tv Outnumbered FOX News March 9, 2016 9:00am-10:01am PST
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best to argue to voters that he should be the one to grab their votes , those who would obviously prefer not to see donald trump win the nominatio . jenna: we will see if his argument works. we will see back here in an hour. jon: outnumbered coming up now. >> we begin with a fox news alert and we want to draw our attention now to a family ceremony getting ready to happen for nancy reagan, the former first lady who passed away on sunday of heart failure. this is santa monica california outside the funeral home where the casket of nancy reagan will relieve in the next little bit but we are kicking off three days of formal morning for nancy reagan with the family arriving at the gates mueller murphy funeral home in santa monica. that's a short drive to their home in bel air so as the family arrives and pulls into the picture, that's where we are watching. we don't know exactly when this will happen. we are anticipating in the next
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five minutes the casket will emerge carried by the secret service agents who worked on her detail. the motorcade will then depart simi valley and that drive is about a 45 mile drive. they later alive at the reagan presidential library. the casket carried in to the library lobby and that's where the public viewing, the line in repose will begin. this kicks everything off and as it's happening this morning and this afternoon, morningon the west coast, we bring it to you life . >> this is outnumbered. you're with us today are sandra smith and democratic strategist and fox news contributor julie regency and today's hashtag, one lucky guy. cohost of after the foul on
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foxbusiness and a host of forbes on fox. you wake up with him on saturday morning. i know i do. welcome back. >> wait to behere. yesterday you had my godfather on . kind of unofficially. we've known each other 30 years. >> he's at least a good friend. >> guiding me in certain areas as you know, he's a catholic and i'm not there but he's hoping and praying i will be someday. >> such a spiritual guy. who knew? >> a big night in the race for the white house. republican front-runner donald trump racking up three more wins in mississippi, hawaii and the crown jewel of the night, michigan. ernie sanders rolling to a surprise victory in michigan where many polls showed hillary clinton was leading by double digits. at a press conference from one of his golf resorts in florida, donald trump had a message for
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his candidacy. the answer is not 100%, but largely i would say yes. largely i would like to do that. believe it or not, i'm a unifier. you look at all the things i built all over the world. i'm a unifier, i get along with people. andrea: ted cruz able to chalk up a win in idaho. but it was so bad for rubio that so far he has failed to qualify for a single delegate in all four states up for grabs. this reportedly prompting rubio's advisers into sufficient conversations on whether he should drop out before florida to avoid a similar loss. donald trump, resounding
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definitive win. he won with evangelicals in mississippi. democrats in michigan. he seems to be capturing both of them. david: the reagan democrats, we haven't seen reagan democrats since reagan. george w. brought a few over when he was elected in 2000. but not like the donald is doing. the republican party would be crazy not to recognize the power of that. does anybody believe ted cruz would bring over any moderate democrats as crossover to the republican party? i don't think so. i love how he says i'm a unifier in his speech. did you notice he was serving trump steaks with trump water and trump wine. a direct reback to you the establishment questioning whether he had failures in those areas.
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andrea: one comment was it was one part political speech and one part qvc. americans like qvc. >> and they like capitalism. that pushes in the face of voters something they love about donald trump and that's that he's a businessman. i want to talk about the field. when you look down at the night marco rubio and john kasich had. in michigan when you look at the late deciding voters. four out of 10 voters in the michigan republican primary said they made up their mind in the past week. that's astounding to me. 40 per of voters were undecided last week and made their decision. that benefited john kasich the most. he picked up 35% of their vote. donald trump only got 8% of
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late-deciding republican voters. david: kasich was -- it looked like kasich was in the lead in the beginning but he came out second. michigan is on top of ohio, so there is a lot of crossover between the states. it looks like people just don't know. some people are instinctively drawn to trump. they love the fact that he doesn't have a politically correct filter at all. they are sick and tired of having somebody point their finger at them for saying something that's politt. but they have concerns. they are concerned about what he says on trade, they are concerned about contradictions in his own lifestyle, that he does outsource a lot of his product well and condemning others for doing the same. andrea: on twitter i saw some people floating the idea of a trump-kasich ticket. an said of his remaining rivals, they are pretty much all gone.
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and dismissed any threat of competition from even a ted cruz. is he right? harris: he went down the recent history of when they were at 17 and now he's at 4. he was drawing attention to where he has been and where the country has been. why is he going to florida now and the primaries in new hampshire. but he's doing it again. last night there was a retired baseball player in the audience. he said you are from ohio. i love ohio. that was tipping his hat toward kasich letting him know, i'm coming there next. if most of the country and we know statistically people like to decide late. if those late deciders aren't breaking toward trump, where are they going? are these people dissatisfied, they won't be voting?
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david: the thing trump did last night by pointing to the baseball player is something you never see cruz do. cruz has never learned to play the crowd the way the donald does. he has decade of experience doing it. harris: would you see him calling out jack nicklaus or talking about the people who won at his golf courses? andrea: he has this ability. he says hostility doesn't work for some people. meaning he can be hostile and others can't, and by that he meant marco rubio. look at this poll. this florida poll. trump is beating marco rubio 40% to 24%. in the sunshine state. a lot of talk about rubio dropping out. but his hostility toward trump
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didn't work. julie: we talked about this on the couch. you can only be true to yourself. marco rubio tried to out-trump trump. it can't be done. marco rubio rrps appeal was he was -- a young guy appealing to the republican party, presentable. he got down in the gutter. that was 100% the beginning of the end. it was just a crazy thing to do and completely contrary to what he stood for. it's not just the former baseball player, paul o'neill, a '9 yankee. harris: i figured other people would know what we were talking about. as we move toward florida, it's winner-take-all. 99 delegates. a good night for marco rubio or maybe not if he doesn't win.
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julie: up of the opinion marco rubio is either trying to win florida which won't be enough. it's only 99 delegates. either he's doing this to deprive trump of a convention win where he wants a brokered convention. but i'll tell you for his personal career, why would you do this? get out now and don't embarrass yourself in your home 8 if you lose. he's done. he's finished in his home state if he doesn't win florida. david: the establishment is already moving to cruz. he got neil bush. harris: you and i watched social media a lot during the big primary event. and he's not doing that. does not not resonate if you are not -- andrea: cruz had the momentum over the week. marco rubio is getting bad
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advice. it was bad advice to not be authentic. whatever his consultants gave him. who knows what advice he's getting. i see the shaping up as a bit of a gender war. a lot of analysts saying trump needs to win women. one big national american. a couple hours ago live here on fox. we are talking about men versus women if it's trump. one massive -- david: she got less than she thought she would. talking about having it all covered when it comes to the presidential election. a prime-time lineup like you have never seen before. our hosts on the road with all the republican candidates tonight. gretta goes on the road and on the record with governor john kasich. 9:00 p.m., megyn kelly with senator ted cruz and back at
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11:00 p.m. with marco rubio. and sean hannity gets the donald. a huge upset in the democratic race. if you were watching last night, bernie sanders coming out on top in a key state. while clinton's national lead is also narrowing. should she be worried? a stunning report revealing how many gitmo detainees released the under obama have returned to terrorism. could this stop the president from shutting down the prison? log onto foxnews.com/"outnumbered." diabetes, steady is exciting.
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stunning considering clinton led by double digits in all 15 polls conducted in the state this year. meanwhile hillary clinton's national lead has slipped to single digits in one major new poll. the "wall street journal"-nbc survey shows clinton with 53% compared to sanders 44 per. how worried should hillary clinton be? david: very. she campaigned like crazy in michigan. she made flint, the water thing, her cause celeb. bernie campaigned a lot, too. the key issue i think, michigan a manufacturing state. he really hammers her on trade deals. trade is the big loser whether hillary or donald are concerned. bernie campaigned hard against trade. the donald is campaigning hard
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against trade. the one thing i should warn everybody. historically speaking. when the world becomes more protectionist, it becomes a more dangerous place. overseas or here where bernie and donald are winning on protectionist issues. i'm with donald in terms of the people getting fed up with the establishment. but i'm worried about protectionism. >> julie, when you look at everybody who took everybody by surprise, considering every poll leading up to this had hillary clinton beating bernie sanders. were there perhaps signs looking back that she was in trouble in the state? >> we talked about this in the break when you asked was anybody surprised. thinking about it i should have been for the reasons you just south lined. michigan is a state that has been tremendously hit because of
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manufacturing and jobs being exported and cars produced in mexico. and you did hear bernie sanders at the fox news town hall hammering that message home, hitting hillary on the fact trade is something she consistently supported. so in retrospect it shouldn't be a surprise. thought it was to me when i saw those results. sandra: does this point to vulnerability? the vulnerability she has with the blue cal r collar -- the blue collar voters. > andrea: she was beaten by an avowed socialist in michigan. they do prop her you have, i think there is panic at dnc. they don't want bernie sanders to get this nomination.
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she has most of the superdelegates. they have this thing, a coronation for her. the clinton camp is so annoyed this is prolonging and protracting her nomination. in a general election i don't think she is as competitive as people think. i think if donald trump continues wins with blue collar voters and has the crossover appeal the "wall street journal" documented, it's trouble tore democrats. julie: she walked out yesterday with more delegates than bernie sanders. she walked out with pledged delegates, not the superdelegates. 88 and bernie 72. on the strength of mississippi mostly. democrats have not won blue collar workers in a long time. she is amassing the obama coalition, african-americans, minorities, the younger voters. as a result of that democrats
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understand in the next election we are not getting blue collar white voters. harris: trump is getting those people. julie: republicans typically do. harris: with bernie sanders, it's that crossover appeal. even though hoik says she can almost feel the pain, but when you make $300,000 for a each, it's hard to connect with people on a real level. not like, you know, dreamy problems, but a real level. >> and won't release the transcripts. sandra: does the gop establishment matter any more. what donald trump and ted cruz say about how much clout party leaders have these days. the nation of iran back at it.
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test firing ballistic missiles with the phrase israel must be wiped out. what you make of this latest provocation and america's response. this little guy is about to make his first deposit. we'd like to open a savings account for him. yes yes. great thanks to mom and dad and their safe driving bonus check from allstate. oh. look at this. safe driving bonus.
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we'll be with him all day as he goes back to taking tylenol. yeah, i was ok, but after lunch my knee started hurting again so... more pills. yep... another pill stop. can i get my aleve back yet? for my pain... i want my aleve. get all day minor arthritis pain relief with an easy open cap. harris: we are continue now. another tough night for the gop establishment as donald trump scores big wins in three of four contests across america. it looks like romney's anti-trump speech may have back fired, mainly for marco rubio. romney's robocall did not seem to help much yesterday either.
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carly fiorina endorsed ted cruz highlighting his independence from the quote d.c. cartel. cruz has yet to get a single endorsement from any of his senate colleagues. after today's rally, he called for the party to rally behind him if they want to stop trump. >> if you don't want to hand the general election to hillary clinton and the democrats on a silver heart. if you are a jeb supporter or marco supporter or kasich supporter, we welcome you to our team. harris: andrea, i know you feel strongly about this. it doesn't matter who you are going to vote for, or what box you are going to check. when someone tells you what you should do -- andrea: the gop voter doesn't want to be told their vote needs to go a certain way and they need to choose a certain brands or flavor of republicans.
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mitt romney, keep those robocalls coming, please. i think this is a fight for the very power and existence of the gop establishment. when you think about it, think about all the lobbyists that would be out of work. harris: i never think about them. andrea: under a president trump they wouldn't have anyone to buy off anymore. national review has become the least influential magazine in the country. they are fighting all these campaign consultant for their very own existence and power and the republican electorate knows that and they are denying them that point. i think it's fantastic. harris: house speaker paul ryan reached out to donald trump. he said he will do it with each of the candidates.
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ted cruz, kasich. all four. and i said on the couch yesterday, does that mean the establishment is feeling the heat, the pressure, or does it mean something else? david: they are feeling the pressure. but all they have -- all they have is cruz. and not only do you have carly going for cruz. neil bush, the brother of jeb bush went tore cruz. he's on the cruz finance committee. i think the establishment is moving to cruz. by the many very interesting that paul ryan being a very savvy political operator understands it very well could be trump and it's time to try to deal with trump rather than just condemn him. harris: john kasich does get crossover votes as well. democrats will say john kasich is not yelling at us and can possibly have crossover appeal.
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julie: john kasich needs to win more than he's winning now to be competitive. he's not resonating the way cruz is. harris: why did they get behind marco rubio? julie: he's one of them. harris: what does that mean? julie: he's young, he draws a contrast with hillary generationally. harris: he's establishment because it's young? julie: those of us who do campaigns for a living. we do a poll. we see what's the republican party missing? it's missing the youth, the demographics, the latinos. he's part of the senate, he's got same campaign, used to work for romney and bush and go to the same golf outings and eat steaks and drink merlot on the
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taxpayers' time or the super pac's dime. julie: ted cruz the most reviled man in washington. the guy that called the senate majority leadered a liar on the floor. they revile him and hate him. this is all they have left. this is the demise of the establishment. david: can i ask andrea a question on this? >> they want to back a winner. we are winning, we are going to win, we are going to keep wing. the republicans put rol mitt roy up there. david: what happens if cruz has the same albatross hanging around his neck which is the
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establishment that marco did. har already not one -- harris: not one single senator will back him. david: neil bush was a game changer for cruz. but could that be more harmful to cruz than helpful? andrea: david, that's such a good point. the more the establishment gets behind ted cruz, to his credit he has been able to put some light between himself and washington, d.c. i think if i'm ted cruz that hurts me. i don't want the endorsements from the dusty beltway folks. but you look at this, it looks like he's going to wrap up this nomination if donald trump does it sooner than the democrats? it would be suicide not to unite behind him. harris: i think where you were going with marco rubio. all the boxes he can check.
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when you look at a guy like a donald trump, who -- at size of those audiences they are almost bernie like in terms of their youth. why wouldn't the establishment see the people backing him. >> if you look at this poll i just mentioned. general election polls make no difference. this is as snapshot in time. but trump received a lower share of white voters than romney, but she received minority voters, young voters as obama did. if i'm a republican, i'm worried. i don't want trump at the top of my ticket. i'm not sure i want cruz at the top of my ticket but i don't want trump at the top of the ticket. sandra: he addressed that at the end of his speech. andrea: a new show of force from
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iran. reportedly test firing two more ballistic missiles with the phrase "israel must be wiped out" written on them in hebrew. this comes as the international atomic energy agency reveals certain agreements in last year's nuclear deals actually make it harder to monitor iran's nuclear program by limiting inspectors' ability to report on potential violations. >> we are united in belief that a nuclear armed iran is absolutely unacceptable to israel, the region and the united states. i want to reiterate. if they break the deal, we will act. andrea: what does "act" mean? david: they are shaking.
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iran is directly -- do you think it was coincidence they lobbed this missile exactly when he was visiting israel? it had written in hebrew the message death to israel. they got exactly what they wanted from the iran deal. the european sanctions are gone. even if we break -- even if we snap back our sanctions. the europeans are not going to snap back theirs. once the oil gets out, once oil gets out in the market it's all over the world. you can't trace where it's from. even if we snap back our sanctions which is what the vp is suggesting we make do, the europeans are not going to do it so they have got what they want. >> do we have anything else up our sleeves? david: i don't know shoafortd an attack against iran which will never happen with president obama, i would say no.
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harris: the gates of hell moment involve paperwork. i don't think they would be scared. plus they have all that money they are getting. but you mentioned the inscription, the hebrew inscription, that's right out of the page of hamas. when they lob across into israel they do the same thing. what's sad about this is the only image that burns into our mind should have been a wake-up call to this administration to this deal and it was not. it was our sailors capitulating on their knees. david: 100%. harris: by the iranian revolutionary guard members. david: nothing is more effective in the middle east than humiliating your enemy. that was the last picture we saw before thing continued to go their way. what do we expect?
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andrea: a lot of people thought that was a thumbing of their nose at the united states of america. and it was done to humiliate. basically a shiia commercial. we are about to get all this money from the united states of america and thumb our nose. if you are going to get a lot of money from someone you don't give them the finger before you get. but this information we learned from the iaea. we weren't supposed to know that. john kasich did this deal. the only reason we know we aren't able to check the violations is because the iaea told us. julie: here is what we know about the whole deal. iran was never going to turn into some great flowering democracy. they are an evil regime that hates us, hates the west and hates our allies in the the middle east. having said that i don't know what the alternative would have
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been. we can't launch a war against iran. i think we have to try this. david: should have kept the sanctions, julie. andrea: congress has to be asleep at the switch. they should subpoena the sailors to find out why they were told to to and down. why isn't congress demanding and why isn't the media asking the questions. stunning new numbers from the obama administration on the growing problem of gitmo detainees returning to the battlefield. live pictures from santa monica, california, where we are awaiting former first lady nancy reagan casket to be transported to the reagan library. we'll bring you that live as it
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>> the obama administration releasing a shocking new report on the number of former guantanamo bay detainee's detected every engaging in terrorism after being released. 12 of the 144 prisoners freed since 2009 return to the battlefield. that is actually double was released in july. the plan to shut down gitmo and transfer dozens of those detainee's on american soil. that is not tremendous. remember what we are being told about the last people at gitmo. in 2009 arguably there were some that would have the same characteristics of the few we are looking at now and that is the worst of the worst.
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it is something to worry about. dave: 204 of the 606 prisoners released are either confirmed or suspected of the engaging, 204 out of 676 is a large number. i have to come back and maybe you can answer is this, president obama care at all that the prisoners being released are going out and killing innocent people? >> i would be a hypocrite if not criticizing obama but criticized bush when he said it is i have been of the opinion from day one in guantanamo you need to drive them. i don't know why they haven't been tried. establish guilt and send them to supermax in the states the way we did with shake muhammed. >> you want to bring them here for trial. >> you can frighten there but they have been kept at guantanamo without trial for a
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decade. is almost impossible to try them at this late date. >> one of reasons the legalities have stopped is they fight to have the same rights people in america have, attorneys jumping on the ship saying slowing down the process. senator grassley today talking with the attorney general loretta lynch, asked could the president use executive action to moved the keys to the u.s.? is didn't directly answer the question but she confirmed it would be illegal under current law to bring those detainees to the u.s. and under current law need to go through -- >> we are talking about 91 detainees that he talked about bringing to the united states. these numbers are astounding george w. bush, we saw this under, the numbers, 118 of 676 prisoners released under both presidents are now confirmed to be engaging in terrorism. asked what point do we ask the current administration is not
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the next going to reassess the situation? >> on top of that we are fighting isis. and potentially some high asset targets there. if we don't kill them and we happen to capture them, where do we put them? do we create something syria? >> it is an important question. what are we doing? with those we are capturing? the obama administration has not told us. a very important question. with regard to gitmo closing, it is obvious the president will use executive action to release these, putting the plan in front of congress is theater. it won't happen. he's doing it to check a box. he is going to use executive action to release them. at least george w. bush used his justice department to prosecute in federal court a lot of these terrorists and with tremendous excess. it is mind-boggling that president obama is releasing these terrorists back to the
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battlefield after we spent so much time -- dave: i just saw the movie judgment at nuremberg. we did that. we tried war criminals in a public situation and it worked great. maybe we should do that again. military tribunal. >> the numbers we're talking about coming here. >> i don't believe -- >> i don't have the number. is not in front of us. >> the administration scrubbing the intelligence reports actively telling intel officers to scrub the intel downplayed the threat of isis. do we think the numbers accident? it is quadruple that. >> part of the president's plan is $400 million for construction. could he get around the legal language for releasing them in the united states. >> he has gone wrong legal language before. >> we will follow the story as it happens and we are all waiting at the presidential library and a rival. what we are looking at is the
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funeral home where nancy reagan's family has gathered, we are waiting for that to emerge as we put in the first that is waiting. we are told about this point this our this private gathering of family and friends would emerge with that casket and they will make it a 45 minute drive to the reagan presidential library at simi valley, calif. where the public will be able to view of the casket, closed casket we are told, that holds nancy reagan. we are covering this as it happens and we will bring it to you live. pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies.
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>> back to santa monica, we are awaiting nancy reagan's casket, some of the family and friends coming out of the funeral home in santa monica where she has been. what we are told is going to happen is they will load the casket up. this has been up private ceremony they have had with family and friends and it started 50 minutes ago. they are running close to on-time according to what we have been given. that vehicle will leave on its way from the kids miller murphy funeral home to simi valley,
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calif. where the presidential library is. we are told that once nancy reagan's casket arrives they will have another private, with family and friends for about an hour or so, ceremony at simi valley and right after that the public will begin its viewing of former first lady nancy reagan, one of our 40th president, ronald reagan, will lie in repose both today and tomorrow. let's bring in adam hall's we on the other end of this bidding for their rival, 45 miles from the picture you see here. you are at the y prairilibrary. >> small contingent of family coming out, we were told this would be a small intimate family
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ceremony. former secret service detail, part of the planning for years, echoed name for the secret service men when she was first lady was rainbow. her husband was rawhide. you see the casket emerging right now from the funeral home into the hearse. the drive will go down a couple surface streets to the freeway which runs to the beach in southern california. the 10, the 405 north to the 118, the ronald reagan freeway which comes to simi valley, 45 minute drive without traffic, we did it this morning, a presidential drive where we are told there will be hundreds of flags, preparations have been feverish as we watch the first lady being taken into the at hearst. >> once the casket arrives the plan for the funeral on friday where nancy reagan will join her
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[background sounds] >> we are watching now. the door has closed on the hearse, nancy reagan's casket, former first lady, the white of 40th president ronald reagan. for so many they have their own memories and emotions to fill in gaps, family and friends that are gathered on the lawn and for the nation, so much to talk about on thursday in terms of the commitment the first lady made to her husband after he was
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diagnosed with alzheimer's, live with that for ten years after his presidency. she stayed by his side rigorously, protecting his legacy, reminding all of us all that he had done for the nation, to leave this nation across we to presidential terms and became synonymous with the word strength and grace. now we watched her begin this three day journey home, three days of formal morning for nancy reagan is let's bring it to you for your thoughts. dave: is lovely mention the period he took care of the ex-president when he was in alzheimer's. that is the real true sign of a commitment one has for one's house when they get sick. she stood by him come hell or high water, through thick and thin, when he was sick during his presidency. one thing i love about one of the commentaries on her is while
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she was in frail health until her death her brain was at 110%, she was as sharp as a tack. >> we are watching the clergy join this procession. you heard adam house we talking about the 45 mile drive they will all make to the presidential library at simi valley. andrea: to build on what david said there are so many things to remember nancy reagan for. hailed for her sense of fashion, the imprint she put as first lady on policy during her time in the white house but it is the way she loved her man, the way she cared for him, and made at a priority. such an enviable goal, away a partnership and that marriage should work, it was beautiful, a lost art nowadays in our culture and we could all learn from the way she loved him.
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>> we remember the things that happened during his presidency, he was shot. one thing my parents say about that particular marriage is it was tenderness through tragedy. they just seemed to emerge with more love than ever. >> for those who grew up in thes and remembers them, the archetypical couple from that decade, i went back after she died and they went through the letters the president wrote to her from the white house and they were so beautiful and so poignant. a man in the midst of the cold war, the leader of the free world at the time to write beautiful love letters to his wife, that is a lost art these days, really humanized it for me, children of the 80s, they set the tone, what they could be. >> the final days, she was sharp
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