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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  April 19, 2016 9:00am-10:01am PDT

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>> heather, do you have another hour in you. >> hanging out with you, absolutely. >> we'll being back here in one hour on new york voting day. >> "outnumbered" starts right now. ♪ andrea: this is "outnumbered," i'm andrea tanteros. here with us today, harris faulkner, sandra smith, co-host of "after the bell," on fox business, melissa francis is back. and today's #oneluckyguy, fox news chief political anchor, and anchor of "special report," we welcome back, mr. bret baier. you are fair, balanced, unafid and outnumbered, sir. >> this is second time on "outnumbered" in just a few weeks. harris: see? >> i feel honored. andrea: one of our best. harris: we feel honored. this is a big day. >> it's a big day. harris: you're bringing awesome stuff. >> bringing the heat.
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andrea: back by popular demand. get to it. primary day in new york where pressure is on front-runners to pull off convincing wins on democratic side. 247 delegates are at stake. for republicans, 95 are on the line. as new yorkers head to the polls, stakes are high for donald trump who is aiming for a delegate sweep and a big win in his home state could go a long way putting gop front-runner closer to the nomination. mr. trump making his final pitch to the voters. >> you are going to remember this evening, and you're going to remember more importantly tomorrow and the vote. you will look back in four years, 12 years and 25 years. you will say, that is the greatest single vote i have ever cast because from that point on, as soon as we beat hillary clinton, we are going to start as the country winning again.
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andrea: those comments come amid big changes in the trump campaign. as it appears top aide, washington insider paul manafort may be solidifying his influence within the camp. trump's national field director stepping down after a reshuffling of the team staff. as for ted cruz and john kasich, they have already left new york and are setting sights on pennsylvania and maryland. kasich has grained ground in new york in recent weeks while ted cruz has struggled in the polls. all right, bret, forget voting for past presidents. today is the day people will make history with the most important vote of their life for donald trump. how big of a day is this for mr. trump? >> it's a big day. listen he is poised to win big here in his home state. the question all as we talked about math and if he can get above 50%. first of all statewide, that would give him all the 14 at large delegates. and then 50% or more in each of the 27 congressional districts which have three delegates each.
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so, the big game here is how many delegates he can get out of this state which he is well-positioned to do. and obviously, all about get being to that magic number, 1237. andrea: you mentioned the rules are like most states, funky. he could leave as many as two dozen delegates on the table even if he wins a landslide if he doesn't win outright that majorities in each of these district. >> each of these 27 districts is its own race. ted cruz and john kasich are hoping they get any delegates out of those congressional districts. they have to post 20% in the congressional districts to get any delegates. if trump doesn't get 50%, in a lot of these districts then, you know the others could get a lot of delegates. that is all about the math. harris: disclaimer, i live in jersey. i don't read about new york. andrea: you don't get to make history today. harris: not on a tuesday in june, baby. so i understand upstate new york
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is very different in terms of those districts for donald trump, really for all of these candidates but particularly for him and the big city of new york. so talk to me a little bit about the struggle, if there will be any within the districts that you can think of. >> right. ted cruz spent a lot of time up north in the northern part of the state and he is hoping along with john kasich to pick off some delegates there. you have congressman chris collins, the first endorser on capitol hill of donald trump who is really pushing this. trump had a buffalo event last night that was well-attended. listen, he is expected to do really well and it is just a matter whether he can cobble together all these congressional districts above 50%. sandra: look forward after tonight. we know there has been a change in the hierarchy of the campaign, some new hires but when you look at this political report suggesting $20 million budget for key contests in may and june, trump is granting to his new staff members to spend,
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does this change the donald trump campaign we've seen and make sitting completely different? he is touted just how little he has had to spend to be the front-runner? >> dramatically. this is a huge shift, it should signal to everybody he takes this fight for delegates seriously. he was rick wiley, used to be scott walker's campaign manager now in the top position. paul manafort running his delegate operation. they essentially say, hey, we're going to fight for every delegate, because it comes down to trying to run the table, 55, 58% of the rest of the delegates to be able to get to 1237. >> where does he get money? rich people don't like to spend their money. that's why they're rich. they don't part with it. he said his campaign is self-funding. sandra said, you have to step up and put a lot of money into ads going forward. they will hire more staff. five communications staffers. they learned lesson not having enough behind them. is he raising that money?
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is it all coming from his own bank account? do we know? >> we don't know the specific breakdown but we know he is raising some money. some are checks coming in and using that money but largely self-funded. he is putting that, writing the check. i think infrastructure is starting to be in place to raise money if he is the general election nominee for the republicans. he will have to have that. andrea: bret, what about these stories he is rearranging deck chairs on his campaign? people say that points to turmoil. seems to be a bit of a shake-up, manafort flexing muscles. not the titanic analagy at all. he is doing well. what is happening behind the scenes. >> they realized ted cruz is outmaneuvered him on county and state conventions. he is not happy about it. shanking things up to get more established political guys that know the system to be able to fight every battle and win. he may be just a few delegates short. if that is the case, everyone of
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these battles matters. harris: yeah. i mean you heard rudy giuliani talking about it on fox news this morning. even if he just get, sniff out like 1200, the last 37 or so you may be able to muscle in, doing deal-making without changing rules which may be a lot difficult as we get closer. you mentioned chris collins. he is one of representatives leading weekly meetings. he led the one here for trump supporters on capitol hill. this is his home state of new york. >> interesting he endorsed jeb bush and then endorsed donald trump. harris: hmmm. don't know what to say about that. candidates on the democrat side for their nomination also making their final pitches to new york voters. here is hillary clinton. >> it was the greatest honor of my life to represent you in the senate and i want you to know -- [applause] -- that new york had my back and i always tried to have your back
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and i will again, if i'm so fortunate enough to be elected your president! [cheers and applause] harris: both candidates appear to be downplaying expectations for today despite leading in the polls, hillary clinton campaign spokesperson says he thinks her margin of victory will be tighter than expected. analysts tell the "new york post" she needs to win the state by double digits or bernie sanders will make it look like she didn't win. senator sanders is suggesting it doesn't really matter if he loses the empire state. >> we'll see what happens tomorrow. i won't speculate. you have got california. you've got oregon. you've got pennsylvania. >> what does it mean if you lose in new york? >> what does it mean if i lose, i lose. >> what implications for your campaign? >> we're going all the way. harris: $44 million a month in fund-raising. he can go anywhere he wants with that cash. >> even oregon. [laughter] he has a lot of money. he has a lot of momentum and young people love him. it is a big problem for the
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clinton campaign, let's be honest about it. this expectations game is serious because i think they see he could close the gap. if he gets to five points in her home state, not adopted home state that she served as a u.s. senator for, i think that's really going to be a problem. andrea: bret, when she campaigned here in new york in 2000. she went on listening tour. she made a lot of promises to the people in upstate new york. 200,000 jobs they have never seen. almost appeared like they haven't forgotten that. if she does barely eke out a win or doesn't, that is big headaches as you point out not just for the campaign but for the dnc, who seemingly has this preconceived, predetermined outmany could for the race already. how big does that affect turnout for democrats if the sanders voters think this is being stolen from them, the same way trump voters feel? >> i think it's a powerful argument for the base and it motivates the base. that's why donald trump used that so effectively on the stump
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because the rigged system is really what this election seems about. coreforget it the establishment stinks, let's take over washington to turn things around. the sanders people are the same way. sandra: harris: i want to talk to but the conversation the two have been having at debates and town halls about the economy? sandra: he has pressed her and hit her hard on her ties to wall street. he is continuing. even interviews up to today demanded she release transcripts of speeches she gave on wall street and for goldman sachs which she received $250,000. that hurts her, continued hits on the ties to wall street. that being said, what do we have to see today from hillary clinton assuming she wins? do you agree she has to win by double-digit for it to be perceived as win for hillary clinton? or if it goes to single digits does bernie sanders claim victory. >> i think it goes into single digits. bernie sanders claims victory. this was home advantage for her
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even though he was born here. he makes case momentum is on his side. the math is not on his side. he has to win 68% of the remaining delegates to get the nomination on democratic side. that is really uphill battle against the clinton machine. harris: i want to show viewers hillary clinton morning radio. do we have time to show that? let's roll it. let's watch. >> what is something that you always carry with you? >> hot sauce. >> really? >> yeah, yeah. >> really, in formation right now? [laughter]. hot sauce in my bag swag. >> hot sauce. >> really? >> yes. yes. >> people will see this she is pandering to black people. [laughter]. >> okay. is it working? harris: wow. [laughter]. she likes hot sauce and chillies in her bag. is it working pandering part. sandra: you have to say she
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looked more natural. that is one of the things she would classically do horribly and wasn't as painful. talking about the hot sauce. she says it helps her immunity. that hit against the issue where she is always losing her voice. sound like she is sick on the trail. clinton doesn't look so great. i said that before. that is knock on those two. she is saying no, i'm having my hot sauce and doing well. it was a reach that could have been a big flop. if i was manager her i would not tell her to do that. >> she is spicy. harris: goodness, we'll move on. fox news channel is the place for coverage of the new york primary all day long. polls close at 8:50 p.m. eastern, our #oneluckyguy bret baier along with megyn kelly will take reins. giddy up. keep it right here on fox. hillary clinton looking
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towards the general election and slamming front-runner donald trump calling him dangerous and comparing him to cancer. why the race is getting really nasty even before it begins. we haven't gotten through the primary season yet. president obama about to embark on international good-bye tour. why the trip may not include a fond farewell for some. stay close. ♪ thank you. imagine if the things you bought every day earned you miles to get to the places you really want to go. with the united mileageplus explorer card, you'll get a free checked bag, 2 united club passes... priority boarding... and 30,000 bonus miles. everything you need for an unforgettable vacation. the united mileageplus explorer card. imagine where it will take you.
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♪ sandra: hillary clinton facing off against bernie sanders today in the new york primary. while she isn't the democratic nominee yet, she is looking towards the general election, running ads against donald trump and slamming the republican front-runner on popular new york radio show. >> don't scare me because what he's saying that he would do is wrong for our country, it is not only offensive to people and kind of makes you cringe, it is dangerous. i mean he is setting people against each other. he is inciting violence. and what he is doing, you know, to basically, in some ways play to the worst instincts of people, is just in violation of
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american values and new york values for sure. sandra: she also likened trump to cancer and said everybody needs to be going after him. bret, is this a good strategy for hillary clinton? >> yeah. she wants to get to the general election as fast as she can. if there is a unifying figure in the democratic party it is donald trump. it could be ted cruz as well. they both rail against both of those candidates but she is playing to her base on a general election battlefield and that usually plays for her very well, except, that she is not finished with her own race and, that's an issue. sandra: that's an issue. but if you are to look forward to the potential donald trump, hillary clinton matchup in the general election is it a smart strategy for her to go at donald trump that hard now, andrea, when we see what happens when you poke the bear? he already prepped potential nickname for her, crooked hillary. andrea: points to the fact she fears him. i think she is deeply threatened
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by donald trump. if you look in numbers in new york, if he pulls off a landslide and she ekes out a win, does donald trump put states in play in the general. i pose that based on tonight's outcome. bret, with her going after donald trump now, is she doing this in right way. do republicans, democrats are having trouble coalescing, do republicans hate hillary enough to coalesce if donald trump is nominee or ted cruz? >> most republicans you talk to if donald trump is the nominee, they say the unifying factor is hillary clinton. so much like donald trump is unifying factor on democratic side. andrea: do i think that is true, bret? >> i think for some republicans will governor of their problem if he is the nominee because the thought of hillary clinton nominating supreme court justices or you know the way forward, essentially a third president obama term is the thinking.
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but, there is obviously a huge rift in the republican party, one that will take a lot of repairing. harris: you know what is curious, if you look at some reports on conservative radio host who is are saying it is not just a vote for hillary clinton, there would actually be, i mean if trump or cruz were nominated for gop, it would be a situation where republicans would be angry enough or something enough to actually vote for hillary clinton. could that even be possibly true? historically, what do we have to base that on? >> not a lot historically. there are anecdotally republicans talking openly saying they vote for hillary clinton before they voted for donald trump. you heard that. i think it is still hard to believe because the campaign will take on its own shape. hillary clinton will be characterized and republicanized as somebody unacceptable. harris: they would be voting for that person, yeah. >> it is also interesting how the conversation never turns to bernie sanders in these circumstances. points to how much on the left,
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no matter how much momentum he gets, silly things with george clooney, i would rather support him because i don't raise money for him because i don't think he has a chance to win. shows how much the conversation goes to the general, they're not taking bernie sanders into account at this point no matter what he has done so far, right? >> that's right. bernie sanders will have some roll, if he doesn't win the nomination, which he doesn't look like he is going to, he will take some scalp from the democrats as far as party platform or something. he want to name or be a part of the number two selection. he could say you have to take on my pay college for everybody platform, that kind of thing. sandra: perhaps hillary clinton likening trump to cancer, launching this attack now is getting ahead of donald trump's arsenal of attacks that he promises that he has for her? >> i will say that you know, his argument is that just wait, i haven't even started on hillary clinton. so that is a fair argument to
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make but his negatives are really high with women, with african-americans, with hispanics. democrats look at that, and i i lick their chops but they are unsure how he would run the general election. andrea: very quick, does her husband bill neutralize trump with women, after the ties with bill. does it neutralize it a little bit? >> that is a big question. harris: i was reading about his negatives recently. he is not as popular. andrea: no he is not. sandra: he is a little grumpy. >> bill clinton has been a little grumpy. seems very grumpy. >> on the stump? harris: talking about his crime bill. these things are chippy for him. sandra: we have insight on republican convention from senator mitch mcconnell. he is hinting wanting a second ballot in cleveland, apparently a swipe at donald trump. what the establishment next move may be as the trump train rolls on. plus president obama on an international farewell tour
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heading for saudi arabia today. after recent swipes at our allies he might be in damage control mode. right after the show, head to the web for "outnumbered overtime." log on to foxnews.com slash "outnumbered." send us all the political questions. we have bret baier on the couch. it's a big night. send us your comments. tweet us, facebook message, we'll be on the live chat right when the show ends. stay right here. ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. ♪ andrea: senate majority leader mitch mcconnell suggesting he wants a second ballot at republican convention in an apparent swipe at donald trump. up until now the kentucky republican remained fairly neutral saying he would support whoever is the nominee. now he is weighing in on things could play out at possible contested convention if no
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candidate gets support of delegates needed to cinch the nomination. >> i'm increasingly optimistic there actually may be a second ballot. i want somebody who can win in november. the whole process is about trying to beat hillary clinton in november. and i think our delegates, if they end up actually having the latitude to make a decision, which would occur on the second and third ballot, are going to be interested in who can win. andrea: want to focus on his words, bret, abuse he said two things i think are incongruent. the establishment said they would stay out of this, stay impartial and let process play out. using term optimistic, seems almost excited and people perceive it as a shot. he also says i want someone who wins. wouldn't a second ballot mean blood on the floor and fractured gop? so that doesn't really make sense. >> yeah. i think the establishment and mitch mcconnell is as establishment as you get, thinks that they don't think that
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they're optimistic that donald trump can win a general election and i think he is expressing that there. their ideal hope i think what he is saying, second ballot and you get to another candidate. now whether that's ted cruz or john kasich or somebody else, that's their, how they envision it. important to point out two things. one, donald trump can get to 1237 and if he gets there, everything is moot. all these arguments about contested convention over. it's done. two, if he gets just short, there are 41 days between the last primary in california, june 7th, and the start of the republican convention. in that time it's deal-making time. and "the art of the deal" comes to, i i would think fruition. he figures out how to get difference, by striking a deal with one of the other candidates or somehow going after unbound delegates. i think he can get there. harris: i am glad you started with the first example he
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actually could get to 1237 and all of this would be moot. i say to senator mcconnell, what are you going to do? are you not going to the polls? what are choices? >> going to the polls, what do you mean? harris: is he not going to vote himself? as he said you thrown a precursor to blood on the floor brokered convention, what happens if it all becomes moot as you said? where does that leave a leader like senator mitch mcconnell? >> listen, he first of all is most concerned about the down ticket races and senators keeping control in the senate. harris: okay. >> and he thinks, i think -- harris: you mean self-preservation? >> well, sure. harris: that is how i consider it. >> i thinks he thinks republican can't win and wants somebody at least in the polls does bert against hillary clinton. that is what he is signaling there. but you're right, it is forecasting that it is going to be messy in cleveland. >> you mentioned though, there is that period of time between the last primary when they actually get to the convention.
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favorite game for people out there to play now, i heard that. they fill in the crazy scenario of what they think is going to happen and one thing we've been hearing a lot of is during that period of time donald trump has the chance to go out and partner up with weather kasich or someone else, get the votes. show up at convention even though he didn't get there and still over pretty much out of the gate because a deal has been made ahead of time. does that seem to you, if he doesn't get to the 1237, does that sound like a likely scenario to you, that some deal is made in the off-season and over more quickly? >> much more feasible that happens than this big brawl on the floor. >> unfortunately for us because we love to follow it. >> you look at the all the minutia of the rules and how this is going to happen, the rnc is trying to be transparent but it is amazing how many different moving part there are. sandra: based on the conversation we just had, bret, reince priebus is forced to answer this question, we just heard mitch mcconnell say the rules are the rules. are the rules working?
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is the process working? >> well, if you're strum trump you look at the state and county conventions and say i'm not being represented fully. it is the way it has worked. now we're looking closely at this system because this race is still going on. this has never been a factor where we looked minutely all the state and county conventions and how delegates are pickedded. if we want to change the system we have to change the system. harris: that is interesting. it changed a little bit in 2012 with mitt romney, the eight-state rule. you have to win delegates in eight states to be part of the nominating process. we'll see what happens. president obama is starting out on the first leg of what some call his international farewell tour but first stop in saudi arabia after criticizing nations for not pulling their weight. in the late tan tick, he blasted allies looking for u.s. to provide security too often.
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he said quote, saudi and iran need to quote, find an effective way to shared neighborhood. repealing 9/11 bill victim families to sue saudi arabia. 15 of the 19 savages on that awful day were from there. president obama explains his opposition. watch. >> this is a matter of how generally the united states approaches our interactions with other countries. if we open up the possibility that individuals in the united states can routinely start suing other governments, then we are also opening up the united states to being continually sued by individuals in other countries. harris: pressure is growing for the president to release 28 pages that are classified of the 9/11 commission report, which may implicate the saudi government in some way. so there is that. i want to impact it a little bit though and just kind of start
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from the top in all of this with you, bret and that is where we are with the president on this so-called farewell tour and the criticism that's coming, you know, gosh, we've got a deal made with iran, we've just given them a ton of money. i'm just curious to get your thoughts? >> listen saudi arabia is not happy with the u.s. they think they have dropped the ball when it comes to iran. they think they are not supporting saudis efforts in yemen against the houthis which are tied to iran. i think they think that the syria thing and the red line was a disaster. so saudi arabia is not heap with the u.s. on foreign policy but this issue about the 9/11 families is significant and this bill that's in congress with bipartisan support, sponsored by chuck schumer and john cornyn in the senate, justice against sponsors of terrorism act, would enable 9/11 families to sue saudi arabia and bring them to federal u.s. court if there is a
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tie or suggestion of a tie to funding terrorism. the president says that would open up the u.s. being sued down the road. this specifically deals with funding terrorism. america doesn't fund terrorist acts. harris: my question is, why can't the president saying no, veto the bill why can't he have it both ways but then turn around say for those families, for those families we will declassify the 28 pages so the world can know what went on, trace the money, trace who had the connections? >> sure but those families want some justice. they want some retribution, want something, i think. listening to their attorneys talk about it. andrea: wouldn't he then have to act, bret? if you dig into the research this, is long-standing national security council policy which led to even further blow back on this issue but the president is not saying that. to harris's point from a pr perspective looks like he is on both sides of the sunni-shia fight.
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we're pumping $150 billion into iran. we've given saudi arabia money and perceived to be allies with saudi arabia but this almost seems like he is covering for saudi arabia, again even though it is national security council policy. so from harris's point, why isn't he explaining this better to the victims and giving them some solace even those documents are locked? >> i think it has a lot of families scratching their heads about this policy. you're right, he could open up the 28 pages. he says there could be raw intelligence in there that is confusing but to the family's point, if there is some connection that has been overlooked by not only obama administration but the bush administration, there is embarassment there. it should come to light i think this will move forward. saudis threatening to sell $750 billion in t-bonds. >> i have to say that is a drop in the bucket. look at amount of debt, china
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floats our debt. they talk about that being about oil. it is not about that we're producing so much for ourselves. saudi arabia is a tricky ally. it is a valuable ally even though they're not a perfect ally by a long shot. this is not a country we share any natural ties with. we certainly don't agree with them politically. in a very bad neighborhood it is something we had a relationship over time. it is tough to throw that away at this point. they depend on us because they are defending mecca and medina, the most holy sites rest of their area would like to come in and take over. they depend on us to sort of back them up. it is a very tricky and complicated relationship, one a lot of americans don't appreciate but at the same time you know, i hate to say it there is value there. everybody can't be israel in the sense that, you know, we share more ties with our allies. sandra: look at the threat, melissa, you obviously looked at this very closely, if they were to liquidate billions of dollars of assets they are threatening
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wouldn't that cripple the kingdom more than our economy? >> yes, yes. harris: we might be confused by raw intelligence, why not just redact it? they do that with a lot of things? makes you scratch your head. >> hillary clinton and bernie sanders are pushing back on the president about this issue. i don't think it is going away. harris: boy, we love having bret here. hillary clinton supporter kristin gillibrand, slamming bernie sanders in emotional interview saying he lacks concern about horrors of gun violence saying gun violence is women's issue. she bragged about keeping a shotgun under her bed, does this play a role in the debate? ♪ @e@8ñúñ÷@@@0@ú
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♪ sandra: new york city senator kirsten gillibrand a hillary clinton supporter?
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an emotional interview blasting bernie sanders on guns. he doesn't understand what is it is like for families that lose loved ones to gun violence and suggesting women have been left out of the debate over tougher gun laws. listen. >> i think if women in america took over the gun issue, said we'll have common sense gun reform because no mother should have to lose her child to horrible gun violence, you would have a different outcome but this debate is relegated to the men. it is about hunting. has nothing to do with hunting. nothing in this debate has nothing to do with hunting. nothing has to do with the second amendment rights. nothing. sandra: we should know. gillibrand was once a strong advocate of gun rights when she was a statehouse member. even boasted about storing a shotgun under her bed. my have her views drastically changed. of course this is a key issue in the new york state democratic primary because hillary clinton has gone after bernie sanders for being too soft on gun control. >> yeah. kirsten gillibrand has history
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of being in a place in upstate new york that was much similar to bernie sanders situation in vermont when it came to the issue of guns. high, has 100% nra record at the beginning. sandra: yeah. >> but this issue is not only dividing democrats but i think is going to be a big issue in the general election. you can't get farther apart between the two parties when it comes to their perception about guns. at least overall among the base of each of the parties. sandra: she is making the argument that she wants congress to be 51% women because she feels like that would provide the country, different gun control laws. is that a reasonable argument? are women more empathetic to begin violence, melissa? >> i mean she is trying to say because she went out talked to a mother i think it was in the bronx, who lost a four-year-old to gun violence on the playground unless you lost a
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child or no someone who lost a child you don't have right perspective on guns. to turn everything into gender issue, her own flip-flopping, they called her tracy flick, in election, reese witherspoon was all about winning election and she was slick. we boil down to issues one resolution that fix problem forever. she talks about idea holding gun manufacturers responsible when they have a weapon used used ins shooting because they made the weapon in a way more useful there. there is never one way to solve these problems. she is kind of just jumping on the emotional bandwagon. that is something you survival hate all the time. andrea: she is flip-flopping and doing hillary clinton's dirty work. as you mentioned flats burke, watertown, almost touch vermont in upstate new york she pandered too and also hillary clinton. telling that hillary is not making case. gillibrand is doing it in the
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empire state so hillary can eventually triangulate. stats don't back it up, polling not just from the nra, pew and other sights, 36% of women are target hunterses up from 2004. 77% increase according to pew increase in women owning firearms. sandra: is she making a mistake? andrea: she is making a huge mistake. hillary clinton has to face it. "new york times" published an editorial pushing women to buy firearms. women are owning guns and owning more in greater numbers. this is misstep and the reason gillibrand is doing this not hillary. sandra: talking hunting, shotguns and deer rifles. you're talking about handguns and pistols and gun violence scenario. what do you make of this, harris. harris: we supported your love of guns. you grew up in the household. on two things, gender issue, 51% of congress is what she is looking for. not all women are the same.
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she can go out and get 51%. we're all different. annie oakley great-great granchildren, may have a different view on this whole thing. what about a dad who is parent? i think i have is offensive to make this mostly gender issue. sandra: last word to bret. >> gillibrand does work with republicans. she staked out a bipartisan place on capitol hill. and, you know, she on this issue i think is trying to to for the nuance of the way that moderate republicans and moderate democrats can get together on some kind of bipartisan piece of legislation. it is still farfetched up on capitol hill. harris: bernie sanders talked about it in last debate. he could be the consensus guy who could very well do that maybe this is the answer back. sandra: we'll keep watching it. hours after a bomb ripped through a crowded bus in jerusalem vice president biden slamming israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu saying israel is moving in the wrong direction. the impact of those comments next.
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andrea: more "outnumbered" in just a moment. first to jon scott with what is coming up in the second hour of "happening now." >> hey, andrea. hillary clinton wrapping up
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speech in washington, d.c., after voting at her home in chappaqua, new york. she is hoping for decisive win, where recent polls show her ahead of double digits ahead of rival bernie sanders. bernie sanders is speaking this afternoon in pennsylvania. donald trump voting in new york city this morning. he is hoping to capture more than 50% in his home state and most of the 95 delegates up for grabs. john kasich hopes for a number two showing for proof he remains a relevant challenger. we have fox team coverage. historic flooding in houston where five are dead. some parts of the state getting 20 inches of rain. more flooding and rain expected today. that's ahead. "happening now." back to "outnumbered" and beleaguered bret baier. [laughter] >> i like this place. andrea: thanks, jon. >> possible new tensions between the obama administration and one of our closest allies just hours
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after bus explosion in jerusalem injured 21 people on monday. vice president biden slamming israel's government, expressing his frustration with prime minister benjamin netanyahu decision making. >> i firmly believe that the actions that israel's government taken over the past several years, the steady and system settlements, he will legalization of outpost, land seizures, they're moving us and more importantly moving israel in the wrong direction. they're moving us toward as one-state reality and that reality is dangerous. >> hmmm. biden also slamming palestinian leaders calling out president mahmoud abbas by name but saving toughest words for israeli officials. bret baier, how does this play? was it intentional, was it smart? >> i think it was intentional. administration made clear they're making signals they don't like netanyahu's direction. in fact he said that directly.
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they don't like the direction that israel is heading. he made a point in this speech to praise the member of the parliament, left-wing opponent, may your views, this knesset members may this be the views of the knesset overall. suggesting they don't like netanyahu. >> andrea, this is amazing, people from israel explain to me, you don't understand the position we're in, until somebody is willing to blow himself in front of your child's school and take your child with him. we're almost going to that place. should americans be more sympathetic as terr roosts more and more, not to same degree but still? the. andrea: you would think the administration would but they haven't. this is ongoing theme which causes people to ask, why does this administration seemingly openly hostile to israel? bret, you're right. you get obama liberal.
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his views may not match up with netanyahu's but if you look back historically, president obama has taken shots at israel. he has taken shots at netanyahu. he snubbed him at the white house. called for return to '67 borders. when he was in israel he didn't swing bit knesset. i was just in israel a couple months ago. they perceive it as hostile relationship with the united states of america. we've seen john kerry reach out and negotiate with hamas, something i didn't think the united states did. i think netanyahu has a point. why are they putting them on the same playing field as the palestinians when it is palestinians are invoking violence? israelis are just defending themselves. sandra: bringing this to the new york primary today, bernie sanders weighed in heading into today, said the u.s. should be even-handed and must not always say netanyahu is right. how do you see this playing out in the primary? >> you know, sanders didn't talk to aipac in d.c. he did not do do the speech. hillary clinton did. she has advantage in jewish-american vote on the democratic side.
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but we'll see how it plays out politically. just a tease, 6:00, charles krauthamer on this very topic. thank you for having me. harris: i would ask, bernie sanders of jewish faith. says he was raised like that, i would like to ask about that. >> don't say bye yet. >> oh, okay. you don't let anything keep you sidelined. that's why you drink ensure. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing...
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7:50 eastern as polls close here in results -- 8:350. fox news out.com/outnumbered. click on overtime tab. we thank you and you will stick around too. >> thank you for overtime. thanks for having me. harris: tuesday, good having you, "happening now" now. of delegates. and a college student kicked off of a plane after speaking arbic and speaking the name of a terrorist group he said discrimination and wants an apology from the airplanes.

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