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tv   The Five  FOX News  May 3, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

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really brings them all together. >> it's just unbelievable, fellow. >> this wasn't the british team celebrating its 5,000-1 odds being champs. these are brits happy they're getting coverage tonight. hello, i'm kimberly guilfoyle along with juan williams. eric bolling, melissa francis and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." getting your election groove, we're about an hour away from the polls closing in indiana where the crucial primary bat sl under way. tonight could have a big impact on how the race moves forward. as americans exercise their rights to vote today. we should not forget the who than 150,000 u.s. military personnel currently stationed overseas.
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including about 35,000 in the middle east. these brave men and women are putting their lives on the line in harm's way to protect our rights here at home. this morning, u.s. defense officials confirm a navy s.e.a.l. was shot and killed by isis terrorists near erbil, iraq. the third american soldier killed in the battle against isis since october. white house press secretary josh earnest addressed the development earlier. >> today's incident is a vivid reminder of the risks that our service members are taking them, three of them now have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. but the president has been clear, time and time again, exactly what their mission is. that mission is to support iraqi forces on the ground, who are taking the fight to isle on the front lines.
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iraqi forces must fight for their own country. united states forces cannot be a substitute for those iraqi forces. >> retired four-star general jack keen explains why he believes we are facing the threat of isis. >> in 2008 when the obama administration was elected, president bush had handed the obama administration a victory. when the administration came in in early 2009, they began to disengage politically from iraq and not shape the political system, which was in desperate need of help. and 2011 we pulled out all the troops. i can tell you that our leaders were unbelievably frustrated by that. there was no reason to abandon iraq. the obama administration has failed to make the peace work, that's why we've got isis. >> this is pointing directly to the failures of the current administration, we see on this primary, election day. a lot to be focused on in terms
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of 0 what kind of choice people want to make. especially with the unrest and fatal u.s. casualty on the ground in iraq. >> interesting that you're bringing in the primaries on this topic. because there's some, different varying views on whether or not we should in iraq. donald trump says we shouldn't in there. he said he was against it. others are saying we should go. ted cruz said we should bomb syria. the sad part is that josh earnest says the white house mission is to support and train. yet this hero, this s.e.a.l. died in action in combat, right? there's 4,000 troops left in iraq. either you're going to be in iraq or you're not going to be in iraq. 4,000 isn't enough. you're putting 4,000 at risk. if you're for a strategy that says solidify, secure iraq, then put enough people in there so these people aren't dying. if you're for a strategy of pulling out, get the heck out
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and stop putting more in. we're sending 200 or more recently, president obama should just wake up, do what he's supposed to do. stop fighting this war with his blackberry, go to congress and say this is what i want to do, congress. if you're on board, sign on the dotted line and join me in this fight. or they can say, here's what we want to do president obama, and push back and say have an alternate strategy and get involved instead of the president doing this unilaterally. >> especially since they're the funding arm and that would be following the proper process. >> i think the president has done that eric. we've seen that the congress is reluctant to make that decision. everybody is sort of gun-shy after having given president bush authority to go to war in iraq and everybody laments, republicans in congress now think you have to give the commander-in-chief unlimited rights to fight and to go take
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out isis. democrats are worried if you give the commander-in-chief total leeway, the next president might take us back into full combat. they don't want to see that. i think congress is the one that's kind of stuck at the moment. >> but he's doing this on his own. he's developing his war strategy on his own. frankly we've heard that he doesn't even consult these generals, he doesn't listen to his generals who may have a different idea. my guess is they would be get back in there and fix it. >> melissa, your comments? >> i don't think that he wants to go in there and fight, i think that's why we're seeing so few people go over there. you look at one of the propaganda videos that cropped up in the wake of all this. an isis fighter says i'm jealous of you as a suicide bomber, i'm jealous of you going to heaven. at the risk of sounding like jesse waters, i don't know why the president isn't more aggr s aggressive. everybody is working towards the same purpose. want to die. the whole things that gotten so insane. >> you bring up a good point. one of the criticisms has been about the failed foreign policy
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and how we've handled it. there was a failure to put in a proper status of forces agreement to insure stability. ultimately that failure has led to the rise of isis and the quest for a caliphate. that's all stemmed from this. we had tremendous gains, whether getting in or not getting in iraq, we did. we committed treasure and resource there and kmern lives, we accomplished a great deal, only to see it slip away and isis rise up. >> if you do not like the war that we as americans, as a nation won, it is not up to you to lose it. even if you disagreed with the premise of it. the fact that the war is won, the war is won. you know it's not up to you to say i never liked it from the start, so i'm pulling out. >> you have to understand we talk about a country that's being gun-shy, we're short-changing the military. the military knows why they exist. consequence of vanquishing evil is that good people will die and sometimes the greatest people will die. it's a price that a happy
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warrior pays. a buddy of mine who is a green beret says do not feel bad asking us to do our job. we didn't enlist in order to do drills. and when you are faced with perhaps the worst evil that we've ever seen, that makes your mission matter most, we have to keep our response in context, the more that we freak out, the more it enhammers isis. whenever something like this happens and we lose a brave american, we have to return to resiliency. that for every one that we lose, they lose 1,000 and that's just the way you have to look at it. people say you're a chicken hawk. but it is a government agency. it is a government agency filled with people who want to go and destroy evil. and we have to let them do it. >> right. exactly. we don't have you know a draft that's being composed, everybody's got to go, no matter what. these are people who signed up,
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believe in this country. but at the same time we have to have things in place like proper status of force agreement when we do win a war and also give them everything as in modify tremendously the rules of engagement that under this administration has hampered all the men and women serving over there. if you ask anybody like your green beret friends or delta or s.e.a.l.s or special forces, that's a huge problem. >> and isis, if it's not isis, then what is it? what would you fight? it's americans. this is truly one of the most evil phenomenons in history. >> not a question of fighting isis. but the method at which you do fight isis. the method, how do you take isis out? you really want to eradicate isis? go for it, do the bombing raids, do what we did in the gulf war. we didn't, we didn't send five or seven or 10 sorties a day, we sent thousands a day. and we pounded them and beat them into submission. >> that's a different context.
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we are not, it's totally different. i think it's greatly different. i think at this point we do not have the political will to assert all those troops back into a war theater. >> do it by air. >> we are bombing. >> inevitably you've got to be on the ground. >> the intel. >> worried about collateral damage. rules of engagement. >> let's talk a second, rules of engagement. the people that we're sending now, they're looser restrictions on them to speak to your point, kimberly. they can now go into the forward front of the battle. that's how this young man was killed. this navy s.e.a.l. previously they had to stay back at the headquarters. >> that's over simplifying it. that's not true. >> the idea is to advise and help these iraqi people do the job for their own country. >> he was helping the kurds. that's why he was there. the problem is great evil does not cowhuld yo cower in the fac
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resistance. next inside intel on the gop race on this primary day. before we go tonight, don't miss a special extra live hour on "the five," the midnight edition, greg, wake up. we'll break down the results on the battle for indiana. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn because you can't beat zero heartburn!
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welcome back to the fief on this primary day in indiana. 57 gop delegates are on the line in the winner take all battle. ted cruz has a lot at stake here and is campaigning very hard. the hoosier state could be his last chance to stop donald trump from clinching the republican nomination before the convention. both rivals realized how important it is to score a victory tonight. >> people of indiana, it's an important week. because you can absolutely -- if we win, it's over. then i can focus -- then i don't have to worry about lying ted cruz, i don't care if he endorses me, i couldn't care less, but i don't have to worry about lying ted cruz. we don't have to worry about kasich. >> the kpir country is depending on us.
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the entire country is looking to do right. it is only indiana that can pull us back. it is only the good sense and good judgment of indiana that can pull us back. we're staring at the abyss. i have incredible faith. >> joining us to forecast how the race is going to shake out is campaign carl cameron. one of our great political reporters. on the set here in new york city, carl, welcome. >> thank you. >> so carl i looked at a poll that said nine out of ten republican voters think donald trump is going to be the nominee. and i see that donald trump is saying these other two guys, cruz and kasich, hanging on by their fingernails. what do you say in. >> just because nine out of ten think that donald trump going to be the nominee, doesn't necessarily mean that all nine of them want him to be the nominee. they're forecasting what the polls are doing and what his
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momentum is bringing us to. ted cruz's camp is pretty bummed out today. they acknowledge it could be a pretty rough night. the trump people are psyched. they're looking forward to west virginia where they're talking about a poll that has him up 30 points. they had meetings today to talk about the build-out for the general election. meetings tomorrow to do that sort of stuff. see this is an opportunity to put sort of a nail in it. clinch the nomination in california on june 7th, with plenty of room to spare. if he gets in the high single digits in terms of a win tonight. if trump pulls off a win. this is a state that ted cruz said was a must-win a month ago and was leading by 20 points. >> melissa? >> what is the deal with ted cruz? it feels like the harder he struggles, it's like he's in quicksand, the more he sinks. he's tried so many moves, he tried teaming up with kasich. he brought out carly fiorina.
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it just sort of fell apart. >> he left it all there on the table. everything but the kitchen sink was thrown at trump's head. gallup has a poll that shows the graphic numbers of all of this. and the numbers go like this, trump's favorabilities are going up and cruz's are going down. part of it cruz has come to the place where every republican candidate who has dropped out went before they did so. bobby jindal went for donald trump's throat and attacked his integrity and personality very aggressively and he bailed. lindsey graham followed. jeb bush after the new hampshire primary threat all hang out, taking on trump before he ultimately dropped out. today ted cruz acknowledged let me tell you what i've not done at all during this campaign, let me tell you who i really feel about ted cruz. he really went for it. it has all the earmarks of laying it on the record. he's let some people know he's not entirely sure he wants to continue -- >> this is the evil comment
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you're talking about? i wanted viewers -- >> he called him pathological. >> does that have anything to do with, behind the scenes we're hearing that the big donors may be pulling out if cruz doesn't pull out a win in indiana tonight, the donors may cut back on the money. in number two, i think it's important, that maybe staff has been told they may be let go if cruz doesn't win indiana. >> there won't be a lot of point in having a great deal of national staff around for the few states that are left. only nine after tonight. he's already agreed to step aside in new mexico and oregon. so now he's down to seven and to get all the way to california knowing that trump is likely to get 1237 before the convention, it would be that sort of exercise in futility. because trump would win the nomination on the first ballot. making a contested convention impossible for cruz and kasich to even create. >> let me just say quickly cruz seems to be ahead in nebraska, montana. some of the upcoming states.
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>> i have a question. to bag back on what you're speaking about. i don't understand. i think it's a little ill-advised for someone smart as ted cruz, who should be thinking long game. if he doesn't prevail tonight, his campaign will have no path going forward. lacking a strong position to go to any kind of contested convention. why isn't he thinking about someone who is bright, with a big future, who had a lot of followers. not alienating people. people who come out to support donald trump or kasich could be his people going forward. in 2020, et cetera. it doesn't make sense. >> had that consideration to the money issue you were talking about, which is largely at the super pac level at this point and then bring it to this. that is that -- those nine out of ten republicans who think that trump is going to win the nomination, a lot of the opposition to trump is beginning to melt away. more and more people are hearing it's okay to talk about trump in polite company and maybe even support him, because it would still be better than hillary. as a consequence of that, those
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numbers are going up as well. there's a variety of things that are augering for trump and not well for cruz. if he wants to run again, if he wants to go back in the senate and have some friends, if he doesn't want this to look like another budget shutdown that he didn't have a solution for. a gentle, careful, cautious walk-away not to a contested convention might be a way to show some face. >> so the anti-trump forces, the establishment, it looked like this was, they were going to make a stand here. they put money into advertising the last two weeks, mike pence, the governor, is reluctant endorsement of cruz, are they defeated now? >> they're not going to give up until the tonight's results and if tonight's results are a blow-out you're going to see a lot of that begin to winnow away. largely because the money won't be there. super pac donors, the mega-whale donors are not going to drop 15,
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10 million on something that may be a waste of money. >> now we go in-depth serious. >> i think we're missing the biggest story of the day. imagine if hillary clinton claimed that bernie sanders had a role in the killing of bobby kennedy. we would be going crazy right now. we'd be going wall to wall. but no, have we -- are we about to achieve a historical first in electing the first conspiracy freak president? is this the pivot we've been talking about? he's not pivoting from presidential, he's pivoting to alex jones, he's pivoting to crazy. why isn't it news? >> pivoting? >> come on. it's unusual that somehow it's not news when trump does it it's kind of funny. >> wait, wait, would you tell the people what you're talking about? >> the national -- "national enquirer" printing a story saying that ted cruz's father was present with lee harvey oswald. days before the assassination of
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jfk. >> and now trump has repeated the story. so carl, you're on the scene. is it true? oliver stone was right! >> oh, my god. someone delete greg's twitter account. >> it is true that the "national enquirer" published that story and they say that it's not conclusive. but they do -- >> really? >> they have pictures they say looks kind of like rafael cruz with lee harvey oswald. who was like passing out leaflets in new orleans in '63, a few months before he obviously shot and let's remember that the government around the warren commission and everyone else said it was one guy, lee harvey oswald. no other co-conspirators. >> i've been told if trump gets elect elected, i'll be in charge of
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finding big foot. >> now he what this is all about? >> lying rafael cruz. >> you think that trump believes that? this was his fun mol to have cocktail to throw of a ted cruz. >> this is guise we've seen ted cruz, donald trump use a lot. i'm not saying, people have just said to me. >> donald trump is a socialite in new york city for all of his life. having relations with tabloids there is probably good business. >> having a good social life and being a socialite can pay off. but you know -- and also the inquirer has had to walk back a lot of stories, like john edwards, not. >> i take about half of what they say to be true. >> that much?
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wow. >> greg, cross them off the list. >> i do not get my news from the "national enquirer." wait a minute, o.j. simpson. they got it right. and way ahead of people, by the way. >> gennifer flowers, they were right. >> you are so judgmental. i agree. >> fair and balanced. >> are we allowed to go back to asking carl real questions? i have a real question for you. i love it. so cruz obviously picked his vp, how do you think would be the best one for trump? your mom named you campaign carl cameron. >> actually that was shep. >> poor shep. >> what would be good? >> those meetings began really in earnest today and they're going to continue tomorrow. there will be a lengthy short list and it's going to be need to be vetted. they're going to need to have people who know how to do
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vetting. >> he's already talked favorably about john kasich before he started calling him names and one in 44. >> and rubio. and the reason those are two obvious choices is one, they were rivals, two they come from ohio and florida. in both cases they would offer something. >> oprah. >> so -- >> bernie. >> and what about -- >> newt has talked about him. >> melissa is asking a point. >> i mean you talk about what does he need here. a woman on the ticket. >> condoleezza rice. >> a minority might help with his problems. >> oprah. >> people with all races and somebody from the military might back up the idea that he doesn't necessarily know what he's doing from a military perspective. what are some names on that front. or that you've heard spoken if you don't want to express your own opinion. >> i think they will say this, too. it's way too soon. >> trump is really now got to just basically figure out how to finance a general election. he's been self-funding his
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campaign. lending money to his campaign. when we get to the general election, that's going to be a massive -- >> mexico is going to pay for it. >> that was a good joke. >> he, there will be, there are already independent -- >> obama can't be vp. >> no, did they cancel our 12:00? >> i have a legit question. >> there's some recent talk and it's seems to be snowballing, carl. that the people that who are bernie sanders supporters, who cannot bring themselves to vote for hillary clinton for the insider/outsider, are actually looking at donald trump to look to vote for donald trump. that's not a new phenomenon. >> and also on trade. >> it's been happening -- >> trade issue is a big one. the trade issue is a big one. there's always, there's always been on the democratic left an -- dick gephardt used to tie bill clinton up in knots over nafta back in the '90s, that
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aspect of trump's policies will be appealing to some on the left. but from the very beginning, in bernie and trump rallies, and iowa and new hampshire. before anybody was caring about either one of them in the early part of last summer, we would see people walking in and say my second choice is bernie. at a trump raly. and if you go to a sanders rally, their second choice after bernie is trump. >> it's a big difference between people who loathe government and government intervention, and people who say oh, i want free health care and free college tuition and government should be more of a nanny state, there's a huge difference. >> it shows you how there's no principles involved in all of this. >> you've got young people who say -- >> you have no principle. trump is saying i love the young people. and so people are supporting sanders and encourage them to come and join our campaign and our movement because i'm the best one to give you a job and
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have some future and success. >> i want all of the coverage. and read all of the news. >> you know the general election match-ups, no one takes that into account. >> with the sanders vote, that vote may jump over to trump. trump versus hillary. you're looking at people who are interested in trump or ted cruz against hillary. >> you're looking at the general election. >> this is a new phenomenon. >> almost unpollable. >> >> it seems like a movement. >> turn-out is way up on the right. down on the left. that's an important thigs that underpins this entire conversation. donald trump is bringing in an entire new type of voters. bernie's votes, his rallies, his core is an awful lot like an
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obama core. hillary's dominance, establishment that comes from being the secretary of state for the outgoing president. they are losing turn-out, their turn-out is shrinking. >> without being sort of presumptuous about what's going to happen tonight. let's look forward a little bit. where are you headed after indiana? which states come into play? >> west virginia. >> right now trump has a huge lead there and incredibly complicated way of attributing delegates. it probably goes entirely to trump who has been complaining about a rigged system. nebraska, cruz will compete there. again, he's not going to compete in new mexico. >> nebraska and -- it looks like cruz is doing well. >> all of this assumes that it doesn't, that he continues to go in earnest. >> i said cruz is doing well
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somewhere? you are so -- so down on ted cruz. >> if ted cruz wins tonight. he'll have to do very, very well in places where he hasn't been. if that comes to pass. he'll have extraordinary momentum. it will be the upset of the race. it's been described all over the place as the decisive state. the most important taste, the pivotal state. more than any other to this point. if he were to win tonight, that would be huge. but it still might not be enough unless something went drastically wrong with trump simultaneously. >> i don't think even if he won even with this momentum that it could be enough at this point. >> what about the delegate count? >> right now trump is about 996. if he sweeps tonight he gets another 57. that puts him about 200 off the pace to clinch there are 450 delegates up for grabs after tonight. so he needs 200 of those after tonight. >> 40%. >> it's not hard. >> that would put him on track to california.
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>> you guys are very cozy over there, scooched in together. >> it's they're like a legal team. >> he got empathetic for me because i said something nice about ted cruz. >> beaming with empathy. >> because even with common core math he seems the numbers. >> directly ahead, hillary clinton goes face to face with west virginia coal miners and it's not pretty. details on the coal confrontation and clinton's attempt to walk back her remarks, when we return. pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies. flonase is the first and only nasal spray approved to relieve both itchy, watery eyes and congestion.
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hillary clinton spitting the trail in west virginia, but voters in coal country are not happy with her. during a campaign stop in the williamson yesterday, clinton was confronted by an emotional
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man who recently lost his job at a coal company. >> when you make comments like we're going to paut lot of coal miners out of jobs. these are the kind of people that you're affecting. this is, this is my family. my hope is gone. that's my future. i want to know how you can say you're going to put a lot of coal miners out of jobs. and then come in here and tell us how you're going to be our friend. >> police clinton tried to clarify her previous remarks, slamming the coal industry. >> i don't know how to explain it other than what i said was totally out of context from what i meant. because i have been talking about helping coal country for a very long time. and i did put out a plan last summer. and it was a misstatement because what i was saying is that the way things are going now, we will continue to lose jobs. that's what i meant to say. >> she was taken out of context.
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here's a refresher of her threatening to destroy the coal business in her own words, two months ago. >> i'm the only candidate which has a policy about how to bring economic opportunities using clean renewable energy as the key. into coal country. because we're going to put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business. >> okay, kg, her own words. >> i think that was a powerful moment. it gets a politician to come off a high horse and look in the face and the eyes of people who are affected by the rhetoric. do not penalize and demonize the coal industry. there are families that rely on this a good form of energy. you shouldn't be embracing it and looking at ways like fracking as well to be able to create jobs in this country versus cutting them off and shutting them down. and that guy's story is very compelling. it makes you think about his
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family, doesn't it. >> president obama did say if you want to build a coal-fired power plant, we will bankrupt you. >> this was one war he was happy to wage. and the problem is, coal is a moral substance. where coal reaches, people live longer, happier lives. anti-coal, anti-fracking, it wreaks of white ocean privilege. the left wants to get rid of things that work, effective substances are foreign to them. that's why they love windmills. the left like windmills they can only exist if there's a back-up generator. >> but it's true. >> we know about the cold showers, don't we? >> in terms of politics, west virginia extremely important for both sides. she's going to get smoked in west virginia after this. >> first of all that guy a registered republican.
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he's not a democrat. you think she has a shot in west virginia after making these comments? >> well let me just say, i think you know there's something to be said for the idea that coal jobs are going away and what hillary clinton said in trying to clean this up was, that she is looking to try to replace those jobs with clean energy jobs. to bring a new plan -- >> do you think they're in west virginia? >> let me just say -- >> i can't believe you guys are talking about coal like coal is manna from heaven. if you tried to breathe in beijing? please. >> oh, my god. >> you can use coal, it's clean, expensive. >> let's talk about bo copley. you say he's a registered republican. that's how hillary clinton attacked him as well. he came on my show on fox business, he said he broke database in tears, fasted for two days and prayed, so that he would have the courage to say the right words when he spoke to her. he said he's supporting his family in west virginia, they're
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prideful people. he wants to work for a living and there's nothing else he can do anywhere near that provides the same kind of money to support his family. which is all that he wants to do. >> people, nothing in that state. he said that's -- he said that's all great in the future. that's not going to help me pay my bills this week. >> can i get kg in here. there's another very important state. one that could be the deciding state. pennsylvania has a ton of coal mining jobs. >> that's why trump is saying if he's the nominee he wants to put that state -- >> you're making this weird -- >> the bottom line is, anything can happen. >> a republican wins pennsylvania. >> why would you concede it. >> that's my point to you. >> an important coal state. >> donald trump will have an important campaign platform going forward to attract voters in pennsylvania. and why would you if you really want to win, concede any state
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to the other side? >> we got to go. they're wrapping me. up next, more brand-new exit polls from the battle in indiana straight ahead. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, and you're talking to your doctor about your medication... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me go further. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation
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usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. these are the polling numbers. welcome back to "the five." the first polls close in indiana in 15 minutes. i'm on bolling's phone. i'm looking at the polling. this is a fox news alert. >> 70% of the people polled believe the economy is in big trouble. i think that's a big thing. what do you think? >> i think these are just the beginning of the numbers that are coming in. it's very important for people to go out and exercise their right to vote. these are just preliminary and the polls have not closed. >> what these exit numbers say in terms of the economic
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participation. you don't see immigration there. so i mean early in the campaign. we were talking immigration, now we're talking economy. >> look how low terrorism is. >> those are democrats, no wonder. got you, juan. >> you got me. >> you juaned right into that. >> you wandered. eric. >> look at the numbers, if you're a never trump person, you're not liking what, i pick four of maybe six exit poll numbers. >> those people tend to lean towards trump. 84% of people are either angry or dissatisfied with government. hello, there's your guy. 65% say the plurality should be the nominee. not necessarily the majority. the guy with the most delegates, not necessarily 1237. trump again in this one. 59% want an outsider. i mean -- >> at least as far as indiana goes. >> these exit poll numbers that
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he, trump, should have a very big night tonight. >> it's always about money. at the end of the day -- it goes back to the idea where republicans, are you worried about the economy? of all the choices vary. 70%. everybody is worried about their pocketbook. worried about the direction of the economy. it's not expanding at the pace it should be. we're due for another recession, it's been seven years since the last one. it's a huge issue, only going to get worse between now and november. it will favor the candidate who has a real answer. >> remember we used to believe in facts and reason instead of emotion? >> when we come back, predictions.
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we are less than ten minutes from the first polls closing in indiana. getting our first look at some brand new exit polls from the hoosier state. all right the one that caught my trump is the gop nominee. trump, definitely for trump. not for trump, 22%.
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eric bolling, what do you think about this? if he's the nominee? 22% saying they're not going to go vote for him. >> so 78% said they would? >> no, said yes, 21ai pretty go polls are win, if it happens to be a trump win. here's the key. watch tonight and listen to what ted cruz says when he gets up there. he'll probably be very, less outspoken. i'm sure he's not going to go t that's the going to stick around. >> i don't hint. i think ted cruz has been veryt. because he said he believes get. >> that's why he picked carly. >> 40% said they definitely won't or trump in a general
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>> it's very make them say whatever you wa, said 22% said f he was the nominee. probably. 55 definitely. 22 not at all. you're saying that of those 21, the probablies are not much of a commitment. you're lumping them in with the 22. >>e cause which means morethan not. sufficient evidence. >> these are republicans. republicans, indiana republicans, this is a e. >> they said they wouldhere's t voting for trump bec going to get. the one who says we got to get out of the middle east. or the one who says let's take all their oil. the one who says ted cruz is a liar, or the one who gets his news from the "national
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enquirer." the one who says he's pro military or says that john mccain isn't a war who claims t 11s to save his own investments. so trying to figure out which trump you're actually for. the one who calls libya a disaster after egging on the invasion. the one who said don't meddle in the middle east, condemned obama for not helping christians in kimberly? and is go to beat hillary clinton to take back the white house. >> shocking turn of events they would like us to wrap. our final thoughts and predictions on the indiana primary up next.
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[announcer] working together, we can help your business thrive. time for our final thoughts and predictions for all right. so ladies at the table. >> i'm g didn't get to in the lastt. because greg was singing. which republican ran the most unfair campaign? cruz, 42%, trump. 38. i'm a little surprised that cruz is on top. especially after the "national enquirer." this has gotten very dirty. equally dirty, according to people voting in indiana. >> bolling? >> i think donald trump will after tonight pivot to hillary clinton. he will not waste any more time with the cruz, or kasich. he'll start taking her on in a general election match-up. then the numbers start to get
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interesting. >> campaign carl said they really want to turn their attention to the general election match-up. they have a meeting specifically i guess today about doing just that. >> all right. juan what you got? give us your best shot. >> exit polling is so interesting to me. it says here indiana republicans. think that the campaign, 40% think the campaign has energized the republican party. but 57% say this campaign has divided the republican party. i think that's a troubling statistic. it's about -- i think when people look back on this campaign, especially the primary and cautioncuses, they're going talk about this as a turning point for republicans and republican politics in this country. >> that was very fox news sunday. i like it. >> that was saying it's smarter than "the five." >> trump's advancement is predicated on the unpopularity of others, he's going to win because cruz is not popular and compared to hillary, he may be more popular than her, too. so his pursuit of the white
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house is predicated on the fact that everybody else is unlikable. >> that's why tonight is so important, keep your eyes here on the fox news channel for our battle for indiana primary f coverage. if we win in indiana, it's over with, folks. >> it could all come down to the hoosier state. >> the entire country is depending on the state of indiana to pull us back from this cliff. >> can ted cruz stay in the game? >> it's over. they're finished. >> will hillary clinton close the door on bernie sanders? >> i will stand up and fight for you, through this campaign and into the white house. >> let us see indiana, help lead this country into the political revolution. >> special coverage of the battle for indiana starts now.

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