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tv   FOX Report  FOX News  June 22, 2015 1:00am-2:01am PDT

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right now charleston south carolina is preparing to you night in a new show of solidarity. let's take a live look. we're told some 3,000 people will begin standing shoulder to shoulder hand-in-hand over the city's iconic bridge in support of the nine people killed in cold blood last week. this is set to get under way in just a short time from now, twin hour they will do this. it caps off a day filled with reflection pain prayer and gratitude. this morning the sound of singing and church bells ringing across the city of charleston. supporting a congregation that was about to transform what was a crime scene back into the
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house of god. emanuel ame church opened its doors for the first time since last week's tragedy not just to its congregation but to the entire world. the comfort they found in their faith is simple lie well amazing grace. their message to all of us is clear that their response to such an ultimate act of evil will be love. >> a lot of folk expected us to do something strange and to break out in a riot. well they just don't know us. >> today service marked a chance for this tight religious community to begin healing. but first the reverend you just saw who was standing in place of the churs pastor who was among the nine victims thanked the governor of south carolina the mayor of charleston and said this. >> i want to say thank you to
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law enforcement. [ applause ] i got no problem with doing that. i want to thank the chief of police of the city of charleston. [ applause ] and our neighboring communities for working together to bring about a safer place not just for some of us but for all of us. that's why i was so pleased when the authorities made the phone call to us. to say you can go back into mother emanuel to worship. [ applause ] some folk might need some more time in order to walk in. but for those of us who are here this morning, i want you to know because the doors of mother emanuel is open on this sunday. it sends a message to every demon in hell and on earth.
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>> it was powerful. mike tobin is outside that church. >> reporter: in his own words this confessed cold-blooded killer intended to divide. what we saw today was exactly the opposite. white and black come together in the street in front of this black church singing in harmony, laying down flowers. inside the sanc turn ary 1,200 people and a message of faith and forgiveness. instead of fiery rhetoric and retaliation the talk was of mourning healing and coalesce. >> at this time we need to be in solidarity and praying for families and our communities around this state and particularly in charleston. so i want to say to the citizens of charleston and visitors thank you for being whom god has
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called you to be. thank you for your flowers out front. thank you for the cards and the emails and all the acts of kindness. i want you to know that the offices and members of mother emanuel want to say thank you. >> reporter: and let's take one more live look at another show of unity that's taking shape at this moment. it's supposed to complete at 1:45 and that's people gathering at the bridge some 3,000 of them are expected to gather and stretch up the roadway all the way from a town called mount pleasant here to the mother emanuel church. one more shove unity defiance of the goals of this twisted killer. back to you. >> thanks so much. if that happens this hour we'll take those pictures live and show our viewers. thank you. there is talk on this sunday about whether it is really the right time for this sort of thing. an old debate is coming up again in response to the massacre in
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charleston. it's over the confederate flag that flies at a war memorial not far from the state capitol. this weekend former 2012 presidential candidate nominee republican mitt romney took to twitter and condemned the polygamy calling it a symbol of racial hatred that should removed to honor the nine victims and several potential presidential candidates are being asked to weigh on that issue now. >> reporter: you're right, presidential hopefuls are being pressed on the issue. we watched many of them take to the sunday political shows shifting their normal discussion from terror overseas to violence right here at home and whether or not that historic confederate flag symbolizes hate and incites racial tension. >> everyone is being baited with this question with somehow that has anything to do whatsoever with running for president and my position is it most certainly does not. >> you can put up confederate flags every where or you can get rid of all the confederate
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flags. it's not going to make any difference. what's going make a difference is do we change peoples hearts and minds. >> my opinion is we should let people of south carolina go through the process of making this decision. >> reporter: former florida governor jeb bush releasing a statement and it reads in part in florida we acted moving the flag from the state grounds to a museum where it belongs. on the democratic side much fewer voices. former secretary of state hillary clinton who in years past has said the flag must come down did not revisit the issue this week. >> i do want to make something clear because i hear people get this wrong all time. the flag is not flying over the state capitol, it's a war memorial that happens to be on the same ground. i do want to make that clear. i know local leaders are talking about this because i've talked with some state senator there's. what your hearing? >> reporter: you're right. local leaders are express their grief. one state senator said there will be a bill when the state
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general assembly reconvenes assuring his constituents the tragedy will not be forgotten. >> i just hope that not only this week but in the next seven months when we come back to the general assembly everyone will remember this week it will be a bipartisan bill for us to move that confederate flag put it in a museum somewhere in columbia where it will be off the state capitol grounds. >> reporter: south carolina governor nikki haley said it's time to have the conversation and allow south carolinians to decide. back to you. >> we'll cover the news on this as it happens. thank you very much. 16 days on the run and no sign of two convicted killers. but there is a focal point at this hour. an area near the new york slap pennsylvania border. u.s. marshals police officers k-9 units concentrating efforts there after a possible sighting yesterday. investigators say a woman called in early in the morning say she saw two men on a railroad line who looked like the fugitives.
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road blocks are up near the town of friendship new york about 350 miles from the maximum security prison where the men escaped. david sweat, richard mat who you see in this picture were doing time for murder one of them dismembered his victim. david lee miller is live. how credible do they think this lead is? >> reporter: based on the resources being deployed it's clear that the authorities believe that this lead is a credible one. keep in mind that so far the authorities have received over 1500 leads in this case. they described this one as significant but also unconfirmed. the commander of the state police barracks stayed witness who trortd sighting of the two men walking around the railroad tracks was interviewed at length. >> she gave us a description that was in line with two individuals that escaped from the correctional facility. our investigators interviewed her thoroughly and we determined
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she was credible and this should be investigated. >> reporter: the intensity of the search seems to be dialed down a little bit. state police say that most of the road blocks we saw earlier have now been removed but the state police also say their job is not going to be done here until they've looked under every rock tree and structure. >> never good those when you see that intensity slacks off. leads you back to where we were a week ago. do they have any idea. are they searching any other areas in particular? >> reporter: well i think we're back to where we were more than two weeks ago. the state police believe that it is still very possible these two fugitives are literally in the shadow of the prison itself. state police issued a statement a short time ago saying in a quote, tips and leads continue to come in across the state along with unconfirmed sightings but primary focus of the search is in the dannamore area.
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these two fugitives could very well be not far from where i'm standing in the friendship new york area. the accomplice joyce mitchell purportedly told authorities that two fugitives had plans to travel by car seven hours to an undisclosed location after the break out. that would put them in the vicinity of friendship new york. and lastly one of the fugitives has family ties to a community not very far from here. it's very possible he could have been heading in this direction. some people fear to settle old scores. >> wow. i know they are telling people to stay on alert but that's a huge area they are looking at. you're talking about the alleged accomplice who is giving them some details as well. david lee miller thank you very much. pope francis is talking about climate change and he has a warning to the world. his comments are now sparking
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response from some republican presidential contenders. and fiery words coming from iranian lawmakers. and what they want to do to america. you know they just pass ad bill that could put the ongoing nuclear talks in
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>> a defiant iranian parliament chanting death to america as they pass a bill that bans nuclear inspectors from any access to all military sights in iran. gaining access to those sights is a key demand of the united states and the other world powers in the ongoing talks with iran. iranian officials including the religious leader the ayatollah khomeini are strongly rejecting the idea of iranian scientists being interviewed. the u.s. state department now plainly says in response to all of this those inspections must happen or there will be no deal. america and our allies face a
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june 30th deadline for a final agreement. the pope is weighing in on climate change calling it a manmade problem that poses a threat to the world and now some republican presidential candidates are responding to the pope. >> reporter: harris the pope has put some republican presidential candidates in an awkward spot. they are having to push back against the catholic church. in a campaign stop jeb bush said he believes religion should stay away from politics. >> i hope i won't get castigated for saying this i don't get economic policy from my bishops or cardinal or pope. >> today the archbishop of washington addressed that kind of criticism on fox news sunday. >> i would hope that no politician gets policy from his faith committee, his faith community but what we get is the moral frame of by
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which we arrive at those policy positions so the pope is talking about what should we be doing, not here is a political agenda that you must accept. >> reporter: the catholic church's focus on the environment. pope francis said we should do more to address what he calls the human caused climate change that's threatening all of us especially the poor. today presidential hopeful and former pastor mike huckabee disagreed with the pope. he said it's not an issue of climate change it's an issue of resources. >> climate change is the wrong question. good stable energy prices and making america an exporter of energy not just for economic reasons but quite frankly to disrupt the balance of power with russia iran and the saudis. >> reporter: expect this climate change debad to heat up. the pope will make his first trip to u.s. in september where he'll address a joint meeting of congress here in washington.
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harris. >> thank you. another police officer has been gunned down in the line of duty. a massive 24 hour manhunt now leads new orleans authorities to find this man. questions remain about how exactly this happened. and a nationwide egg shortage has many
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a policeman in louisiana has been measured and authorities say they have the suspect now. he's 33-year-old travis boyd. here's how they got him. a rookie officer and his trainer spotted him boarding a city bus. he's facing a number of charges including first degree murder of a police officer. investigators say they are trying to figure out he was able
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to overpower and shoot the veteran officer david holloway. he's the 14th policeman shot and killed in the line of duty this year. will carr has more from our los angeles bureau. >> reporter: good evening. darrell holloway was more than a police officer he was the father of three. a tragic weekend. a father's day weekend for his family. he served the new orleans police department for 22 years and the people who knew him best say he was funny, good hearted and the type of man that you don't forget. >> you couldn't be around him for longer than a minute or two without becoming his friend. if there was something funny about you, he was going to let everybody know. and so i'm going to miss him. we're all going to miss him and new orleans will miss darrell holloway. >> reporter: today new orleans mayor came out and said holloway was more than a good officer and he was good man and a good
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father. >> how did this happen? how did the suspect get the gun and then get loose? >> reporter: well police say the suspect, 33-year-old travis boyd was initially arrested by officers working on the midnight after he had an altercation with a woman that involved him firing a .38 caliber gun. he was arrested frimbged had that .38 caliber gun confiscated. then handed over to officer holloway who was working the morning shift. he started to transport boyd to jail when boyd who has a history of being an escape artist when it comes to being in law enforcement custody, he moved his hand cuffs from behind his body to the front of the body then he managed to push through a small opening of the cage that separates the back and the front of the car. he pulled out a .40 caliber smith and wesson and shot officer holloway in the head and took off on foot. holloway later died at the hospital. where he got that gun and why it
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wasn't discovered during the initial search both are under investigation. police ended up centurying for boyd for almost 24 hours this morning an officer saw him getting on a bus after a brief chase he was taken into custody. thankfully nobody was hurt. now the new orleans police chief said they will look at all of their procedures within the department to make sure that they never have to go through another tragedy like this. >> will carr thank you very much. a nationwide egg shortage is taking a bite out of profits for many restaurant owners and that means prices could go up for everybody. some restaurants have gone so far as to take dishes that call for a lot of eggs as ingredients off the menu. the shortage of sparked by a bird flu virus that's wiped out millions of chickens mostly in the midwest. federal agricultural officials say it could take up to two years before egg production returns to normal.
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happy father's day to all the dads out there including my own. you know it's celebrated around the world. but in the united states the first presidential proclamation honoring dad was issued in 1966. here's a few other interesting facts. in 2008 the u.s. census bureau spated the number of dads in this country at more than 70 million and last year there were an estimated 211,000 stay at home dads in america watching more than 420,000 children. and the average person will have spent about $115 on dad's gift this year. again, happy, happy. just minutes from now thousands of people set to join hands forming a chain across a bridge in charleston south carolina and reports they are already starting to get set. meanwhile supporters around the nation are praying for that community in the wake of last week's church's shooting. how they are honoring the victims. we'll take another look. also new polling shows senator
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bernie sanders is gaining ground on former secretary of state hillary clinton in the race for the democratic presidential nomination. why do you think sanders is doing so well against hillary clinton? tell us. tune in and chime in at the same time. hit us up on our fox news social media pages facebook and twitter. fox news political ins ancestry has come out with a new version. now they have lifestory. it literally lays out somebody's life, from birth to death. when i was using lifestory i discovered my great grandmother. she went through a lot. two sons go to fight in world war ii. she lived through the depression. and she made it through all of that. here i am. just because she survived, and she kept going. bring your family story to life like never before. get started for free at ancestry.com
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let's look live now in
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charleston south carolina. we told you this would be happening. if they close up in a minute. this is a live camera. if you can look closely and you can see the traffic on the bridge. we're told in minutes there will be some 3,000 people joining hands going on to and across and getting off that bridge they will be walking, getting out of their cars there. they are honoring the nine members of the emanuel ame church who were shot and killed during a bible study last week. meanwhile the memorial outside the church keeps growing. flowers, notes, prayers, all hopefully helping the healing that began in earnest inside those walls earlier today. we showed you a little bit of that. it was beautiful. the solidarity by the faithful stretching far and beyond. churches across america are coming together bound by their faith and forgiveness the theme today. lauren green has more on this and what they are doing elsewhere. >> reporter: countless houses of
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worship today praying for emanuel ame and realizing no church is safe from the evil perpetrated there. a church in new york city harlem neighborhood what should have been a joyous father's day service became a mournful remembrance of the violence inflicted against black churches over the years. the ref rand preached on the heinousness of racism and white supremacist rant that the shooter spewed would not make them cower. >> we're a community. we're drawn together by a commitment to live a certain way. we're not is going to let the devil destroy us. >> tourist from all over the world wind up around the block each sunday to attend service at the oldest church in america. church members found strength in the steadfast of the church. >> i just want to come and pay
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my respects. it's a wonderful service and really don't have a lot to say. just so very upsetting. >> what we witnessed in south carolina was really the power of the black church because if that was in south carolina or here i think that the reaction of the people would have been the same in terms of the power of faith. >> reporter: now there was extra police presence this morning at black churches. new york's mayor de blasio's office announced this weekend it will work with all the city's houses of worship to increase safety measures. >> thank you very much. always good to see you. as we touched on at the top of the hour the timing of this maybe not what people want but it's being reunited airlines. a long standing controversy in south carolina over the confederate flag which flies at a memorial on state capital grounds. critics include 2012 republican presidential nominee governor mitt romney says it has to go.
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in fact he tweeted this weekend, take down the confederate flag at the south carolina capitol. tom it is a symbol of racial hatred. let's bring in our political insiders. doug i'll start with you. >> sure. harris i think we all have to join hands literally and me metaphorically with those who are doing what they can to show solidarity with emanuel baptist church. that being said i think mitt romney is exactly right. he's right on the merits. he's right politically for the republican party given the need to be inclusive. that being said we're seeing from some of the other candidates a more nuance response in terms of trying to
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deal with the nature of the south carolina republican primary and i would say that at this point i have to do what president obama did which is say hats off to governor romney. >> you know what's interesting the timing of certain political debates have really been questioned and it's interesting to see how now this becomes the topic. i do want to let everyone know and we can pop it up on the screen at any time we're watching that situation in charleston south carolina as they begin to lock arms and also cross the bridge. this is the street we believe leads up to that. if you take a shot of that bridge right now you can see the traffic even from this far away that's starting to pile up and letting people off so they will be locking hands. but, you know pat, just the timing of this. this is a long standing debate. i pointed this out earlier. the flag is not standing at the state capitol. not on top of the state capitol. in 2000 they took it down. there was a compromise. they put it at this war
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memorial. your thoughts? >> i'm from charleston i drive that bridge my family we have two very real connections with two of the women who died >> i'm so sorry. >> my e come together about this. in a way that ought to be instructive for the whole country. all my life i have lived as a southern terrify struggle over civil rights which i started, i was involved in when i was very young and i have to tell you, we have made some progress a lot of progress. i'm bothered by the timing of this. charleston fort sumpter elected in a republican primary overwhelmingly white a black congressman who is now a united states senator-elected with more votes than lindsey graham. there are ups and downs on all of this. but the struggle has been for a while. but i think we're making and it reminds me -- i'm bothered by people racing off the the political points. i said that flag should have
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been gone to a museum some time ago. it's a flag hat honors by a lot of people but hijacked in the '60s across the south racial resistance. it doesn't belong there now. abraham lincoln said something very important in his second inaugural when he said that god had decided he couldn't understand this contest, that god had decided it should go on. the equivalent of 5 million americans died. to answer the question you know what do the words all men created equal mean and we have been struggling since that day and when lincoln spoke, he spoke about the whole country, north and south. and we have to continue and i think what's happened in charleston is a sign of the way to do in a terrible act. we haven't even buried our dead yet. >> i would ask this question is this the new gotcha question on the campaign trail? i mean if you heard governor huckabee hearlier on fox report we had it. he said not necessarily so much
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for the candidates to weigh on. this is a state thing. what are your thoughts? >> my bigger thought the crime was unbelievable and the reaction by the victims' families at the bail hearing was equally -- it was a huge news event that hasn't been talked about enough. the act of forgiveness by those grieving family members. you know as your promo said this is the heart of christianity forgiveness. other religions don't practice it the way we do. this is the best example of it. really the last thing we ought to talk about in this story, i think. >> all right. we'll cover the news on that as it happens. meanwhile, i want to just go back out and let's take a picture, a look at the live picture that's in charleston south carolina now and you're talking that this is your town pat. i did not realize your close personal connection with those in the church. i know you're from there. as you look at this picture i know tonight you're not surprised at all the people that have come out. you can even get another car on
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that bridge. it's not moving right now. >> no. the whole community and many people come to charleston we've been united and are shocked at this and, again, as i keep saying this moment of healing, it's very different from what we saw in ferguson what we saw in baltimore and hopefully it will be a message as you said john a larger one. but we must deal with the prejudice in our society even as we make progress. this crime was beyond comprehension to most of us. >> we'll cover this and when they do lock arms and make a statement with 3,000 people
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well is hillary clinton in a bit of trouble? i want to come to you, pat. have you seen this new new hampshire polling among democrats? new hampshire is an important
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state as we look forward to primary season. first of all you can handicap it for us with regard to that but also what do you make of this? 31% for bernie sanders who many people laugh at when he talks. i bet she's not laughing. >> she's not laughing now. the suffolk poll run by somebody who used to work for my company, if you look at the people who know both candidates they were the only poll that was right last time predicting hillary would win by three points which she did. >> inning. >> by the way, they have showing among people who know both candidates that the race is 38-35. the movement in new hampshire among activists is stunning and i suspect we're going to see similar things in iowa. that in part i would defer to doug on this but why hillary is panicked trying to hold the left of the party in going so far to the left now. but bernie sanders is authentic if nothing else.
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and people are -- look at those crowds. what's happening is the speed of which this is happening. i told you several weeks ago. you can see the seepage and i can see it in this poll. >> this is a large problem that pat has isolated for hillary which is protecting her left flank. the democratic primary electorate is deeply suspicious of any candidate who is not authentic on things like income equality and bank regulation which is what sanders is speaking to and elizabeth warren potentially is speaking to. >> she's not running. >> not yet. >> that's what she said. that's what she said. we remember from 1968 robert f. kennedy wasn't running and lyndon johnson pulled out, bernie sanders is the gene mccarthy of this race. hillary is covering. pat couldn't be more right. that's what this announcement campaign kick-off is about.
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preempting the left. >> the second announcement. >> is it only new hampshire? >> no. >> do you see an area where republicans -- hold on. do you see an area where republicans can step in and take advantage of what's happening? >> no. this is why i've gone nuts over the republicans always bashing hillary as if she's going be the nominee they are going to face. they need to focus on what they will present to the country. it could be very possible hillary won't be the nominee. >> very likely she will be nominee but huge potential vulnerability. >> there's more potential for republicans than you do. >> republicans can win the election next year by standing there and just bashing hillary all day that's not a program that's going to get you elected. >> the thing is and i said this last week. i don't think elizabeth warren or joe biden or even john kerry,
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the candidate you picked months ago to get in this. i believe by fall if this number her numbers continue to come down we'll see people who thought they weren't running -- >> like who? >> like those people. john kerry. >> after not running, running again. john kerry, joe biden. they are going to look at this -- the party will look oh, my god so she could have a much tougher race. i want to make the quit point. it's important. for her these scandals are what the war in vietnam was to lyndon johnson in '67 when everyone said he can't be challenged. and look what happened. and i think we're looking at the same kind of chaos next year. >> on twitter steve hartman said you can sum up bernie sanders popularity with one word academia. >> i disagree. he's authentic. he speaks to the democratic left which is the predominant force in the party for redistribution of wealth and power. our audience may have a problem
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with that. i'm a centrist. the democratic primary electorate is to the left of her. >> does she know she's a centrist now -- >> she's a chameleon. she will go wherever she has to go. look at the last two years. democrat party occupies wall street elizabeth warren and bernie sanders. the tea party is the passion. >> i want to talk about trust. we saw last week washington street journal poll with trust issues for hillary clinton. we saw many of them. i said "the washington post"/abc news cnn polling. >> it's overwhelming. that trust factor is getting into as i said couple of weeks ago, slipping into beginning to eat into her base voters young people women, moderates who have doubts and as they confront
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those doubts she's doing nothing -- >> she's speaking to what the polls show her great strength leadership by trying to outline a program on the left harris that both speaks to her confidence but also to the position. >> the fact we're talking about her trustworthiness, right? the fact that she has to reverse her positions on all these issues makes her less trustworthy. it plays to -- >> she would say it's a different nuance position. >> she's running. she's done all the positions. her husband's position. on trade she can't make a decision. she looks like a chameleon as you said. >> would you say on immigration and voting rights she's done what a democrat needs to do? >> she's trying to run to the left of obama. i don't know it will move those groups. >> let me step in here. the one headline i got from the two democrats at the table, john is that the field could
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get more crowded. >> definitely. >> that's something that you have all been saying about the republicans. so if the field gets crowded for the democrats it could get
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republican voters are open to. 74% said marco rubio. 75% jeb bush. mike huckabee in third spot with 65%. that's an increase of 13 from april right before he officially entered the race. scott walker who has yet to announce he's running, is in fourth with 57%. the fox news political insiders are back. no disrespect for skipping titles there. i'll pick them up but i wanted to move along. the big title is republican presidential contender. what do you think about when you see that? >> i think the race is completely wide open. not everybody is in.
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i think we'll have 16 announced candidates by the time of the first debate. i think the biggest news of the week that we've just finished was donald trump getting in the race. the three of us all see trump as a very important factor in the race. we don't take him lightly. we take him seriously for various factors. he's smart, first of all. we all know him and on political analysis donald trump is a sharp guy. number two, obviously he's got unlimited money. if he's really in to try to do something and spend money, he can cause trouble, but the big thing is paris, he set the agenda. when he says i'm going to build the best wall ever and make the mexicans pay for it the other 15 candidates are going to have to react to that. he sets the agenda. >> all right. on the money issue, you know in journalism you don't take gifts from people because you want to stay independent. for politicians, you don't take money from people because you stay independent. >> trump will be independent.
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he will also be something else. he will speak to the electorate. anger at the establishment, anger at washington anger at government dysfunction at. paris, in a race with 16 candidates as john suggests trump getting 10 or 15% is far more significant than in a 2, 3, 4 person race. i agree with john. he could make a huge difference. >> let me say in pointing out "the wall street journal" we polls, we'll see it tomorrow. we've had candidates who were up like bush. they had let's face it a presidential kind of announcement. that's good coverage. handled himself. then had, as you said i'll come back to trump for a quick second. there are also some others. ben carson and karly fiorina had huge jumps in recognition. they almost doubled. it means that everything is fluid. as both doug and john said i know trump. he's a friend. i've done some stuff for him, not about politics but things. let me just say this.
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one thing about trump is he is willing to say what so many americans feel. they may not in the end end up voting for them but he will royal this race. he will royal this race and raise issues. you have an establishment in washington that we can't function. it seems to be the draw strings of chamber of commerce. trump is hitting some nerves and it will open some doors for the -- on other nonestablishment. >> pat, in '92 you were the first guy hired by ross perot and perot is an early version of the independent candidate that the three of us have sort of been talking about as is coming in american politics. i just wonder if trump should be running this year as an independent where 50% of the country -- >> that's interesting. >> yeah because they're the anti-establishment. they don't want to be part of either party anymore. i think trump fits them better than he fits the republican electorate. >> eileen pain writes on
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twitter. you hit the nail on the head in terms of trump in terms of anger. he would get them without having to put an i by his name. >> he may get some of them. that's part of the dynamic. trump as an ind pen be dent could draw across the political spectrum to angry americans. he's in a republican primary. it's a divided field. he's got a red meat conservative message. he is going to be a factor no matter what he does. >> quickly. when he goes after banks as we talked about the coalition to occupy wall street deep parties in the polling that you and i have both done these people are angry and they come together. the independent thing was -- i would do it if i were him. >> on twitter the viewers are starting their own stream. nice shot says on fox news just saw a poll saying that jeb bush is in the lead 75% want jeb bush. >> no. >> this person is asking others on twitter, do you feel that way? final thoughts when we come
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back. hold on one second. we'll be right back.
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as we wrap it up here with the political insiders i want to go back to you john talking about jeb bush and donald trump. the viewers on twitter are going back and forth about really how much they love any of these people. donald trump is being talked about a lot. >> "the wall street journal" poll we have to be clear about it. 75% would consider voting for
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jeb bush doesn't mean 75% are voting for him. they're open minded. it's part of the fluidity. the race is wide open. you ask republicans, they have no passion yet for any candidate. they're looking, learning. the debates are going to be the beginning of learning about them. >> yeah. >> we have a long way to go. >> before then we are expecting on july 13th governor scott walker of wisconsin to get in. gentleman, good to have you. i'm going to ask you to sit by. i know pat, this is your home city we're going to take a look at right now. charleston south carolina boy, they've taught us a lot today, haven't they? they've taught us just how to pray how to have faith, integrity, patience forgiveness, and love. the associated press is reporting that funeral services for most of the victims in the massacre last week will be later this week. funeral services for the late church's pastor will be held on friday. that's according to the a.p. pinckney's casket will be at the statehouse for public viewing on
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wednesday afternoon. we leave you now with a chain of solidarity that they have formed across the bridge in charleston south carolina. some 3,000 people and it took a while to get them in place. we've been watching it for nearly an hour as they have pulled into place here. let's just take a moment just to listen. you may not hear direct sounds and voices but let's just take a breather here. as we leave you tonight, south carolina. continue to watch fox news >> it is june 22nd. a fox news lart. the search now shifts. more than two weeks after two convicted killers break out of prison police now appear to be closing in. >> we will search under every
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rock, behind every tree and structure until we are confident that area is secure. >> the new leads hundreds of miles apart. >> charleston days after emanuel ame church thousands pack the church as a flag flight is reignited. should confederate flag still be flying over south carolina capitol. >> shark sightings are forcing police to close the beach as people are warned to stay away from the water. "fox & friends first" starts right now. >> good monday morning to you. you are watching "fox & friends first". i am heather childers. >> i am ainsley earhardt. thank you for starting your monday off with us. a pair of escaped killers still on the lose 17 days after breaking out of prison. >> a dramatic shift in the search area as the investigation
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moves from one side of new york state to another. kelly wright is here now following the latest developments. >> police in new york are investigating what they call a credible new lead in the massive search for two convicted killers. here are the latest developments. hundreds of police are on the lookout as at first they were searching in new york near the fence pennsylvania border where there were reports of escapees following the train tracks. the news search is based on evidence found in a hunting cabin in the woods in the village of owl's head. dna evidence was reportedly found showing the men may have broken into the camp. the manhunt for convicted killers david sweat and richard matt is causing people in the area to stay vigilant. >> we are prepared because being in the country we think we should be ready for anything like this. not really. we didn't

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