tv Fox Report Sunday FOX News March 6, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm PST
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presidential candidates hillary clinton and bernie sanders. it's clinton's first appearance on fox news in two years. and that's it for today. have a great week. and we'll see you next fox news sunday. fox news alert. first pictures coming into "fox report" as we pick up the coverage from earlier today. the loss of our nation's former first lady nancy reagan. this is the hearse pulling into view now as it arrives at a funeral home in santa monica, california, in the past hour from the reagan home in bel-air, california. mrs. reagan, the wife of america's 40th president, died today from heart failure. she was 94 kbr. their marriage, once described as the greatest love affair. during her time in public life, mrs. reagan was known as a fierce champion for veterans. the elderly, and people struggling with physical and
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mental challenges. her iconic just say no campaign warned kids about the dangers of drug addiction. so many memories from so many people who knew the reagans well. >> he always has this tremendous optimism. and nancy reagan had a great antenna, both politically, and in terms of persons, what their motives were and how they might be using him or trying to use him for their own purposes. >> when she had any kind of problems, she just focused on fixing it. getting through it. i've never seen anybody who was better at that. >> despite her own personal difficulties, she really performed as the first lady as she always had with a great deal of elegance and grace. >> many of us remember covering her visit to president reagan's grave side a couple of years ago on the tenth anniversary of his death. now we understand they will be buried alongside one another. william has been on it since it
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broke this morning. >> reporter: dignified, gracious, devoted, all words we've heard used to describe nancy reagan. she'll be remembered from everything from the anti-drug campaign to her elegant clothing. but for more, it will be this image, a symbol of her love affair with ronald reagan. she finally broke down and said her final goodbye to president reagan when he was laid to rest in 2004. mrs. reagan died this morning at her home in bel-air at age 94. she and ronnie moved here in 1988. it's the same house where president reagan died. a hearse came at 9:30 this morning followed by some family and friends and it left about five hours later and arrived at a mortuary here in santa monica, where she will remain for days, exclusive to family, before she is transferred to be buried
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beside ronald reagan. frail and in declining health, she was last seen publicly in june 2014, ten years on the anniversary of president reagan's death. she was last interviewed by "vanity fair" in 2009, where she talked about her life, his legacy, including his fight with alzheimer's, which at the time of the diagnosis, was still a relatively unfamiliar disease. >> it was what she described as the long goodbye, how difficult that was for her. but i think she did it with great dignity. i think she preserved his dignity. it's a part of her legacy, something she will always be remembered for. >> mrs. reagan was an only child, born in new york city. her parents divorced, her mother remarried and nancy took the last name of her adoptive father, dr. loyal davis. she was a graduate of smith college. went to hollywood, made 11 movies and that is where she met ronald reagan, who at the time was the head of the screen actors guild. they had two children. patty davis and ron jr.
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we do not know the exact day where mrs. reagan will be transferred from this mortuary in santa monica up to the library, where we are told she will likely remain in repose for one day. the public will have the opportunity to pay their respects. harris, we expect people from around the world, really, to come to the service. she has asked that in lieu of flowers, that people make a donation to the library, which is really where she spent her last years preserving really and promoting the president's legacy. back to you. >> thank you very much. a chance now to talk with my friend and the reagans' friend, ed rollins, who was a white house adviser to president reagan during both his terms in office. always good to see you. >> thank you very much. >> get your perspective tonight. i've heard you say obviously he was a president, but she had tremendous political instincts. what did you witness? >> i worked very closely with her. she had extraordinary instincts. she was very much a people person, not that the president wasn't. but she reached out. she was on the phone all the time talking to her friends
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around the country and she had thousands of friends everywhere. she had a great antenna. she understood public relations better than anybody. she cared very much about the issues. she didn't drive the issues. he drove the issues. she was extremely supportive. and i think we're celebrating a magnificent life. obviously the last ten, 12 years have been very difficult. but she was never afraid of a fight. never afraid of supporting her husband. and i can tell you, he told me that he would not have run for president after 1976 when he lost to gerald ford by 117 votes. he said i've sort of made the mission, took the shot at it, didn't think he had to be president for destiny. she was the one who said the country desperately needs you and really basically persuaded him. after he was shot, she basically in 1984, the campaign i ran, i was in the white house, and she said she was very concerned. she was very worried about his health. their friend had been murdered. the pope had been shot. she said we sort of accomplished everything we came here to accomplish. why don't we go back home? and he just felt there was more
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he had to do to finish the agenda and she basically bought into it and was a great ally and what have you. >> how interesting how things changed. she was propelling him to go back and refight, and then she was ready to fight, but he wasn't done yet. you just heard william talk about the fact that she became a protector, if you will, of his legacy. how do you think nancy would want her husband to be remembered? >> i think they would both be shocked to realize how great the legacy is. he didn't care about the legsy. he said to me one time, he said history's going to be distorted when they write it. i really don't care. i won't be around for it. she cared deeply. she knew what he had done for the country and she felt it was very, very important, that he be rewarded. so she was sort of the keeper of the flame. she was his protector. she protected him personally. she made sure that we on the staff knew what we should be doing a it right. and obviously in a power place like a white house, there's all
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kinds of pushing and shoving. she made sure that never affected the way he made decisions. and i'll never forget in materially days of the administration, the person that was a staff secretary was sending um reams of paper every night. so he'd stay up until 1:00 in the morning reading all these papers. she finally came down and said enough, enough, enough. she said i want him in bed by 8:30, 9:00. so basically get it -- she was very much the protector. >> get it done. >> i think he wouldn't have been president without her. i think he wouldn't have been the great president that he was without her. i think the country owes her a great debt. >> just one last question for you. i know so much of their life was public, but you knew them in private moments, too. was there a favorite story that you have that you can share about nancy? >> well, she basically -- she didn't like the ranch. everybody thinks the ranch is dallas. it was a stucco house. had rattlesnakes around it, flies and what have you. so he said to me one time. he said for every ten days i get
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on the ranch, she gets a week in beverly hills. which was not a bad way to end up. but he loved the ranch. she was a great sport. she could take them out there any time they wanted. but it was a dirty -- it was a ranch. some guys like that. but she was always -- one of my favorite stories is he had been planning to work on the roof. he was going to put a new roof on the ranch in 1985. so she was worried about him falling off the roof and breaking something. >> good idea. >> she called out there to barney, the ranch foreman, and said barney, get that roof done before we get out there. so they get off the airplane, we come running down, he's all ready to go. he sees the roof's been put on. he found out nancy had done that. he says take it down. so we tore the roof off. barney and me did. and they put it back on. >> because he wanted to do it. >> she called me. i was the acting chief of staff. said what are you doing? i had that roof put on. he's the president, he's in charge. >> that is a good one. ed rollins, thank you. i knew you would lighten the moment for us. >> she had a great life and she
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was a great contribution to the country. >> amen. >> thank you. now to an election year that has looked nothing like the 1980s or probably any other decade for that matter that we've seen. and what appears to be new momentum now for the opponents of donald trump. it's turned out to be a big weekend in the nomination race. trump's delegate lead shrinking a bit with senator ted cruz now solidly in second place after winning two state contests yesterday. donald trump won the other two states. marco rubio is in third in the delegate koupcount and picked u wins in puerto rico. puerto rico citizens, by the way, don't participate in the general election, but they do get to play in the primaries for both the democrats and the republicans. ohio governor john kasich is in fourth place in the delegate count. and going forward, things get, well, really interesting. on tuesday, four more states up for grabs. michigan, idaho, hawaii, and mississippi. and on the 15th, kind of a super tuesday part two. five states to battle over. among them, ohio and florida. winner take all.
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ohio governor john kasich. florida senator marco rubio. must win their home states. and those states also essential to those in the republican party who wish to try to stop donald trump from clinching the republican nomination before the convention in cleveland. chief political correspondent kacarl cameron is live with allf it for us tonight in detroit, michigan. what does the rubio win in puerto rico mean overall for his campaign and then going forward in the race? >> reporter: well, it's oxygen really. he had a bad day yesterday. as you said, donald trump and ted cruz each picked up two states, and marco rubio came in third in all but one, that was maine, in he came in fourth, even behind john kasich. he campaigned in puerto rico yesterday. so today's victory gives him a shot at getting back into the hunt. and this is his first primary win. he did win the minnesota caucuses, so he's got one in each column. but he's still very much behind. and it's an important -- a really important week for him. he wants to make sure that he
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gets himself set up to go and win florida a week from this coming tuesday. so the win is very, very helpful. but he's got a very steep hill to climb. >> so the race where you are right now in michigan, tell us about it. >> well, michigan is a big delegate burst coming up on tuesday with 59 delegates. it's a heartland midwestern industrial state, right next to ohio, so it's a very big deal for john kasich. he said earlier in the campaign that he thought he could win in michigan. that is not the case, according to the latest maris poll. you can see that donald trump has a big lead. that ted cruz and marco rubio are competing for second in a very close race. john kasich is a distant fourth. that is not at all what he was hoping for. and if donald trump were to pull off a victory in michigan on tuesday night, that would be yet another big boost to his momentum, and the possibility that he could be getting closer and closer to putting the nomination out of reach. having said that, none of the candidates, ted cruz, marco rubio, or john kasich are showing any indications that they intend to get out of the
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race. they're both putting -- they're all putting pressure on one another for others to get out. at the same time, they're suggesting if they all stay in, that might make it more possible to deny donald trump the necessary delegates to actually clinch the nomination. >> kind of two schools of thought there. before i let you go, can we get back to puerto rico for one second? one thing that i was reading today, tell me if this is important. so about 6,000 inmates in puerto rico are part of this primary vote today. what to make of that? >> well, it's one of the states that has allowed inmates to vote. this is a primary. but it's one that doesn't bleed into the general election. territorial voters don't get to participate either as a voting member of congress, or when it comes to the presidency. so it's an interesting social experiment that played out obviously today in the primaries. but as a practical matter in general election politics, inmates and felons are still
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very much influx as to whether or not they're allowed to vote. that's something that's state by state. and puerto rico being a territory obviously is in a category quite different. >> they thought they would try that with thousands of them. carl, always good to see you. thank you very much. and that that we've been talking about, just some of the developing stories we'll get to with the fox news political insiders on this very busy news day, will hit the so-called never trump movement and ask if it's gaining some traction. and we'll talk about the fallout from the caucuses and primaries this weekend, which carl gave us a little bit of a primer on. and preview the big contests that are popping up next. you're watching "the "fox report"." i'm harris faulkner. rformance sales event is on. with extraordinary offers on the visionary ls, the generously appointed es and the new, eight-passenger lx. ♪ this is the pursuit of perfection. frequent heartburn brand in america.
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saturday. she now has 1,121 delegates, about half the total needed. sanders is far behind that with 481 according to associated press. mike emanuel with us in flint. mike? >> reporter: hillary clinton is hoping for a decisive win here in the rust belt, while bernie sanders is trying to stop her momentum. we saw hillary clinton visit three churches in detroit earlier today. her message is trying to drive turnout. talking about economic issues. and clinton also made message to the water crisis here in flint. >> in part, we have to fix the pipes that carry the water that became contaminated with lead. that should be under way right now. but we also have to fix the lines. there is no safe level of lead. >> reporter: sanders keeps hammering away at hillary clinton's support of free trade deals over the years, which he
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argues have been terrible for workers here in the midwest. >> there is no doubt, i don't think anyone debates this, that these disastrous trade policies, nafta, permanent normal trade relations with china, have cost this country millions of decent paying jobs and resulted in a race to the bottom where many of the new jobs being created pay significantly less than those jobs used to pay years ago. >> reporter: expect questions about the economic crisis and broader economic issues when those two candidates face off later tonight. harris? >> starting to sound a little bit like donald trump there talking about trade. on the sunday shows today, it was interesting. mrs. clinton said something about the e-mail scandal. she says, i think we're getting closer and closer to wrapping this up. is that just optimism or is there news there? >> well, you know, "the washington post" did an investigation looking at thousands of her e-mail chains during her time as secretary of
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state. it sound that 104 e-mails that clinton authored are now deemed classified. today, clinton down played the significance. >> we're getting closer and closer to wrapping this up. i also know that there were reports today about the hundreds of officials and the thousand e-mails that they were sending back and forth that have been looked at and classified retroactively. >> reporter: clinton is said to have a comfortable lead here in michigan. we will see if bernie sanders gets tougher with her about that issue or any other issue between now and when michigan voters vote on primary day, tuesday. >> so the spin is there are thousands, but you only found 104. >> reporter: that she personally authored, yes. there are lots of other ones that went through her home server, but they're saying 104 that she authored herself that are now deemed classified
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information. >> mike emanuel, thank you very much. don't miss special report tomorrow. hillary clinton, bernie sanders taking part in a fox news town hall, live from flint, michigan. bret baier moderating. it all kicks off monday, 6:00 p.m. eastern, right here on fox news channel. don't miss it. the people of puerto rico make their voices heard in the race for the white house. we've been talking about it. brian yanis is in our newsroom now with more on that. >> reporter: florida senator marco rubio wins florida's primary, and how is that going to affect the race in florida? i'll have the very latest next. >> thanks a lot. plus, our coverage of the passing of the former first lady nancy reagan when we come back.
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all right, we get to dig a little deeper on "fox report" on sunday nights. marco rubio is said he has to win florida. will rubio help him out? reporting it's like oxygen his victory there. brian yanis takes a closer look at the territory he's won. and the only u.s. state he's won is minnesota. >> 23 delegates may not seem like a lot, but that's more delegates at stake than in vermont and just as many as new hampshire. today's win in puerto rico is important for senator marco rubio, who desperately needs delegates. he's currently sitting in a distant third. rubio is the only republican candidate to campaign in puerto rico. this win is also significant because it could influence votes in his home state of florida. seen as a must-win for the
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senator on march 15th. according to pew research center, there are a million puerto ricans living in >> there's several hundred thousand that have moved to the i-4 corridor in florida. a very important swing state. these people come from puerto rico who aren't necessarily republicans or democrats. so they're up in the air. and they can be swayed -- i wouldn't say easily, but they can be swayed. >> reporter: today's republican primary is particularly significant to puerto ricans who are going through an economic crisis, teetering on a humanitarian one. the island is $70 billion in debt. for 3.5 million puerto ricans, today is meaningful because it's the only time the commonwealth's vote counts in the presidential election. >> they don't really have a lot of say. they don't have a representative in congress who has a voting record. they can't vote in a general election. so if they're going to participate in the electoral process for president of the united states, this is their time. >> rubio has called for leadership change on the island. not bankruptcy protections to
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help solve the financial crisis. the democratic primary is on june 5th. harris? >> brian, thank you. fox top story this hour, the nation mourning the former first lady. nancy reagan died at her home in bel-air, california, earlier today. known as an adoring wife who brought classic hollywood glamour to the white house. she wrote, "my life didn't really begin until i met ronnie." those who knew them well say he felt the very same way about her. >> they were the most married couple i've ever met. they would be sitting together in a room, and ronald reagan would write her love notes across the room. he once wrote five words that i think it's fair to say changed two lives, our country, and the world. five words were, "and then along came nancy." >> more on the legacy mrs. reagan leaves behind. stay close. i take pictures of sunrises,
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(neighbor) we live right there. (dad) salted meats? (neighbor) no thank you. (dad) hats then! (vo) don't be a settler, get a $100 reward card when you switch to directv. the tone of the political landscape has so changed in recent years. we've been talking about the passing of nancy reagan. the news comes during a huge political season. let's bring in the fox news political insiders, doug shone, former pollster for president clinton, and joining us via satellite tonight. hello, my friend. former republican for new york, and pat caddell, former pollster
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for president jimmy carter and fox news contributor. top of the news on your mind this sunday? >> well, i think we'll get into it. but a tightening in the republican race. trump still in strong but somewhat eroding position. big questions about hillary clinton's position. also more secure based on republican discord. >> pat? >> we are in a historic moment that we will recognize later on and events are in the saddle. and we are in for a ride. >> i think donald trump's campaign is at a turning point. >> really? which direction? >> it's up to him. >> oh. intrigue. what do you mean? >> he has done an unbelievable job from day one to get to where he is today. which is he's leading obviously with 35% of the republican or the vote altogether.
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he's sort of mired there. john sears said it once to me, and to many people, that campaigns need to keep moving. can't stay the same. got to move. and it's time for the donald to do a little bit more of what we've said. less of the political invective against his opponents and more -- if he wants to vet the anger of the people, let's do it at the corrupt establishment. let's do it at these trade deals. there are legitimate targets. let's go after government corruption throughout the whole thing. and go high, not low. if he does that, he's at 35, he'll go up to 40, he'll go higher. but he's got to raise his game to get there. >> pat? >> well, to support this point, donald trump did something i've never seen happen. he started the race from high negatives. and he managed to reverse those over the fall. no one has ever done that in my -- i mean, a lot of people were shocked. now, since january, he's been really piling up particularly the negatives in the general. it goes to what you said.
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but here's where we are historically, which i wanted to say. we are at a point where the public -- we've got this all wrong. donald trump is not the independent variable. he's not category fivie in driv. the people are driving this because they want their government back in their country. both republicans, democrats, independents. he is the vessel. they are the independent variable. and he is the dependent variable. and we do not yet know what will happen. i'll explain why in a second, because it's very important. >> i'm going to turn to twitter for just a second here. we're seeing a little bit of a trend. stanley picked up on some language that i had earlier this hour, saying i was promoting what we were going to be talking about. he says why do you speak of a #nevertrump as a movement? but it has been talked about that way, because it would seem like there are forces from all different areas, and that's exactly what you guy s have bee
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talking about. >> that's exactly right. let me be pretty brief on this. there are a bunch of super pacs that are forming. former supporters of jeb bush and others. to stop donald trump explicitly. it's clear that that's going on. the establishment via mitt romney is certainly doing that. and between john kasich in ohio and marco rubio in florida, you have the vehicles to block trump, whether that will happen, that is the big question, along with michigan on tuesday. >> all right. we have a little bit of donald trump and his description of what's happening right now. can we watch? >> the republicans are eating their own. they've got to be very careful. we have to bring things together. now i hear if we, not me. if we win. look at these crowds. look at this. it's packed. this convention hall. i wish the cameras would spin around and show those upper d k
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decks. on top of that, there are thousands of people outside. >> i've been saying it for weeks. what happens when the american voter feels left out of this process? >> i don't think they do feel left out. we've got more people voting in the republican primaries than we've had in a long time. and it is partly or mostly the donald who's brought them in. >> you think he's right about eating their own with the establishment? >> definitely. but everybody's eating their own. they smell victory, and they smell defeat. the establishment smells defeat. they're losing control of their positions. >> but things are tighting. you said it. >> they're too -- there are two phenomena. with romney, and his campaign manager who decided he needed to make money. and you have all these people, like murphy made millions off bush. give us some money, we'll stop him and attack him. that kind of advertising hasn't
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worked. real events have worked. but let me just say something. you want to talk about con artists? a party leadership, which tells its people that it will be against obamacare, will not fund immigration and then does. a party out of control. the republican base -- and i said this on this program at the end of 2014. if you remember. that the republican party was about to split apart between its base and its people. now, all the people who want to first of all preserve their relationships at all cost, those corrupt arrangements that they have in washington, they are now thre threatened. my god, the barbarians are at the gate. we must kill this. so they would rather have hillary clinton, some of these people. >> they actually say it. >> so they can preserve their power. >> so what do you say to those people who are on the trump train? i want to read from rebecca brown now. that's a movement, too.
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for trump. >> listen. let me tell you this about trump himself the candidate. it's very hard when you're a candidate to really see what you're involved in. you're so close to it. you're giving these speeches. you're physically exhausted all day. all the travelling they do. i don't think he quite has got the big picture of what he's got to do. he's got the people, they love him. he said it. my voters won't leave me even if i go out and fifth avenue and shoot somebody, right? but he needs more than these people. >> are you surprised that somebody from within the establishment has not gone over and said look, let me help you get this done? because we're seeing that. >> he wouldn't listen to them. i think candidates, they all do the same thing. they start out, people say you can never win, you're a loser, you'll never make it. and you get a thick skin and you say i'm not going to listen to these people. and he has done this himself. no pollsters, no advisers. >> when we come back, i want to talk about ted cruz and some of the lang wanl he's used that some people are saying look, that's more positive.uage he's e
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it was super saturday yesterday, and the states were split for donald trump and ted cruz. cruz tightening the gap of the number of delegates. john, you were talking a little bit about this. and something that's happening behind the scenes, you mentioned senator lindsey graham. why is that significant? >> i think we've seen a huge change in the last week. lindsey graham is an establishment republican. hates trump. says i'll do anything to stop trump. and he has now come to the position -- >> he said the same thing about cruz. >> he did. can't stand him. he now says if i have to, i'll go with cruz to stop trump. >> so what's different? >> i think the establishment is
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so apoplectic that they will hold their breath and go with cruz. >> deanne says i stand with ted cruz and #nevertrump. >> that is a correct thing. >> good for the viewer? >> that cruz is running an ideological insurgency. >> what's working about it right now? >> trump is running a populist insurgent and he's getting all these people that aren't republicans to come vote for him. cruz is going goldwater reagan. >> all right, doug, your thoughts on what's working for cruz right now? >> well, first, he is still running an anti-establishment campaign. that's for sure. but he's basically advertising to the establishment that he's their only alternative. other than lindsey graham, mitt romney had a few encouraging words as well. so what cruz is trying to do is get down to a one-on-one with donald trump. say to the establishment and
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everyone who's against trump, i am equally anti-establishment, but i am somebody who can beat the dreaded donald trump and keep the republican party together. so he is morphing his candidacy all the while not trying to change his basic message. >> pat? >> look, establishment candidates have been wiped out, starting with bush, which we pass over like it never happened. $150 million. we now have the two insurgents who are dominating. but as you just said, john, cruz is running him out. logical first. return to the old faith. trump doesn't look like a typical conservative. is campaigning about the big things for people. and that brings me to my point about how the development of the presidential campaign goes from my real experience.
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that is what i would call a threshold of acceptability. people start at different levels with the frontrunners. we had the period where i thought right off at iowa, we weren't going to run awi with this and they didn't. they used cruz to stop that. second, they went back to him because they wanted to reinforce what they like about the big message. but now, he is at the point where it's not about sending a message, it's about whether he could be president. and so, his need to make that evolutionary move is critical. right now, cruz is running as the anti-trump. so the question is, if he gets ahead, he'll have this problem. but right now for trump, who is at a dynamic revolutionary moment, events are in the saddle and we don't know what's going to happen. it is much up to him whether he does this or begins to fall. he really did drop in louisiana. >> there may be some evidence of dropping in michigan. maybe. since the debate the other night. >> you say there are some ways that he can shore up.
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is it time for donald trump to do something like a statesman's speech? or is that too much like a politician? >> i wouldn't mind it. little things that pat and i talked about in the green room that we would do if we were involved, we'd take the blackberry away and we wouldn't let him tweet all the time. without the tweets being checked. >> but his followers love that. >> but we need more than the followers. >> i want to get to marco rubio with you, doug, if we can. we had carl cameron looking at what was happening as we were coming to air tonight. we covered it quite a bit. puerto rico doesn't play a part in november, just in the primary season. they send 23 delegates to the convention, but the electorate doesn't actually vote in november. do you think he's picking up steam? these guys are laughing. >> i think it actually matters in a slightly different way,
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harris. this keeps him viable in florida. it gives him good press, even if the delegate numbers are not all that significant. and with cruz having decided he's going to compete in florida, it divides the anti-trump vote. and ultimately, i think will help donald on march 15th, that you have two viable opponents there working hard to beat him. >> one thing i will agree absolutely with is cruz's strength -- this idea that there's a coordination going on. ambition trumps anything -- pardon me. i didn't mean that as a pun. but cruz has decided to go into florida. he's going to florida for one reason, to kill rubio off. so he can be -- >> both asked for rubio to get out of the race. both trump and cruz. >> but they know he's not. >> not until florida. >> and they want him out. >> it's also possible that rubio could win florida. my sister lives there, she says every time she puts the tv on, four anti-trump ads are running
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constantly. >> trump's campaign i don't think is spending the money. >> no pro-trump ads anywhere. >> or even challenging the opposition ads. >> how about trump for president, cruz for vp? would that move into a brokered convention? real quick. doug, yes or no? >> i thought it was likely a month or so ago. given the vitriol between the two. trump calling him lying ted, i don't think it's going to happen. >> we're coming right back. stay with us. every mom is a working mom... and it's working moms everywhere who inspired us to work harder. that's why we are putting more food in our salisbury steak dinners and making chicken strips with 100% natural chicken breast. now serving... a better banquet.
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>> a lot of integrity is what i'm seeing on twitter. maybe not his right time. >> it wasn't the right time. let me tell you, the fact that he was running as well as he was in the polls as another kind of outsider, and a decency, it appealed to many people. >> you think that will come back? >> i think it should come back. >> they want it. >> let's get to the democrats. i want to go to you first, doug. i don't know if you heard your friend say this. hillary clinton says they're getting closer and closer to wrapping up this whole e-mail scandal, this pesky thing. i'm paraphrasing the pesky part. >> well, the news of last week, as much as i am for hillary clinton and believe she's advantaged by republican division, but the news of last week with mr. pagliano to have immunity, three aides to be interviewed in her -- did not suggest to me that it's going to be wrapped up any time in the next couple of months. could run into may or june. and candidly, i think that it
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remains a serious problem for her. probably more serious than bernie sanders in terms of the nomination and election. >> pat, how do you account for the crowds that are still coming out for sanders? >> because there is -- inside the democratic party, as tightly as it's being applied, we have a corrupt system of super delegates who are there to rig the system. the entire establishment, his message still resonates. we're about to go to a critical test for him. and that test is michigan as it is for trump. what is going to happen in a state where trade -- got a survey at the end of this week about this. it's a major shock of how big an issue this now represents the economy. democrats in michigan care deeply about it. trump speaks to those people, so does bernie sanders. so we will find -- michigan is going to be a warm-up for krogrd zero for the next week. if bernie sanders can do well,
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come very close or pull that off, then he goes to ohio and does the same. >> if kasich were to win michigan, that is huge for him going into ohio. >> we haven't talked about kasich. we have about 30 seconds left. i'm curious to get your point of view on this. so if trump does not get the 1,237 delegates going into the convention, which it sounds like others are trying to keep him from getting there in some configuration. if that doesn't happen, you get to the convention and pretty much i guess anybody could be up. i don't know if mitt romney was floating a trial balloon or what the heck he was doing, or if it could be john kasich, who gets a lot of democrats. >> it could be anybody who's running. we know that. any of the four. but they can change the rules. and shoe horn someone in if they try to. >> you cannot take someone who isn't winning and hand them the nomination without blowing the party clean up. secondly, it is in donald trump's hands. if he moves this campaign -- we were talking about ted cruz. the ideological argument is a weaker argument in the
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insurgency, then the populism. the big thing of american decline. of an establishment that's caused 68% of the people to think that we're falling apart in america. he has the bigger message, question is, is he going to get to it. >> i want to get this tweet in. fr francine alba. both sides are knee deep in controversy. interesting perspective. we're coming right back. terrific. thank you, doug. sales event is on. with extraordinary offers on the exhilarating is... the thrilling gs... and the powerful rc coupe. ♪ this is the pursuit of perfection. helps preparey themng right for a healthy future. but up to 90% fall short in getting key nutrients ... ...from food alone. let's do more. add one a day men's ... ...complete multivitamin. with vitamin d and magnesium
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to help support healthy blood pressure. one a day. i use what's already inside me to reach my goals. so i liked when my doctor told me i may reach my blood sugar and a1c goals by activating what's within me. with once-weekly trulicity. trulicity is not insulin. it helps activate my body to do what it's supposed to do release its own insulin. trulicity responds when my blood sugar rises. i take it once a week, and it works 24/7. it comes in an easy-to-use pen and i may even lose a little weight. trulicity is a once-weekly injectable prescription medicine to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. it should be used along with diet and exercise. trulicity is not recommended as the first medicine to treat diabetes and should not be used by people with severe stomach or intestinal problems, or people with type i diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. trulicity is not insulin and has not been studied with long-acting insulin.
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and click to activate your within. at safelite,oh nonow how busy your life can be. this mom didn't have time to worry about a cracked windshield. so she scheduled at safelite.com and with safelite's exclusive "on my way text" she knew exactly when i'd be there. so she didn't miss a single shot. (cheering crowd) i replaced her windshield... giving her more time for what matters most... how'd ya do? we won! nice! that's another safelite advantage. thank you so much! (team sing) ♪safelite repair, safelite replace.♪ quick final thought. pat? >> it is all michigan and michigan and michigan. and the debate tonight is important. >> democratic debate. >> tonight, and the town meeting tomorrow that fox has with hillary. and with sanders. >> hosted by bret baier, 6:00 p.m. eastern. >> that's right. >> and the debate thursday, if there is one. >> that's what i'm looking at.
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trump needs to do differently in the debate thursday night. needs to listen to us. change the jiggering of his campaign a little bit. >> pat, you say don't participate. you say do better. real quickly, what you're watching for this week. >> two things. in michigan, how close bernie sanders comes. and in michigan, how close is the race between kasich and trump. >> have a great week, everybody. thank you. good evening, and welcome to the fabulous fox theatre in downtown detroit. i'm megyn kelly, along with my co-moderators bret baier and chris wallace. >> 59 republican delegates are at stake here in the state of michigan during next tuesday's republican primary, the biggest prize out of four states holding
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contests that day. for tonight's debate, we're partnering with facebook. the conversation about this election has been intense. as the crowd is here. as the crowd is here. [chanting] >> january 1st, 53 million people in the u.s. had been talking about the election on facebook. >> tonight, there are just four candidates on the stage. their position has been determined by their standing in an average of the five most recent national polls as recognized by fox news and conducted and released by march 1st. here they are. businessman donald trump. [cheers and applause] >> texas senator ted cruz. [cheers and applause] >> florida senator marco rubio. [cheers and applause] >> and ohio governor john kasich. [cheers and applause] >> tonight's rules are simple. up to 60 seconds for each answer. 30 seconds for each follow-up response. and if a candidate goes over the allotted time, you will hear this.
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[bell] >> so pleasant. >> we have a big crowd here. and while we expect the audience to be enthusiastic and responsive at times. and they have already been. we also expect them to it be respectful and we want the candidates to get their full time so somewhere between a library and a red wing's game. am i right? [cheers] >> let's get started. >> mr. trump, as you may have heard, the 2012 republican nominee for president mitt romney had some things to say about you today. [crowd boos] he said your domestic policy will lead to recession. he said your foreign policy will make us less safe, and then he listed what he said are your personal qualities, quoting now romney on trump, quote: the bullying, the greed, the showing off, the mi
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