tv Americas News HQ FOX News October 25, 2015 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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chemotherapy and it is they're terminal and suffering from this neurologic patients, patients with seizure, some studies coming in the pipeline that it can help. to use it recreationally all the time, it is not -- >> i agree. >> thank you. >> that will do it for us. texas-sized downpour, more than a foot of rain in some areas in just the last 48 hours. we'll go live to water logged houston. >> plus, we are learning more about the lost and injured a day after a car plowed into a packed homecoming parade in oklahoma. witnesses say the young woman accelerated into the crowd. >> brand-new video just released, check this out, a daring raid in iraq to save 70 prisoners held captive by isis. it is the same raid that took the life of u.s. sergeant joshua wheeler. we'll speak with a veteran who will walk us step by step through that mission.
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hello and welcome to "america's news headquarters." i'm shannon bream. >> i'm leland vittert. thank you for spending your sunday with us. >> prepare to be patient. that's the advice from houston's mayor today as that city and all of southeast texas rains for the torrential rains to pass. these are the remnants of hurricane patricia. forecasters say the worst of it came overnight with amounts rafrn ranging from a couple of inches to a foot of rain. these are pictures from south of houston. motorists are encouraged to stay off the roads until all this water subsides. the storm system is now moving to the coastal areas of louisiana and mississippi. steve is right in the middle of it all, following the developments and joins us live from houston with the latest. hey, steve. >> the rain is falling here in downtown houston and the raw
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sewage is bubbling up from manhole covers in front of me, all down this street and around the corner as well. people were hoping this would taper off by the end of the day, but no sign of that happening yet. this storm had produced a number of records in texas since the rain began falling in friday. some areas getting more than 20 inches of rain and it is really two storms at this point, the remnants of hurricane patricia and also this major storm as well. it has been enough to produce some real dramatic pictures, one freight train was derailed by the flooding, two engineers had to swim to safety and around the houston area, especially in some lower lying underpasses, you can really find some cars submerged. but that being said, no catastrophic damage, no loss of life in this storm so far. what is going to happen next is hopefully later this afternoon, the rain will taper off here, but the flooding dangers are not over yet. more to the coast, more around the galveston area, and louisiana, as the storm moves east. we could see some more dangerous flooding. shannon, leland, back to you.
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>> steve, thank you very much. meanwhile, authorities in mexico are relieved this huge record-breaking hurricane largely spared the country. in the pacific coast city of manzanillo, crews are working to clear mud from the roads and remove debris from fallen trees and trying to get everything restored with water and electricity to sewage. hard to believe, no deaths reported with the storm in mexico. fox news alert. four people died including a 2-year-old when a car plowed into the oklahoma state university homecoming parade. dozens more were injured. police say the driver hit a motorcycle before barreling into the crowd. that driver now faces dui charges. lauren green is live with the latest on the crash and the investigation. hi, lauren. >> hello, leland. the town of stillwater is still grieving. it turns the joy of homecoming into a deep sorrow. we now know the names of three
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of those who died, in addition to the 2-year-old stillwater boy, dead are nakita prabhakar, bonnie jean stone and marvin lyle stone, mowed down when the car went into the crowd. bodies were tossed like rag dolls into the air. >> just see the car flying towards these people and i witnessed the impact with the motorcycle and you saw what -- you saw pieces of the motorcycle fly into the air and it looks like you could see people flying. >> oklahoma governor mary failen arrived later to the scene and spoke at a press conference during the game's halftime. >> i have talked to one person who was on the scene when it
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happened and witnessed it happen. and actually went over to the lady who got out of the car, and holding her down until the police could come and arrest her, but she was obviously impaired and out of control. >> 25-year-old dashia chambers was arrested and remains in police custody. prosecutors are awaiting toxicology test results to see if drugs or alcohol were involved. osu did play its homecoming game yesterday, but players observed a moment of silence to honor the victims. there are still five people in critical condition at area hospitals. about 12 people hospitalized in fair to stable condition. and nearly 30 have been treated and released. chambers' first court appearance is likely -- likely will be tomorrow. leland? >> lauren green live in new york following this. thanks, lauren.
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we'll see what happens in court. shannon? the battle to defund planned parenthood is heating up again on capitol hill with a vote friday to use the reconciliation process to strip away nearly half a billion dollars in taxpayer money from the organization. also on friday, house speaker john boehner announced a new select committee to look into potentially illegal abortion industry practices, highlighted in a series of undercover videos released over the summer. marcia black burn named the chair of the new committee and joins us live to talk about that and much more. chairwoman i guess the title is now, thank you for joining us. >> sure. good to be with you. thank you. >> tell me what the focus is going to be here. you heard the criticism of the house benghazi committee by democrats and others who say it has been a lot of money spent, it is a witch-hunt, it is partisan and political. what about this committee? >> the focus of this committee is going to be pretty focused, actually, and then dig deep into a couple of issues. what we want to do is look at the medical practices and also
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the fetal tissue procurement organizations in the relationship between those in the abortion providers and see what that is, look at the business practices as well as those medical practices. and make some determinations there on that with the fetal tissue procurement organization shannon, and in addition, we're going to go back and look at the second and third trimester abortion procedures, we will look at what happens with survival of a partial-birth abortion, which we know there is a ban, but we know the second and third trimester abortions are taking place with some providers. so there will be some look there. and what is given to a child when they survive that abortion? and so we will work on these issues, look at how the funding, federal funds are used, the title ten fund, and by those
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clinics that do health care and abortions and make certain that those taxpayer dollars are not going into the abortion procedures. >> and funding aside, and budgetary issues aside, is it possible that criminal type charges would be investigated or referred by this committee, because i know that there is a lot of criticism of the undercover videos, although my understanding is the raw material is not -- now all available, but there are ko conversations about altering abortion methods which is illegal. is this beyond funding? is this also an issue of potential criminal activity? >> well, this is why we want to look at the medical procedures and the relationships. and you're going to see us work as a fact-finding, information-gathering committee. that is our charge. and we will do a lot of digging and working on getting the correct information. the american people want us to
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do this. people have been horrified as they become aware of the videos and you're exactly right. the footage is available, people can go to the center for medical progress website, they can look at it, and they should look at it, but people want to make certain that no laws are broken, we can't predetermine what we're going to find in an investigation, what we can say is we're going to do our job to get the facts. and then we're going to follow where those facts take us and finding answers for the american people. and, you know, shannon, i know there are some that say, well, you know, we don't need another select committee, but what we do need to do is this. we need to bring the three committee investigations that have been taking place under one umbrella. and also i think it is important to remember that when nancy pelosi was speaker, she had a
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special select committee and investigated global warming. i served as a member of that select committee. and i think it is important to realize they thought that was a priority, they spent millions of dollars on it before that committee was disbanded. >> while we have you, a big week in the house this week. quickly, almost out of time, i want to ask you about the vote for speaker. have you chosen the way you support paul ryan, dan webster, how do you see this playing out? >> shannon, i support paul ryan. i think he's going to do a fine job as speaker of the house. he has worked with all different caucuses and groups within the republican conference and i think he is ready to take that challenge and to lead the conference. >> all right, we'll watch that vote go down this week. chairwoman, thank you for your time, keep us updated on the investigation. >> absolutely, thank you. >> leland.
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>> news of another knife attack by palestinians in israel comes to light. a new plan hopes video cameras will bring an end to the violence. a deal worked out in the past couple of days by secretary of state john kerry and jordan's king abdullah means new camera systems will look over the old cities most sacred ground. israel says the proposed cameras will prove it is not expanding its presence near the ail aska mosque but some say it will help israelis spy and arrest muslims. two palestinians dressed as ultra orthodox jews stabbed an israeli in west bank today, injuring him before they fled the scene. today we're getting our first glimpse of the joint mission to free dozens of hostages from isis. this video is actually from the raid that rescued 70 people from execution. one american was killed during the fire fight. master sergeant joshua wheeler. he is the first u.s. soldier to
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die fighting isis on the ground in iraq. but the administration still contends the u.s. mission in iraq is not a combat one. the general in charge of taking on isis in iraq told reporters, quote, u.s. forces are not in iraq on a combat mission, end quote, do not have boots on the ground. captain benec collins served the tours in afghanistan. we'll get to the politics of this in a minute, ben. first, take us through what you can tell from a trained eye, we saw on that video? >> leland if you look at the video, you can certainly see the professionalism of our special operations soldiers. especially the individuals in this unit. these guys are the pro bowlers of the special operations community. so it is no surprise that you see, you know, very methodical, precise movements. you also see the same thing in the level professionalism with the kurdish allies, which i think also shows how much work and how much effort our
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community has put into that relationship because, you know, you're going into an environment like this, you're working at nighttime, working with night vision, it is a very chaotic and complex environment so you have to have the trust of the allies and the trust of the people standing next to you. and watching that video -- >> there may be trust of the allies, but the reason that the delta force operators actually went into this mission, we're told, and didn't stay in the helicopters as they had planned to was because the kurds and their peshmerga were being overrun by isis. does that show while they may have good skills, they're not up to the task of leading these kinds of raids? >> i think we have to assess a standard. we see the same thing in afghanistan. but your question goes to the slippery slope that is trained, advise and assist. there is absolutely no way and i think the spokesperson in iraq said it, there is a moral obligation if you see the individuals you've trained with and that you've lived with and
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ate with come under fire, you are under an obligation. i guarantee those men saw them come under fire and there was no way they were not going to come to their assistance, which tends to happen in a trained advise and assist role. if we say something is noncombat, you got to be careful with that, because if you're going to be in the assist role, you could be very close to these fire fights and have to make the same determination. >> those delta force operators made that determination. you said the word slippery slope, which is one that has been used in the past to describe what happened in vietnam. it also started as a train, assist and support mission. is that where this is headed. u.s. forces will have to take on this fight against isis? >> well, look, let's remember president obama first said they were going to do everything they could to degrade and destroy isis. now, fast-forward, we're watching something where we even have the defense secretary say, well, we're not going to expand a combat role, yet minutes later said it is complicated, it is
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combat. so i think we're actually playing political linguistics with the definition of combat. i think the real test is going to be do we see other raids of this magnitude, of this sort, under the auspices of their allies came under fire, or they were defending themselves or even what the white house put out the other day, which is if they see innocent lives in danger, they can act, which i think, you know, would open up the scope to a whole lot of other questions. >> to that point, we heard from ash carter on friday, the secretary of defense, who said, yes, there will be more raids, we'll increase the operational tempo. you hear on that videotape the sound of a whole lot of gunfire, which u.s. special forces behind enemy lines, in a hostage rescue mission, getting shot at, sounds a lot like combat. do the political word gymnastics matter, ben? do they matter to people downrange? >> i think it matters. i think the most important piece
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of what matters is the american public who needs to understand we have 3500 soldiers in iraq now. they're there to train, advise and assist. we have these individuals under fire. we lost another american hero in afghanistan. master sergeant mckenna under fire in a train, advise and assist role. if the american people don't understand that, you know, white house definitions and president obama definitions aside, our soldiers are in great risk, they are in a combat environment, regardless of what the lawyers say, they are in a combat environment, if the american people don't understand that, i wouldn't wonder if support could be forth coming. we saw the president veto the national defense authority act. i think the american public, the most important thing is to honor the sacrifice of master sergeant wheeler and understand and demand that our administration and the pentagon recognize that they are in combat and support them. >> and to that point, call it
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what it is. the american people, though, have a tendency to figure things out on their own, especially when they watch video like this. ben collins, we appreciate your service in afghanistan and your service now. thanks. all the best. should the u.s. join a trade deal that supporters say could mean billions for our economy? critics say it will mean fewer good paying middle class jobs right here at home. a brand-new solutions panel. we'll have some answers. round three for the republican presidential candidates as jeb bush slashes his campaign budget and ben carson surges in a key state. and after months of promising not to attack hillary clinton, bernie sanders takes the gloves off a bit. ed henry is there. >> bernie sanders taking the gloves off with both bill and hillary clinton. the former president brought a pop star to boost the crowd for
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tand that's what we're doings to chat xfinity.rself, we are challenging ourselves to improve every aspect of your experience. and this includes our commitment to being on time. every time. that's why if we're ever late for an appointment, we'll credit your account $20. it's our promise to you. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. hillary clinton and bernie sanders making their pitches to democrats in iowa, where we are now less than 100 days before
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the caucuses. the two democratic presidential candidates duelled for support at a fund raising dinner in des moines. polls show that race there is tightening. ed henry is there in des moines to bring us the very latest. hey, ed. >> a shift in strategy for both hillary clinton and bernie sanders. she had been trying to be more scrappy, she was falling behind in iowa and new hampshire. going through those self-inflicted wounds on e-mail and all the rest. now that democratic candidates are dropping out, she solidified a lead, going back to a more cautious strategy at this big jefferson jackson dinner here in des moines, remember that in 2 007, the front-runner, fizzled, barack obama came in, dazzling speech, never looked back, won the caucuses. here yesterday, hillary clinton was trying to build a crowd. she brought in her husband bill for his first rally of the campaign. he brought along pop star katy perry, she sang a few songs like
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"war" and "fireworks," trying to get folks fired up for hillary clinton. something she struggled with in some of these early states. when the front-runner got the microphone jefferson jackson dinner, she tried to look past her democratic rivals and act almost as if she's already the general election nominee. listen. >> the american people in the last six weeks have learned a lot about hillary, what she's for, why she's running, and what kind of president she would be. >> and her husband is saying, look, in the last few weeks with the strong debate performance, the candidates dropping out, hillary clinton seems to be coming back, but what bernie sanders did was interesting. this jefferson jackson speech, he decided in the first debate saying he wasn't going to attack hillary clinton, wasn't going to talk about e-mails, he stuck to policy issues, but really hit both bill and hillary clinton hard on issues like same sex
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marriage, the iraq war, saying they were too far in the middle and he's been the consistent liberal and he tried to suggest he's going to shock the world, just like barack obama in '07. listen. >> i'm the only democratic candidate for president who does not have a super pac. martin o'malley is the third candidate on the democratic side still standing. he called hillary clinton a weather vane. he had this resurgence, the front-runner again, had some good things going in her direction, but still has that fbi investigation of her e-mail server. one of the great unknowns of this camcampaign, how that's go turn out. >> good to see you, safe travels. >> great to see you, thank you. across the aisle, gop presidential candidates are preparing for the next debate. it is just days away and focus s on the economy.
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the pressure is on, former front-runner jeb bush, whose poll numbers are, you might say, dismal. this week he announced a major campaign reshuffle including cutting the payroll by 40%. david pain is a partner of fox global and john messinger. is jeb bush's campaign sick or on life support? >> it is on a slide. no question about it. when you cut your budget and staff and salary by almost half, you're in triage mode and trying to turn that campaign around and reverse the slide. >> all right, so, john what is more telling to democrats in terms of where they see blood in the water when it comes to jeb bush. is the issue the poll numbers which obviously have not held up and negatives are very high, or is it the fact that it appears at least that fund-raisers are abandoning him. >> i think all of the gop establishment candidates have been just doing terribly on the trail. it is their actual performance out there. we have seen gafb,
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another gaffe from marco rubio, another candidate they were trying to get excited about, he has a terrible voting record and went to the senate floor and said employees who don't do their job should be fired. that's you, marco. the establishment candidates aren't getting any traction at all. you can put all of the existing gop politicians poll numbers together and they still don't add up to 50%. it is all ben carson. all donald trump. that's where all the energy is. >> you said the magic word, which is donald trump and ben carson. it is two magic words we'll talk about next including this latest des moines register poll coming out that shows this flip between donald trump who was at the top of every poll for about the past 90 days or so, just ask him, the top of every poll, and now you see ben carson at the top of this iowa des moines register poll. what do you make of this? is this the bloom off the rose for donald trump? >> absolutely. look, three out of four republican voters for the
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primary are looking for a different candidate. donald trump's support has not been able to climb out of the 25% mode. absolutely. carson has been doing it very well in his own soft spoken sort of way. there are other candidates up and coming and marco rubio has been gaining in the polls, he's been gaining in fund-raising, he has the excitement and the passion of his supporters behind him and i think that similar things are happening for ted cruz. >> john, who do democrats want to run against more, a gop, shall we say, somebody from the establishment, somebody like marco rubio or want to run against somebody like ben carson? >> yeah, i absolutely think the establishment because republicans are not going to win this election on policy. the republican party platform is to cut social security, cut taxes for billionaires, start another war in the middle east, throw people off health insurance, what the republicans are going to need if they're competitive in this race at all is a nontraditional candidate, which is why you've seen donald trump, ben carson, whose appeal
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i have to admit personally escapes me, but looking for somebody out of the box who can capture the imagination of the american public. otherwise, they're dead in the water. >> you said out of the box. take a listen to what donald trump is now saying about the polls that before used to quote day in and day out. >> right, right. >> what happens, because i find it hard to believe, i was in iowa three days ago, we had such an unbelievable turnout that i find it really difficult to believe that i'm in second place. but we'll find out. >> david, should he believe the polls? >> yes, absolutely. there is plenty of gop voters looking for an alternative. they're starting to find it. there is a lot of momentum building and we're getting -- we're 100 days out from voting in iowa. so the race is narrowing down.
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it will get exciting, i think. >> i don't think anyone disagrees it is going to get exciting. we'll leave it there. david, john, thank you for youryour insight. >> thank you, leland. more than a few good men and women hit the pavement in our nation's capital for the marine corps marathon. we'll update you on that. a trade deal on the table in congress has bipartisan critics and bipartisan supporters. if they could make or break main street, our solution panel helps sort it out coming up. >> we continue to have strong confidence that this agreement is clearly in the best interest of the u.s. economy, the u.s. businesses and most importantly american middle class families. >> i did not support it yesterday. i do not support it today. and i will not support it tomorrow.
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together people from different points of view to try to find common ground dealing with major issues in our country today. the economy and how it impacts all of our families' lives at the top of the list for most americans. there is a trade deal being debated here in washington that could have major impacts on main street. it is called the transpacific partnership. senior business correspondent brenda butler will break it down so we can understand what it means and tet us aboll us about countries signing on. >> here's the deal about the deal. first, it is a big deal. 12 countries including the u.s., australia, canada, japan, malaysia, mexico, peru, vietnam, chile, brunei, singapore, new zealand. add them up and their combined gdp, $28 trillion, 40% of the global economy and one third of world trade. now, here's what we hear is in the tpp. workplace safety guidelines instituted, tariffs on textiles and clothing removed, tariffs on cars as high as 70% in emerging
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markets like vietnam may also be out, farmers of u.s. poultry and beef might see taxes as well as tariffs to key markets cut too, taxes on other foods, dairy, sugar, wine, rice and seafood could be almost completely removed. tech titans like google will enjoy restrictions removed on sales in foreign markets. bottom line, it will probably be easier to sell stuff to the 11 other governments and it is a tax cut and tariff cut for many products. yes, a big deal. big as well the controversy about the tpp. those who like it say it will benefit all the nations involved, it could encourage other countries, most notably china too. those who don't like it, unions. they believe the agreement is a big gift to big business and will send jobs to overseas to low wage nations. they argue it will also mean higher prices for drugs because it applies american patent standards to other countries. keep in mind, this deal is far
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from being a real deal. congress must still approve it, but because capitol hill gave the president what is called fast track authority, lawmakers cannot amend it, only approve or reject it. the president already is seeing much opposition from his own party. back to you. >> thank you very much. there are critics and supporters of the deal from across the political spectrum. some say too many good american jobs could be lost to less developed countries. others say american businesses will grow and hire more people right here in the u.s. we want to know can a solution be found that can make this deal protect middle class jobs while helping our businesses sell more american made products abroad. to help us answer that, we're joined by two fox news contributors, rick renell and san santina jackson. one thing brenda mentioned is this the president's deal, trying to get it done, but there is a lot of democrat opposition, he'll have to rely on republican votes. why is that?
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what are their concerns here? >> secrecy no transparency, let me see what's in the tpp. if i was sick, i wouldn't take medicine from my doctor if he wouldn't tell me or she wouldn't tell me what's in the medicine. ross perot said that nafta would create a giant sucking sound, 1 million jobs were lost with nafta. $180 billion plus in a trade deficit. american workers need middle class jobs that pay middle class wages. how does that happen when we have to compete with vietnam who makes $1.04 an hour. >> there are some protections that supporters will say are built into this deal and that there will be a minimum wage that will be set that countries all have to recognize they'll be part of the deal. there are concerns about the fact that the u.s. just on some financial grounds and economic grounds isn't going to be able to compete. what is your take on the claim that it will cost us jobs here
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at home? >> well, look, i think it is important that we look at this long-term, not short-term. there is clearly going to be short-term pain, simply because we had a lot of tariffs and government interventions and protectionism going on for the markets. one thing we do know is that if there is a level playing field, the americans can compete and usually win. we need to face the facts with the regulations that we have in the u.s., with the union demands, china, and others, are going to be able to make cheaper products, cheaper financially, and cheaper quality. so sometimes that works and sometimes that doesn't. what we have to be able to do is look at the longer term benefits of free trade because we will win the united states will win and we will have a net job creation if we can realize that in the long-term more jobs will be created when we take away tariffs, take away government
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intervention. >> all right, and one thing that -- one group the president will have to win over is a group that is often backed -- labor unions, they're worried about issues related to jobs. how does he convince them? >> i don't know. i think we need to find out how our constitution and our judiciary can be protected. that is what will protect workers. these tribunals that the tpp would create, run by the world bank, and the united nations, where companies and investors would go to air their grievances and settle disputes that could override our local, state and federal laws, i think we need some assurances, i think rick would agree with that, our own social contract in america would not be shredded. so if they open up the process, plug up the leaks, empty the bucket, let us see what's in the deal, i think we could all rest assured, i think that way we're not engaging in conjecture and speculation, we don't have enough information. >> even lawmakers are still toying with this saying that's
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one of the big issues, they don't know exactly what is in it. i'll ask you both for a bottom line on the tpp and rick, we'll start with you. >> i agree that we need transparency. we need to know exactly what is in the deal. but we also then need to view the deal from a macro level. we need to make sure that we're not just looking at this from one industry or one congressional district or one loud congressman who is complaining about his district not being able to benefit. let's look at the whole thing and with lots of transparency. >> all right. santina, your bottom line? >> rick, i hear you. i thi i think what is good for one state is good for the rest of the united states of america. let's see what's in it and we can continue this discussion. >> both agree we need a lot more transparency and that seems to be a bipartisan agreement across the board on the hill too. thank you for being with us today. great to see you. >> god bless. thank you, shannon. thank you, rick.
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>> thanks to all. brand-new debate about just what came out of the benghazi hearings with star witness hillary clinton. three days later, the spin continues. we'll take a closer look coming up. was out for a bike ride. i didn't think i'd have a heart attack. but i did. i'm mike, and i'm very much alive. now my doctor recommends a bayer aspirin regimen to help prevent another heart attack. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen.
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of everyday things orencia may help. orencia works differently by targeting a source of ra early in the inflammation process. for many, orencia provides long-term relief of ra symptoms. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection like an open sore, the flu, or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. if you're not getting the relief you need... ask your doctor about orencia. orencia. see your ra in a different way. come on! let's hide in the attic. no. in the basement. why can't we just get in the running car? are you crazy? let's hide behind the chainsaws.
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smart. yeah. ok. if you're in a horror movie, you make poor decisions. it's what you do. this was a good idea. shhhh. be quiet. i'm being quiet. you're breathing on me! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. head for the cemetery! hillary clinton may have spent 11 hours before the benghazi committee, but three days after the spin continues. several members of the committee continued the debate on how she did on the sunday talk show circuit. guerin teddy joins us with the highlights or low lights as they may be. >> chairman trey gowdy said all along that the panel's goal was to figure out how it was they could prevent another attack like this happening. and this morning on nbc's "meet the press," gowdy said to that end, clinton's evasive answers on what she's taken responsibility for didn't help.
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>> my main fear there is how are we better prepared to avoid the next benghazi if we don't fully understand who made the errors and where the errors were made last time. >> on thursday, congressman jim jordan asked the former secretary of state why the administration was publicly blaming the attacks on an interislam video while privately telling her family and egypt's prime minister the attacks had nothing to do with the film. today, he said it was a political pr move. democrat adam shift defended clinton's explanation. >> they knew the truth from the get-go and they didn't level with the american people. and i think they didn't level with the american people because libya was supposed to be their baby. this was supposed to be the shining success story for the clinton state department, the obama white house and they couldn't have a terror attack 56 days before an election. >> it was the best information we had and the fact that was wrong initially didn't change the fact that they were reflecting the best that we knew
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at the time. >> the panel's five democrats are calling on house speaker john boehner to shut down the benghazi committee, but even if he doesn't, they're sticking around to make sure the facts are set straight. >> in many instances we found ourselves having to not defend secretary clinton, but to make sure that the record was complete. and i'm glad that the public had an opportunity to see all of that. >> the committee is hoping to interview as many as 20 more witnesses by the end of the year with the goal, writing its final report next year, hopefully being done and made public sometime next summer. >> just about four years after the attacks. amazing it has taken this long. shannon, what's coming up. the american cancer society made new recommendations regarding breast cancer screenings and stirring up a lot of controversy. one of the leading critics joins us next. what if one piece of kale
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but nancy now a breast cancer survivor herself vowed to continue the fight. she's on a quest to help all women with breast cancer all in the name of her sister susan g. komen. and she's concerned about the new screening guidelines that some believe could leave women at risk. ambassador, thank you very much. >> thank you. >> we got these new guidelines at the end of the week. from the american cancer society. they recommend delaying the start of mammography. spacing it out in older years and also talking about fewer clinical breast exams in a doctor's office. >> right. going back a second to the guidelines. you know they talk about women of average risk. who are those women? no one understands what that means. and if we, you know, we're moving so close to personalized medicine and detection and yet we're moving away from it in a statement like this. and then you know, yeah, talking about clinical breast exams takes a few, maybe two minutes in the doctor's office. i know myself had an incident a few months ago and my gynecologist, thanks heavens, found it. but the point is, we now
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acclimated a whole generation of women got to be saying, okay with knowing their own bodies. they should be sort of assertive about their own care and now we're basically telling them this is a new guideline, adding much more confusion. >> and that's the thing is that we have different groups, giving out different guidelines. >> right. >> women are busy. you know, working and doing everything else, how are they to digest this information so they know what to do? >> exactly. well i would only suggest our website at komen.org. it's a very credible website. but you know, a lot of people don't have access to technology. a lot of people don't have access to care. so now this kind of guideline, wherever they may see it, further confuses them. and continues to exclude them from health care systems, exactly the opposite of what it's intended for. it's truly a conundrum. and you know, all that's really reach down to the real problem underlying this and that is we need much more research for cancer detection, and early treatment, and diagnosis. you know, we can see a few
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grains of sand in the soil on mars. and it's very hard for me to believe that you can't find infallible kinds of breast cancer even with women with dense breasts and blood tests to back it up. this just continues every ten years we have this argument. and it's really about something else. and i think the something else is really doing more research. >> and you have spent a lot of time in raising millions of dollars for that research and we do see some leaps and bounds. people will say, in another five years there will be more. where do you see us going? >> well, that's exactly where we are going. with personalized there are several, maybe other 30 genetic mutations, these kind of genetic tests ought to be affordable and used on practically every woman that we can find. then there's another issue, the women with met static disease, we hoped so many of these women would live years and years longer, when you get to the end the quality of life isn't very good. and we owe the public a lot. all of us who have been raising money and doing this and the
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government has given a lot of money. but we need so much more to benefit. and we're very close. that's the frustration i have. we're suffering in a way that concerns our young scientists. who delivered all the, you know, all the new therapy, and advances in the last five or ten years. and now we're going to be left with very few to do this. it's a real conundrum. make a commitment and we need to follow it through because it still is affecting 235,000 women in america this year. and over 40 or 45,000 of them will die. that's just not acceptable. >> yeah. well you've been such a warrior on this. and there's much more to be done. we thank you for what you've done. bottom line, women need to have this conversation with their doctors. >> right. >> all right. thank you for being with us. we'll be back with much more news right after the break. peni. is not normal, it's extraordinary. because there is no stop in us. or you. only go.
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it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than cold medicine alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and say goodnight mouthbreathers. breathe right rain in washington, d.c. this morning didn't stop a number of pavement pounders an. estimated 30,000 people, neither shannon nor i were among them, who ran the 26.2 miles to washington, d.c. and northern virginia to complete the annual marine corps marathon. the marathon is nicknamed the people's marathon. not only for its friendly atmosphere, all of us are so friendly. and it is run in military remembrance. this was the marathon's 40th anniversary. >> and a different parade, dogs of all shapes and sizes in their best howl-oween garb.
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saturday's 25th annual halloween dog parade in new york. you had dinosaurs, you had all kinds there. lots of fun. be safe this weekend. >> have a great weekend. see you guys. i'm chris wallace. ben carson surges in iowa. taking the front-runner spot from donald trump. >> i think a lot of people in the country realize that we're in critical condition. >> we'll sit down with the gop presidential candidate to discuss the latest surprise in the year of the outsider. then, it was one of the most dramatic moments of hillary clinton's testimony on benghazi. >> you tell the american people one thing, you tell your family an entirely different story. >> i think if you look at the statement that i made, i clearly said that it was an attack. >> calling it an attack is like saying the sky is blue. of course it was an attack. >> we'll talk with congressman jim jordan, a member of the
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