is passed on from our generation to yours. this is breaking of a soaps compact. compact and you deserve better. i am going to offer a responsible plan to fix the entitlement system and fix this for your generation. to those americans, those i might add, forgotten americans, drowning in personal debt and working for harder wages that don't keep up with the higher cost of living i came here today to say i hear you. i know you face rising health care costs and rising

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