tv Red Eye FOX News April 27, 2016 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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it is 3:00 in the east and just after midnight in the west. >> so it is all the same day across our country, except in hawaii. one day we will look at the last night as a turning point in donald trump's campaign. thank you for staying with us. i'm eric shawn. >> it is an exciting day and morning. i'm heather childress. thank you for sticking with us all of these hours. trump swept all northeast primary and bringing in a big haul of delegates. the wins are in connecticut and by the way that was all of the counties. delaware, maryland, pennsylvania and rhode island and now he says the republican
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nominating contest is, quote, over. it is done. and here is the latest delegate lead. the associated press has trump ahead of cruz by almost 400 delegates. >> hillary clinton winning four of five contests in connecticut, delaware, pennsylvania and maryland. sanders won rhode island. mrs. clinton is closing in on her party's nomination. she earned 90% of the delegates she is needed to clinch the nomination and that puts her 240 delegate away from that goal. we'll see what happens. it was a huge day for donald trump. the republican front runner swept all five of the day's primaries as the race heads to the midwest and then to the west. we go now to the washington bureau. 1kwr50eu good morning to y'all. it is hard to do better than trump did on tuesday. he won all contests in a landslide. let's start with connecticut which was the closest race of
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the night meaning trump only won by 29 points, more than double john kasich and he won every county in the state and picked up all 28 delegates up for grabs. trump hit 60% and scored all sick teen delegates. many believed kasich could pick up a few delegates in the states close to dc, but trump dominated and picked up 35 delegates. rhode island awards its delegates proportionally and kasich and ted cruz picked up their only of the night. one for cruz who their -- who narrowly made the cutoff mark. trump picked up another 9 delegates. but in pennsylvania he easily picked up the state's 17 at large delegates receiving more than 56% of the vote. pennsylvania's 54 other
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delegates are unbound and 36 have said they will vote for trump on or whomever the congressional district voted for. there are 950 delegates and cruz 560 and kasich comes in at 153. last night at his victory rally, trump said he nowers hime presumptive nominee and he took aim at democratic front runner hillary clinton. >> the only card she has is the woman's card. she has nothing else going. if hillary clinton were a man i don't think she would get 5% of the vote. the only thing she has going is the woman's card and women don't like her. look how well i did with women tonight. >> the only hope for john kasich and ted cruz is to prevent donald trump from reaching the 1237 delegates he needs to clinch the nomination. their last shot is neck week in indiana where cruz told supporters the race is now
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moving back to his territory. >> this race is real, real simple. donald trump and hillary clinton are both big government liberals. they both think the federal government is the answer to every problem. i agree with ronald reagan that the scare -- scarest words are "i am from the government and i am here to help you." >> they sent out a tweet saying the fight goes on and he will continue to make supporters proud. heather and eric? >> thank you so much. >> the campaign for the vermont senator says they plan to continue. we are joined by a sanders campaign adjunct professor of law via skype. thank you of so. >> it is homer. >> thank you. i pronounced it wrong twice.
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>> tell us what can we expect from the campaign moving forward? he said he is in it to win it and not quitting. >> and that's the way it should be. bernie has millionses of followerses and he raised more money than any candidate in the election and his campaign is about a movement and about changing the discourse and changing the establishment and old way of doing things. we are moving to the convention hopefully and that's what bernie has promised to do. bernie said he thinks every american should have his or her voice heard in this primary season. the only way to do that is to go through the whole primary schedule. and he still has a chance to get more pledge delegates and we think he will get more than her by june 14th. >> a chance to get more, but does he have a chance to win the nomination? that is the question moving
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forward for so many people. >> there are still a thousand pledge delegates to be determined. california, new jersey, oregon, all states in which he will do very well and these are open primary coming up. new jersey and california especially are open primaries. they are big open primary. we don't have any doubt he will pick up delegates. >> what about the super delegates? does he need those super delegates to change support from hillary clinton to him to succeed? >> it looks like neither he nor secretary clinton will get there with the majority of delegates in just the pledge delegates. the super delegates -- even though the super delegates is not a great system it skews the numbers. we will have to flip the super
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delegates and we think we have the best argument to do so. especially if you go to the con veption with more pledge delegates. we see he is performing better than her against other republican opponents in the polls especially donald trump. he takes more from the middle and he brings a whole new generation and crop of voters to the process who haven't been there before. we believe he would perform better in a general election than she would. >> is it about the additional delegates that the sanders campaign thinks he combine acquire and then possibly win the nomination? or is it being part of the democratic platform and making sure some of the issues that are important to him and his followers are made a part of the platform? >> bernie sanderses is not running to change the democratic platform. he is running to get the nomination. we still think he can. >> there is an idea going
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around that all of us who are bernie sanders supporters should fall in line and support her simply because she is a democratic nominee. >> to think that way would be to misunderstand the movement. bernie sanders has brought in new voters and if secretary clinton wants their support they want to say they want their support. they will have to reach out to us more genuinely than they have so far. >> i think one of the main differences here and one of the things that it has been more progressive of they are fighting against easy llama phobia and military intervention. it does president represent the things bernie sander does when it comes to that. what we have seen from the polls is that bernie season --
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bernie sanders runs he pulls votes from donald trump. hillary does president do well against independents. >> he did win rhode island. >> and all of the primaries. >> what will senator sanders do? author and journalist judy miller is here. the story, a reporter's journey is now out in paperback. he is the executive vice president of jamestown associates. you just heard him say there are hope -- there are open primaries and it could be good for sanders and new jersey. what happens if he racks up more delegates? >> he probably will win. it is interesting. the democratic party -- >> he probably will win, win what? the whole enchilada? >> hope springs eternal.
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>> what is interesting is the democratic party put out something on tuesday which was yesterday actually around the country saying that unpledged delegates have never changed the outcome of an election. i found it very interesting that they would put out this pr because there are unpledged delegates that hillary clinton is talking about et cetera. they say it never changed the outcome of an election. i found that interesting. >> you mentioned california and new jersey and open primary situations. we had one in rhode island. among the independents who could participate the exit poll shows sanders getting 7 out of 10 independent voters. it is clearly a strength for him and an outstanding opportunity to collect more delegates. i disagree that he could mathematically win, but he could collect more and have more at the convention as i have said.
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here is what bernie sanders has won. he has it defined and she is being defensive about it. she talks about unaccountable money and income inequality and she is trying to recast herself as someone who will fight wall street. we won't let the banks do it again. this is a person who collected $3 million in speaking fees from the big banks. when you really think of the impact sanders has had, you have to look beyond the delegate map. you have to look to the conversation he has dominated that she has inherited. it is not the conversation hillary clinton wanted to take. >> pushing her closer -- further and further and further left. >> that is the great danger. as we said and she has to keep saying, she is 90% of the way toward getting the nomination. to view her as anything other than the presumptive nominee is not to look at the math and not to look at history. >> is that enough to get
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sanders supporterses in her camp? >> whether or not they can motivate them depends on what bernie sanders chooses to do. i am worried about this. until recent leahy define -- until recently he identified himself as a socialist and not a democrat. >> is he a registered democrat? >> he has to find himself as a democratic social list. >> thanks for the clarification. >> and if we can go back to talking about women again, the idea of donald trump being the champion of women and taking this away from hillary, not only do we as women out live men, but we also out vote them in great numbers. older women in particular vote in disproportionately large numbers. that is going to be a huge problem for donald trump who has called them things we will hear again and again in coming months, pigs, disgusting
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animals and et cetera and et cetera. all of that is on tape and it will be dragged out again and again. i think that's an amazingly audacious card for him to play. >> it hasn't damaged him so far. the latitude was for the more colorful remarks because he is authentic and politically in-- politically incorrect. women do vote the economy and they vote security. we were hearing predictions if you watched the news as of this week of an economic down term coming. if that happens that is an advantage for trump. i believe it is an advantage for trump and if you look -- >> for hillary. >> she has done a good job. it is not independent -- i'm sure democrats do. here is something shocking to me.
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the barack obama administration has been in office for eight years. she was part of that. they don't even pay equal pay in the white house. they don't pay equal pay in the state department. for her to make this argument that now she will turn the page and be the champion, i think her record contridicts -- contridicts that. where i think donald trump is going to make a clever shift, he will not necessarily attack hillary clinton. he will attack bill clinton and his reckless conduct of sexual and in some caseses crimes against women. he will do it relentlessly and it will put hillary in an odd predicament of trying to defend her husband. >> and we may have seen the beginning of that with the sanders campaign. you had rosario dawson who referenced lewinski. >> they will try, but hillary
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clinton gave up with some good answers when all of this was going on and she will continue and it will be one or two words and she will swipe it back to her issues. >> the real clear politics poll has hillary clinton beating trump by at least 10 points. i mow it doesn't matter now because the voters are not saying what they will likely do, but it is indicative of the strong, favorable support. >> and there was the george washington university poll that showed a difference of 3%. >> there will be lots of polls. >> and consistantly we are seeing -- and again in truth trump ranks the worst, but hillary is under performing and it relates to the trust and honestly issue. even in a democratic primary like tonight. the vast majority of voters don't trust her or feel she is honest. that is an issue across the
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board and across gender and across demographics. and it will haunt her. it is substantiated in the polling. i would like to have a fact to contridict what you have to say. >> the poll done on the show that hillary clinton scored higher than trump on trustworthiness and 54% find her untrust wore she and 64% found him untrustworthy. >> but that has not haunted him. whether or not that is a statistic, that has not defined his candidacy. >> all of the statistics will be relevant. >> we talk about whose are better, basically. >> that is an irony. >> donald trump says you can pretty much call him the gop nominee, but ted cruz and john kasich are not buying it. jay coming up, a look at their effort to try and unite against trump. you know what will happen in
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score a big win in indiana. it is a last stand of sorts for movement. a win there some predict could potentially secure the nomination for trump. the executive editor of the daily caller and he will tell us what will happen next tuesday. >> i know it all. >> >> what do you think will happen? >> i think that this is definitely as you suggested, this one is for all of the marbles. iana, finally week to week to week and he is winding down the delegate lead. for real next week we will finally get a chance to say this one is gonna prove something. if ted cruz cannot win in indiana that's it for ted cruz. >> i was pointing out, it is basically a very republican state. >> he is a democrat.
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he has not yet made an endorsement, but what if the betting is he endorsed ted cruz? is it a possibility like scott walker did? >> and donald trump is running away with bobbie night. >> i do know that let's look at tonight as an example of what is going on around the country and we can reflect on what is going on in indiana. the exit polls say voters across the country, the republican voters are upset with republican politician m it is a system that has not treated them well and is composed of dishonest politicians and all have lead to big wins. at least it is in the northeast for trump. if it goes to indiana and they are looking at what cruz and kasich are attempting to do which is forming a strategic alliance that means less to do
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what voters want and trump calls it rigged and it is outside the voter control, will it influence them in indiana? my guess is yes. it could have a big impact on helping trump maintain the lead he has and expanding it. >> he caught a collusion. it is politics. it is a blood sport as you know. donald trump has picked up on one issue that of course is jobs down in mexico. they took the jobs from indianapolis. you mentioned it once or twice in new york. i thought he would talk about it more. >> boy, that video of those carrier employees being told their jobs are leaving the country is one of the most amazing moments i think this year ever captured on tape. and donald trump was the first to get on board with explaining, hey, this is a bad thing. we have an imbalance the
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united states is losing on. and we know he will be rolling this out , this concern about the jobs in particular. my sense is that will be a winning issue accrue more support in the state. the big question mark for me is how much is kasich's support and kasich going to detach from the process is. kasich is behind marco rubio and he is posing a threat to win in indiana. this is a big question mark and john kasich is the only one who can answer it. >> apparently no ions of that happening at all. vince good to see you. promises to be an exciting night next week. >> nice to see you. collusions and shanigans. >> it is helping them get into the heads of republican and democratic voters alike. >> we will have more as our tuesday night to wednesday
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>> what do they have in common? both sides share a deep concern about the state of the economy. you can ask anyone and are concerned about the jobs and the economy. they are talking about wall street impacting the economy. 55 in misdemeanor and -- in maryland and 64% in pennsylvania. the gob voters are expressing concern about the economy. gop voterses are concerned about the state of the economy and it is not just about the economy, but the most important issue is following terrorism. they look at terrorism and they look at government spending and immigration and that's something they have a concern about. they are in
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favor of an outsider winning and we can see he won there handily. hillary clinton gets that vote and look at these numbers. 92% are in favor of clinton and 85% in pennsylvania. hillary clinton is the democratic nominee of the democrat party and bernie sanders is trying to hang in there. during his victory peach trump declared himself the winner. what do they think of a general election between clinton and trump? let's go to the polls. 64% and 73% as well as 65% in their respective states and
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they see trump as the candidate of change. they believe he candy feet hillary clinton. donald trump believes it himself. they say his identity with black voters will help her win the presidency. donald trump says clinton -- she will fail against his campaign. one important thing to note. exit polling reveals that the republicans remain divided. 57% of voters say this year's bruising campaign among 17 candidates are now down to three. they say it is fractured or divided. going for the gop will have to work on unifying the party if they hope to win the white house in november. >> we'll see if that is possible as they are wracking up big numbers.
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>> and for more she joins us as the chief political cory spawn department and -- correspondent. thank you for sticking around. let's start there. the last thing kelly wright was speaking about is the vision in the republican party and the numbers of people who think it is still so divided. >> the party is very divided. you have those who are conservatives and those who are populous and there is also the party that is the establishment within the party. and so you have the splintering of the group and everyone has a different opinion and a different support of the candidates and what they stand for. what you really meed to do is unify the party somehow, someway. what the end goal is to beat hillary clinton.
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71% of gop voters see donald trump as the candidate of change what does it tell you? >> people really want an outsider who is in the belt way and someone who is not going to do business as usual and someone who is outside the politics. he has the momentum and we can see what happens with last night or today's election and how he has been able to garner the attention of a lot of voters in the northeast. >> what about the economy? that continues to be the number one issue for people across the board? >> sure, the economy is huge. jobs in the economy and the
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policies that president obama has implemented. you look and they are harming our jobs and our economic growth. our economic growth is deplorable. it was under two%. these are significant issues that americans are concerned about and what we need are pro growth initiatives to turn the economy around. >> back to the general election. when it comes to these issues and if it dozened up being hillary clinton and donald trump , which comes out on top, the experience of hillary clinton which they think is more important? or change that is consistent with donald trump which republicans apparently see as more important? >> i have to say with hillary clinton she has a lot of baggage with the fbi investigation and the e-mail server. i think this is something her
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supporters are ignoring and we will see how that pans out. but again with trump being in the lead, the americans are looking for somebody who is an outsider and somebody who is listening to what they think they need in terms of job growth and security and it is something he gets him in. >> they are turning out in record numbers and not so much for democrats. we appreciate having you here. >> thank you. >> and still ahead our special primary coverage will continue. we will hear what donald trump and hillary clinton had to say about their wins later tonight. >> and what they will they'd to clinch their needed delegates.
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welcome back to america's election mcheadquarters. election headquarters. the battle for the east is over. thank you for tuning in for talk radio news and judy miller and the executive vice president of jamestown associates. let me start with you. when donald trump spoke, he touted endorsements and didn't
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name any names except for carl icon again and he said there would be a lot of bigwigs and have been calling him to endorse him. what do you think we will see in terms of chris christie? >> it was amazing that chris christie was in the picture and standing beside him. we don't foe what that means. i don't think he will choose if he is the nominee, chris christie to be his vice president. but clearly chris christie is out there for something. he didn't look as ridiculous as he has in the past. >> new jersey will be important. >> and do you think it is a point -- that is a great point? it is also the beginning of an establishment supporting him? >> i think he is looking for an establishment support and i think he is reaching out and he brought in new people to his campaign who have some
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campaign discipline. and it sounds like his children have actually been pushing him in that direction. >> judy is going to give a foreign policy speech. what do you expect to hear and what do you want to hear in terms of this much touted foreign policy speech. >> he has to correct the impression that he is ignorant. everything he has said will suggest that. whether or not you are talking about pulling out and pulling out after brussels has been hit by a terrorist attack and whether or not you are talking about if he has let south korea and japan withdraw our forces from there. he has made some statements that have lead to denunciations by the foreign
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policy establishment in the republican party. more than a hundred have said anybody but trump, basically. he has to undo the damage and for tray him noninterventionist. that is consistent with the mood of the country. we don't want to be involved in anymore unending conflicts. if con nailed trump can strike that theme and be informed. if he is a man who knows what he is talking about to somebody who doesn't know he will have accomplished a great deal, but the road is very steep. >> the former terrorism czar called his advisors literally at a conference i attended, escapees from the looney bin.
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i never heard such amazingly strong talk from a man who served in the democratic administration. >> is that characterized by people who have been charitably characterized. >> i disagree with that. they are people that we have here to talk to us about foreign policy. >> it is a perfect example and it has a nuanced understanding of a very complex region in the middle east which is clearly going to be a major area of concern. donald trump does need to show a lot more thoughtfulness and intellectual curiosity about these challenges which he has not up to now. they talked about trump as the economic populous and about the economic fairness. he is also populous when it comes to the idea of
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nonintervention and to your point it is the mood of the country and it really more than anything goes against the orthodoxy, the they yokon -- the fl -- the neocon that was established until now. clearly he is willing to go anti-establishment uh uh-huh cross the -- anti-establishment. i want to talk about the republican establishment and their at tieds and -- attitude and and the shifting of attitude. >> i have not had as many conversations as i have had in this week about the realization that a long, bitter, brokered convention could be more damaging than having donald trump earn it through the uncommitted delegates and trying to win it on the first ballot.
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they use the campbel of ford and reagan. ford won in the first 50 votes. i am starting to sense that that is the desired outcome among a lot more people today than it was yesterday. albeit cruz has time to work his delegate magic. he has out performed and out organized trump in that regard. a lot more people say the mess could not be working. the gateway public dit put out the statistics and if trump wins indiana he could actually win legitimately with just delegates and going into the convention. >> it will be rough especially
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depending on california. new jersey is another important state. the first lady of new jersey was with governor christie and that was the first i have seen in such a public way. i think trump -- >> and she has endorsed trump. >> it comes after june 7th in the uncommitted and the unbound delegates and his ability to win enough over if hue wulings had pros are pros does mentd jew dash >> it he keeps up his attack on the republican party and the means of selecting a nominee. that will continue because even though it has played well for him, the republican rules paradox and paradox have played well for him. now is the time he has to convince america that anything other than his nomination in the delegates would be a
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ask your vet about 12-week protection with bravecto. >> and welcome back. >> it is about 10 minutes until the top of the hour which is 4:00 a.m. on the east coast. >> we will have final thoughts. the author and journalist judy miller and the executive vice president. let me start with you. big wins for mrs. clinton except for rhode island. there is also the delegates. they are proportional. according to the statistics i have seen 194 for hillary and 129 for bernie sander p -- not exactly the sweep you may have expected. >> it is not that bad a night for bernie sanders. >> not at all. >> except you are not winning. >> you only won one state. >> i i understand, but it is about the delegates.
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>> and she has those as well too. i am constantly struck as i watch donald trull p in this new make over now. the switch to the presumptive nominee and how he is changing. the things he is saying that are astonishing and appalling but i am also struck those who are old enough to remember television and watching entertainers of how much he remind me of liberace. has the hair and he has the tan and the beguilling attraction to so many americans and somewhere there is a grand piano with a candle -- candelabra on it. it is the hair and the tan and the gestures. >> he does have the gestures, definitely. >> i am keeping my eye on
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whether or not the strategic ally inteligence will work out the growing pains. i felt ted cruz gave him a perfect alley-oop. he was clearly not comfortable in articulating. it is a really sensible position regardless of their personal feelings toward each other. you have limited resources and you allocate your resources where you think they will have the maximum impact. for kasich it is more of a new mexico-type scenario. let's see how well it works out. tonight was an indictment that the voters were not buying it. unlike hillary clinton tonight was a massive -- a completely unbig wise slaughter for donald trump. >> kasich and cruz's campaigns, they see what everyone else saw that the
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voters who didn't work with them, they see this. what will they do to switch it up? >> i think this alliance is dead in the water. i think it is not working for either of them and weirdly enough, too little, too late as some people called it. i think it is dead on arrival and donald trump did it with the small bites comment and kasich was eating and he asked his followers not to support him. that is not going to fly. >> what do you think will happen in indiana? >> i have emisson up predictions on what donald trump will do anywhere. >> he gained an eight-point lead in indiana. i am not ready to dismiss the idea that this may not go there. with kasich out of the
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dynamic, i do see the potential for ted cruz. he is very well organized and the state does have been electorat that is much more favorable are to a canada do like his. candidacy like his. i do understand howie physical tiff his operation can be. if trump is able to sustain this lead it will be tough. >> governor kasich should have done better or should be doing better in indiana. it is next to the great state of ohio. he has not of the he says he is not campaigning, but he did a fundraiser there. and he told people to vote for him. what's that about? >> do you think he will change? >> i think that's the deal he made with senator cruz. >> which is -- it raises another question on if this is
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still born. >> i think it will be interesting to see if they pivot. >> and how far does this amazing night carry donald trump in earlies it of momentum. >> we will be looking at this on fox newschannel over the weeks and we will be here various weeks. we won't be here neck week. >> but we will be back. "fox and friends" is next and we have two hours of that show to go overall of this. >> a fascinating night. thank you for watching us and following us on the fox newschannel as this miraculous election process and democracy continues. >> it is very exciting. >> and unpredictable. >> take care.
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we're going to have our country back. we're going to make america great again, and i want to tell you, for the five states, i am so honored. >> keep imagining a tomorrow where instead of building walls we're breaking down barriers. let's go forward. let's win the nomination. >> tonight this campaign moves
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