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tv   Hannity  FOX News  May 30, 2016 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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share your thoughts on twitter @megynkelly. i am megyn kelly. this is "the kelly file." good night, everybody. tell us what you think about tonight. thanks for watching. i'm sandra smith. we're going we're going to have a strong border, yeah, we're going to have the wall. who's going to pay for the wall? >> mexico! >> we want people to come into our country but they have to come in legally, folks, otherwise we don't have a country. get your money ready. you're going to pay for the wall. going to bring back jobs from china, japan, all these countries. politicians don't now how to stop it. i'll stop it quickly and easily. syrian refugees are now being resettled in rhode island. we don't know where they're from. they have no documentation. we all have hearts and we can build safe zones in syria and we'll get the gulf states to put up the money. we're not putting up the money. we're going to build our military bigger, better,
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stronger than ever before. ever before. isis will be gone. if i'm elected president. i would bomb the [ bleep ] out of them. i'd blow up the pipes. i'd blow up the refine -- i'd blow up every single inch. there would be nothing left. we have to rebuild america. we have to rebuild the united states. our infrastructure is going to hell. our debts have been forgotten. they have been forgotten. our vets are treated like third-class citizen. our vets will be treated properly with donald trump. we have a disaster called the big lie. obamacare. going up 25%, 35%, 50%, 55%s. we're going to repeal it, replace it with something great. people say trump has a tough tone, a tough temperament. we need a tough temperament now, folks. >> and welcome to this special e
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edition of "hannity." donald trump is the presumptive republican nominee. tonight for the hour we'll examine trump's stance on immigration, isis, health care, the economy and much more and how effective can a trump presidency be? we have a lot of ground to cover. let's start by welcoming the author of "rediscovering god in america," former speaker of the house, fox news contributor newt going riingrich gingrich. i saw something on twitter, you've been ahead of the curve on social media. it's been circulating. goes, for example, have to build the wall, have legal immigration, end sanctuary cities, immediately deport criminal illegal aliens, create safe zones in syria, take care of vets, support police, bring back better jobs, energy independence, balance the budget, fix a broken political system, rebuild infrastructure, restore america's military, reduce taxes on lower, middle class americans, protect the 2nd
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amendment, repeal and replace obamacare, women's health issues, he's pro-life. that kind of sums up the guy i interviewed all these times over these many months. we were talking about this and i agree with your analysis, he's not a traditional conservative. is there any one of those positions that's not conservative, though? >> well, again, i think you can argue about, for example, bi building the wall whether that's conservative or not. it's certainly popular. i would make a deeper point the news media totally misses. you just gave a list of the most substantive candidate i can remember who's taken item after item after item. when people say he doesn't stand for any issues, i wonder, you know, what planet they're on. this is a guy who has gone out and told us about a tremendous range of issues, the direction he would go in. i think in that sense, he's been a very substance-oriented candidate. some of the substance terrifies washington. frankly, that's good. washington needs to be terrified
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a little bit. >> well, why is it -- why is washington so terrified? can you psychoanalyze that? >> sure. he represents the end of their world. look, washington today is this bureaucratic, lobbyist system that is trying to impose left-wing values on the country. look what epa's trying to do to the navajo nation, for example, in terms of their large electric generating capability. look at what obama's done to the entire coal industry. look at what you see happening again and again with court decisions that favor radical values. so you have this huge industry in washington of people who try to dictate to the rest of us how we should think, how we should act, what we should do. and they're faced with a candidate who represents the will of the american people who's prepared to have, you know -- you can think of take
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back washington as the subset of make america great again. if you're washington, that kind of scares you. >> what's happened is, it's really true, because republicans have allowed the entire obama agenda to pass. they never had the courage you had as speaker to let the government shut down. as i recall, you did it twice. they wanted to maintain power. they were afraid they were going to get blamed. they were timid. pretty much everything obama wanted he got with little opposition. there's not a difference between republicans in d.c. and democrats in d.c. and isn't that what the voters have been saying? >> now, look, there's a huge difference between individual republicans, i mean, if you looked at the house republicans and the senate republicans, they're dramatically more conservative, but they have not been effective in taking on obama and taking on the elite news media. what makes fru s trump so fasci, re he reached past the elite media and communicated with the
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american people and beginning to create a trump movement and a sort of trumpism as a philosophy and if this thing begins to coct co-here this summer, by the time we get to cleveland, you begin to sense, here's how we'll deal with the country for the next eight years, this could become a historic turning point because it would mean, as you pointed out in several of your interviews, he's prepared basically to dismantle the washington education bureaucracy and send it back to the states. >> yeah. >> my guess is he would dismantle the washington medicaid bureaucracy and send it back to the states. this is a guy who idirectly eng reshaping the federal government in ways that will make washington very uncomfortable. >> you know, last question, i asked you this before. because the distrust level is so high right now, i always thought rp , i watched up close and personal when you ran on a
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contract, you put your word, your promises on a solemn vow, what you're going to do. i like that idea again. i think to build up trust, to be held accountable for promises, it could help run a national party. you could have senators and congressmen run on the same platform. i think many of the issues everyone would agree on, these are 80/20 issues, many of them. good idea/bad idea? >> i think they ought to have a fairly broad platform in the summer then i think they should pick maybe ten big things and those ten big things, that's got to be negotiated. can't be dictated by trump. he has to actually have the senate and house candidates with him talking it through, but they could big ten of them and really create a vivid example and then say, look, you elect us, and by easter of 2017, this is what we're going to get done. >> wow. all right. mr. speaker, thanks so much for being with us. appreciate it. >> food joining us now with mor editor of lifezette.com, fox
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news contributor, nationally syndicated host, laura ingraham. how are you? >> hi, sean. >> when i hear newt gingrich speak, you get this sense of hope and optimism. then i just realized how the institution in washington, the bureaucracy in washington, especially among republicans, is so deeply flawed and how weak they have truly been and how visionless they really are. it's kind of -- >> right. >> -- a great comparison. am i wrong? >> no, you're totally right, sean. and look, last year, friends of mine and i were sitting around and watching the cranes in washington, the growth of washington, the building in washington, it just keep expa expanding out, the city. i actually came to washington to work for president reagan in 198198 1984 1987. right out of college. washington, there was traffic. it was a busy city. it's grown into this mega, you know, city of lobbyists and
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lawyers and everybody who feeds off the -- excuse the phraseology, but the teet of washington, d.c., and the government. newt is absolutely right. the threat of someone who would come in and change that and really upend in, if that's what trump does which he says he'll do, that shakes their world order and people like, you know, paul ryan and mitch mcconnell, they're used to things look a certain way. and trump's got to be very careful that he doesn't allow the establishment now in washington, after he clear cut that entire field and grew his support among the electorate, he can't bow down and give away all the momentum and the credibility he has on the key issues he ran on. the immigration issue and the trade issue. it's what i'm concerned about when i hear these statements from ryan and mcconnell that trump's got to unify the party. i say trump has unified the party. he's up over 50%. he clear cut the whole field. bushism is over. there's no appetite for it. so i think right now, they're on
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the wrong side of some key issues and they got to come closer to him on a few key issues. >> this is like openly sabotaging the guy which i don't think they would do to anybody else. so he now has some problems inasmuch as i actually can see in my mind's eye some of these people actually actively helping hillary. that's how much -- that's how angry they are at the voters that they didn't pick an establishment candidate. >> well, i think so, sean. and remember, they have no problem working with obama on issues like trade promotion authority. they'd had no problem passing obama's budget. funding planned parenthood. i think if they feel in the end that they can cut better deals on globalization and trade, trans-pacific partnership, immigration amnesty with hillary than they can with trump, then they might as well cut deals with hillary. i mean, it's like the last year hasn't even happened for them.
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like, none of this is settling in that populism and conservatism imbued with an economic nationalism, that is the only future for the republican party. they can be spoilers, i guess, or they can be irrelevant like john anderson in 1980. i think athougthey ought to be thoughtful about what they do. i think the people are going to have a very long memory if the sabotage game is what's going on here. >> i think so. i also don't think it's a time for half measures. i think the problems are so deep. >> right. >> it's really in the foundation of everything there. and trump represents to them i guess the equivalent of a political earthquake and that will rock their world and change it hopefully forever. >> maybe the country would be changed for the better. when policies don't work, you don't keep doing the same policies. you actually do something different. >> it's called the definition -- >> if it doesn't work out, you change that. >> definition of insanity, doing the same thing over thinking you can get a different result. laura, thank you again for being with us.
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appreciate it. and coming up next tonight right here on this special edition of "hannity" -- >> we're going to have a strong border. yeah, we're going have the wall. who's going to pay for the wall? >> mexico! >> 100%, by the way. 100%. >> donald trump vowing he will boa build a border wall if elected and get rid of sanctuary cities. how will he do it? jan brewer and sheriff joe arpaio are here. they'll weigh in on this. as this your insurance company won't replace the full value of your totaled new car. the guy says, "you picked the wrong insurance plan." no, i picked the wrong insurance company. with new car replacement, we'll replace the full value of your car plus depreciation. liberty mutual insurance. trust number one doctor recommended dulcolax constipated? use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief suppositories for relief in minutes and stool softeners for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief
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man 1: i came as fast as i man 2: this isn't public yet. man 1: what isn't? man 2: we've been attacked.
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man 1: the network? man 2: shhhh. man 1: when did this happen? man 2: over the last six months. man 1: how did we miss it? man 2: we caught it, just not in time. man 1: who? how? man 2: not sure, probably off-shore, foreign, pros. man 1: what did they get? man 2: what didn't they get. man 1: i need to call mike... man 2: don't use your phone. it's not just security, it's defense. bae systems. live from america's news headquarters, i'm kelly wright. people are bracing for more flooding with several rivers rising in southeast texas. the brazos river is expected to
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crest wednesday at three feet above the previous record. during four days of torrential rain at least six people have died in flooding alone to brazos. there are also reports of people missing, and crews have been out in full force rescuing dozens of people. and turbulent weather in colorado. a tornado touching down. according to the logan county sheriff's office, it destroyed a barn, ripped off the front door of a home and knocked down power lines. so far there are no reports of injuries. i'm kelly wright. now back to our hannity special, trump on the issues. welcome back to the welcome back to this special edition of "hannity: road to the white house: trump on the issues." the day he announced he was runs for president, donald trump brought up the issue of immigration and it would be a top priority.
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listen to what trump said he would do if elected. >> believe me, folks. we're building the wall. believe me. we're building the wall. we're building the wall. no, we're building the wall. we have no choice. to we have a choice? we have to. we're going to create a path where we can get them into this country legally. okay? it has to be done legally. >> are you willing -- >> we're going to be -- they're going to come back and they're going to come back legally. we're going to end sank wactuar cities. i can tell you that. sanctuary cities. it's almost like a free zone. you kill people and you're fined because you're in a sanctuary -- it's so insane what's happening to our country. >> joining us with reaction, former arizona governor jan brewer. and maricopa county sheriff mr. pink underwear, himself, joe arpaio. our favorite sheriff. welcome both of you. you know, if you look at all the exit polls from all the different primary states including arizona, it's jobs, the economy, and security. all of them are tied to
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immigration. and governor, i'll start with you. what is the impact on jobs for americans, the health care costs, the educational costs, the criminal justice cost of illegal immigrants? how big is it? >> well, it's extraordinary. it costs us probably, you know, a billion dollars or more a year to educate these people that are coming across with their children. certainly they're taking jobs out of the economy. and then their health care under our medicaid program. we call it access here. and the incarceration. it's extraordinary. and we certainly can't afford it and it's not our job and the point of the matter, truly, sean, is that our borders need to be secured and we believe in the rule of law. >> yeah. and sheriff, you have an up close and personal view of this. how many, or what percentage of the people over the years has your jail been holding that are illegal immigrants?
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>> well, you know, just recently, we did a survey, i think i talked about it before, thanks for asking the question. we've had 5,500 in our jail system. we tur to i.c.e. and guess what, 3,000 have come back. that's a big story nobody will talk about. >> when you say 3,000 come back, meaning they got out of jail, you told i.c.e. they committed crimes in the u.s., that they were here illegally and they let them back in the united states, they didn't send them back. >> no, came back to the same jails that i run. >> yeah. >> one inmate came back 24 times. >> they kept coming back, they were let out, i.c.e. never picked them up and sent them back. isn't that the law? >> they were turned over to i.c.e. to be deported and they came back. they're let out the back door to roam the streets. when you talk about deportation, these are people that should be deported for serious crimes.
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so that's one problem domestically. you have to crack down at the border of mexico. you know i was a director in mexico city for many years, and you have to do it over there. get to the source, get that wall up and i -- you know, i was with donald right from the beginning when he mentioned the wall and immigration. nobody wanted to talk about it, sean. you know that. now everybody's talking about it. it's a no brainer to put that wall up. >> yeah. and by the way, republicans, if they wanted the wall up, they would have put it up. let me ask a political question, governor, and that is, john mccain was whining that, oh, his re-election campaigns are going to be reduced because donald trump's the nominee. i don't think that's the case. isn't it because the people of arizona feel that he's been part of the problem over these years? which scenario is more realistic? >> well, you know, john mccain has served us well, i believe, for the many years he's been in office, but there's a lot of concern out there. i think he will win re-election.
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he still has a lot of support. the people that oppose him are very vocal. but, you know, sean, i will tell you there's nobody better that you you want in your foxhole if you have a problem. i think john is truly an american hero and and, you know security is so, so important, we have to be very concerned if john doesn't return to the senate, he's got seniority. i think people should think a little bit cautiously about moving in a different direction. >> let me go back to the border, sheriff, and ask you this question. tell people what have you seen. in other words, drugs. i've been to a drug warehouse, you know, floor to ceiling drugs. the biggest room i've ever been in. the stench was horrible. drugs, human trafficking, explain all this to me. >> i'm glad you brought that up. every politician that goes to the border, all they talk about
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is illegal immigration for their photo op when they're running for office. nobody talks about the drugs coming into our kun country. they're destroying our country. heroin. i have to, once again, commend donald, he brought this out. we need the wall to stop the drugs from coming into our country. destroying our young people. not just the illegal immigration problem. we have to talk an the terrorism threat, too. it's very important to do something at that mexican/u.s. border. >> i agree. i think it impacts jobs. it impacts the economy. it impacts our security. and the trillions of dollars over the years we spend on the health care system, criminal justice system, educational system has been enormous, had a burden on the american taxpayers. thank you both for speaking out. we appreciate it. and coming up next tonight on this special edition of "hannity" -- >> they're going to be done. isis will be gone. if i'm elected president. and they'll be gone quickly. they will be gone very, very quickly. >> donald trump taking a strong
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approach when it comes to dealing with isis. we're going to speak with dr. walid phares, one of trump's foreign policy another day, and i'm still struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may too. know your options. once-daily toujeo® is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus®. it releases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours. toujeo® also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. toujeo® is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. don't use toujeo® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you're allergic to insulin. allergic reaction may occur and may be life threatening. don't reuse needles or share insulin pens,
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so he should have been with those first heroes. ha ha! that's better. so, to recap -- small business owners are heroes, and our heroes help heroes be heroes when they're not eating gyros delivered by -- ah, you know what i mean. we're going to build up our military bigger, better, stronger than ever before. it's the cheapest thing we an do. we're going to have to take out isis and take them out fast. i would bomb the [ bleep ] out of them. i'd blow up the pipes. i'd blow up the refine -- i'd blow up every single inch. there would be nothing left. and you know what, you'll get exxon to come in there and two months. ever see these guys, how good they are, the great oil companies? they'll rebuild that sucker brand new. it will be beautiful. and i'd take the oil. i said i'll take the oil. we must, as a nation, be more unpredictable. we are totally predictable.
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we tell everything. we're sending troops, we tell them. we're sending something else, we have a news conference. we have to be unpredictable. and we have to be unpredictable starting now. but they're going to be gone. isis will be gone. if i'm elected president. and they'll be gone quickly. they will be gone very, very quickly. >> and welcome back to this special edition of "hannity." that was donald trump explaining how he will deal with isis. if, in fact, he's elected to be the next commander in chief. here with reaction, one of donald trump's foreign policy adviser, dr. walid phares. author of great new book "in the arena" fox news contributor peter hegseth is here. fox news national security analyst, k.t. mcfarland. good to see you. ex congrats on the back, by the way. >> thank you very much. >> walid, you advise donald
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trump. i like bomb the living out of them. that's a good start. we've been timid with is swis. he said he wouldn't telegraph everything. give us insight into his thinking. >> what we've heard so far is the primary, you're going to hear more expansion during the debates this summer. what he is going to be doing when he is going to be elected president, elected president. number one, as he mentioned, there's no containment with regard to isis. this is a dismemberment of isis. also the eradication of isis. that means we're going to have to have a force on the ground. there will be continuous, relentless shelling of isis positions. >> you think he'll send american troops into iraq and syria? >> they are all tools, sean. now, he will choose, if he can, through a coalition of local allies inside rauniraq and syri. he mentioned this in his foreign
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policy last week -- >> he said he wouldn't do that. he said he would let other countries do that. he said they should be shedding their blood, contributing their money. >> that's what i'm trying to say, he will talk to these arab countries who have armies that we have trained that have been very frustrated with the obama/clinton administration's policies. >> k.t., i heard a guy that said, you know what, we can't change countries that don't want to be democracies and we've done more harm than good in some instances. and we always end up politicizing the war, anyway, and giving up our gains. how many more times are we going to that is. >> yeah, i mean, he's been clear he doesn't want to have a bush kind of war in the middle east and doesn't want to have obama's leading from behind. what i think is intriguing, he's similar to reagan in the sense he's rethinking, what should your strategy be, and in fact, trump has said to defeat isis, we need a comprehensive strategy like we had to defeat the nazis during world war ii and reagan used to defeat the communists during the cold war. has an economic component,
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ideological component, covert action component. yes, it has a military component, but it's one of a number of issues and a number of ways we fight this enemy. >> one similarity, pete, is building up our military strength that everybody knows we are a force to reckon with. >> well, that's right. i mean, no one's going to doubt trump's gut. we know he wants to defeat, crush isis. that's there. that matter s to troops on the ground who look at their commander in chief now and wonder where his compass is. there's an inconsistency in the actual implementation. the devil is oftentimes in the details in the application. you can't lead without american boots on the ground. that might be part of the equation. >> we have got to advance war sfa fare to the point it's not like baghdad, we're sending kids in with not even uparmored humvees knocking door to door to try to win a war. i think we have got to accept if
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we're going to wage war against a modern day evil, there's going to be far more collateral damage than people are willing to accept. that means the media, cnn will go in with their pictures, oh, they killed women and children. well, that's going to happen in war. we don't seem to have the appetite to do that. >> yeah. one of the things i think is interesting about what trump has said -- >> by the way, i'm not hoping for that. i'm saying that is a natural course. yeah. >> if they're going to kill each other and you got two enemies killing each other, you kind of wonder why should you step in and try to stop them? let them exhaust themselves. but when trump says we're going to build the strongest, toughest military and it's cheaper, that is a really sophisticated concept. why? because he says have the strongest, toughest military. nobody picks a fight with you. >> that's right. as long as you don't -- that was reagan's piece through -- >> they are going to keep picking a fight with us no matter what. they have a caliphate with a black flag. >> not if they're bankrupt. they have mosul. will we be able to bomb their capital? we know where their headquarters are. we won't do it.
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>> obama wouldn't do it because he doesn't want environmental damage. >> i think trump would. >> of course. >> walid, that's a good point. obama wouldn't do it. he did little pinpricks. there was no overwhelming use of force. then there was concern about, well, there might be environmental damage if we bomb the oil wells and take hatheir money away. >> that was another concern, sean. the reality is the obama administration could have destroyed isis if it wanted. we have the best mailitary in te world. it's not iran that wanted this to happen because they wanted to seize the areas. this is where a trump administration will have a different strategy. we and our allies will destroy isis. details will come later. it's always the day after we need to think about. >> all right, guys. thank you all for being with us. good to see you. pete, congrats on the book. coming up tonight next here on "hannity" -- >> you have millions of people out there that can't get jobs. we're going to bring our jobs back to our country. and we're not going to let people leave so easily anymore.
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>> donald trump is a very successful businessman and he promises if elected that he'll bring back jobs from mexico. he'll fix the economy. coming up next, charles gasparino, nicole petallides, gerri willis will weigh in on trump's plans it's more than a network and the cloud. it's reliable uptime. and multi-layered security. it's how you stay connected to each other and to your customers. with centurylink you get advanced technology solutions,
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memorial day by remembering fallen heroes at arlington cemetery, the president laying a wreath at the tomb of the unknowns. in an address, mr. obama stressed the importance of fwefing our vet rachs access to good health care and jobs many we have to do better. s over 4 years. i'm kelly wright. now back to "hannity." back back to this special edition of "hannity: road to the white house: donald trump on the issues." it trump becomes president, he'll have to do a lot of work to fix america's broken economy, of course caused by years of obama's failed policies. here's where trump stands on this very important issue. let's take a look. >> we're going to bring back our jobs and we're going to keep our jobs. we're not going to let companies leave. now, if they want to go to a different state, good luck. compete. but when they start going to different countries, and in many cases countries that devalue their currency and make it
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impossible for our companies to compete, that's not going to happen. you have millions of people out there that can't get jobs. we're going to bring our jobs back to our country. and we're not going to let people leave so easily anymore. we're bringing our jobs back to this country and companies that want to leave, they're going to have to pay the consequences. i mean, if they want to leave for mexico, make product and sell it, they're going to have to pay the consequences which in this case is taxes. they have to pay a tax if they want to come back into the country. with me, they're paying 35% tax as soon as they leave, folks. and they're never going to leave. >> joining us from the fox business network, charles gasparino, nicole petallides, and gerri willis. by the way, i got a chance to read and endorse a brand new book "rich is not a four-letter word" out in bookstores and on amazon.com. it really isn't. i look at his economic plan. i like the idea. we become energy independent. we create millions of jobs. it's good for our national security. you let all of these
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multinational corporations that have trillions, billions of dollars, i think trillions, $2 trillion, $3 trillion, overseas, bring it back at a low tax rate, build manufacturing and centers. >> he wants a 15% corporate tax rate, bring down individual tax rates. the top tax rate would be 25%. this would turn a lot of much ov muc money over to the private sector and individuals. grow and grow dramatically 1% a year. over ten years -- you say gerri, that's not much. over ten years, that's 10% growth. >> nicole, obama, the last quarter, .5%. he's the only president in eight years that will never reach 3% growth in a year. >> i can tell you that i talked to all the wall street traders all the time. today i talked to several of them about this segment, alone, asking about trump's policies, what do they think. you know what, they embrace it. they want a political maverick. they want someone to make changes. they're willing to take some -- obviously some challenges and some, obviously risk with this
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but they like what they're seeing. they like what gerri just noted. 15% from 40%. they like the getting rid of the inversions, bringing back $2.5 trillion back to the states. so they like -- >> that's a lot of money. >> we don't want to be japan. >> there's a critic in the corner there. gasparino. >> i'm the voice of reason. let's be clear. difference between the few traders left on the familiar of the stock exchange and most -- >> charlie likes to note that. go ahead. >> no, no. most major investors are scared to get of donald trump, scared to death -- >> go ahead. >> how about paul singer? >> all right. >> you know what -- how much money could john -- >> here's the point. monetary policy versus fiscal policy. >> listen, a trade war. one of the basics that has al w allowed our economy to grow in good times, forget about the obama administration. you're comparing him to the largest midget in the room. donald trump wants to start a trade war with china. >> not what he said at all.
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he wants 45% -- that's not what he says. >> 45% tariffs. >> oh, my gosh. >> i think he said in working with other countries. >> he didn't say that. >> what he's saying -- >> he did. he said he would negotiate better trade deals. >> right. >> because there's such an imbalance. that imbalance has resulted in americans losing jobs. >> if they manipulate the currency like we manipulate -- we manipulate the currency, too. >> they do it more than us. >> it's called quantitative easing. >> that's horrible. i can't stand quantitative easing. >> a lot of little things, incei incentives to keep companies here. impoverished cities in baltimore, have more incentives there. this could be the greatest jobs god ever created. >> go vote for hillary. good luck. go vote for hillary. >> by the way, donald trump vent the tax cut. you do realize that. >> john kennedy did it. ronald reagan did that. >> mitt romney wanted to do it. every republican candidate, the
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conference between them and drup kr donald trump, he wants to engage in a trade war. >> that's not what he said. >> you left out another point -- >> talked about limiting regulation. who doesn't want to -- >> the only one not frustrating me is gerri, book "rich is not a four-letter word." up next on this special edition of "hannity" -- >> i want high intellect, great intellect. these people are all of very high intellect. they're pro-life. >> donald trump, he kept his promise to conservatives. he released a list of potential supreme court nominees that he would pick from if elected president. that and more on this special edition of "hannity: road to the white house: donald trump
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welcome back to this special edition of "ha"hannity: road toe white house: donald trump on the issues." frump released a list of possible supreme court nominees. on the day the list was made public, i spoke at the presumed nominee at his campaign headquarters in new york city. here's some of the highlights. one of the top things i would ask you often is your judicial philosophy. you mentioned as i said scalia and thomas. they're what we call originalists. >> right. >> constitutionalists. >> correct. >> you are a constitutionalist. >> correct. correct. i also want high intellect,
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great intellect. these people are all of very high intellect. they're pro-life. so that's my list. and we are going to choose from, most likely from this list, but at a minimum, we will keep people within this general realm and, again, i have a lot of people that are conservative that really like me, love everything i stand for but they really would like to know my view because, perhaps, outside of the defense of our country, perhaps the single most important thing the next president is going to have to do is pick supreme court -- >> which will have an impact for generations to come. >> generations. >> donald trump's list of potential supreme court nominees has been getting a lot of praise from conservatives. recently i spoke to jay sekulow from the american center of law and justice and a member of the federalist society and cheief counsel and policy director for the judicial crisis network and john malcom, director of the center for legal and judicial
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studies at heritage about donald trump's licook. jay, i talked to a lot of people -- >> hey, sean. >> that know the people on this list. not one person has anything but high praise for this list. >> look, this is a great list of potential nominees to the supreme court. you've got justices that have served with justice scalia's as law clerks, chief thomas, chief justice rehnquist. they come with broad and serious credentials, have pun liblished opinions. they understand the role of a justice of the supreme court is not to make law. so i think, look, no matter what anybody thinks, the fact of the matter is, the lasting legacy of a president is often the supreme court of the united states. i think you're looking at the next -- we know we have a vacancy. there may be several others. this is a supreme court for a couple of generations. there's a lot at stake. these nominees are great. across the board. not one in there, you would not be happy to have. >> and jay, you say that as somebody who has argued a number
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of times before the supreme court. carrie, my understanding is donald trump did a lot of research. he checked in with the heritage foundation, checked in with the federalist society. he ran the list of names by senators and other people. this was a pretty extensive vetting process. are you happy with it? >> yeah. i think all the research really shows. he has the right people and took great advice. i love he includes people that are often overlooked like state supreme court justices. gives us a really good view of what they would really be like on a supreme court. they've been on a state supreme court. you spr a better sense of how they might perform in the u.s. supreme court. it's a lifetime appointment. make sure you get it right. someone with a really solid judicial philosophy and has the courage to stand up for it under pressure. >> you know, i would say this, if i can, john, republicans often get it wrong. republican presidents. in other words, we're told a justice like john roberts is going to be an originalist.
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he disapointed a lot of disappo, including myself, especially in the obamacare ruling. do you feel that this list -- are you confident this list, there are no disappointments? >> you would have added john paul stevens to that list. >> good point. >> five of the names on the list were also on my list. the remaining six appear to be qualified, men and women who have a proper view of the model role the judge plays, who are going to interpret the constitution based on the words themselves and not using empty vessels to pour in their personal, or political, biases. these are qualified people and the six of them are sitting circuit court judges. five of them are sitting state supreme court justices, one spent time on the wisconsin
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supreme court as well. these are men, women, who are very well qualified with a broad bredth of experience. >> you can see problems, jay, for any of the 11 going up against democrats? knowing they played politics, clarence thomas comes to mind, with judicial picks? >> i think you've got to keep control of the united states senate. that is going to be very important here. i think any one of these nominees you're seeing potential nominees, you're seeing the left criticizing these individuals. they know they have judicial philosophy like scalia, that is what they don't want, what we've got to be prepared if donald trump is the president of the united states, is to defend these nominees. it would be good to get 60 conservatives in that united states senate. it's a fight worth taking.
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>> or you can follow harry reid. this is important, do you see any problems? >> i don't. i see a real strong contrast with what the president put forward in judge garland. he has bad record on the second amendment. thon list, we've got people like judge sykes and judge hardeman who stands up for the second amendment. we've got people like judge keftlich who stands up for these agencies. we see judge garland going with a liberal society. we see people here showing what it's like to stand up against the kind of things president obama is trying to do. >> john, we'll give you the last word. >> i don't think -- i think some of the people could well face a confirmation fight.
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these are people worth fighting for. you need to have a president who is prepared to stand by them, you know, to the bitter end, and to get them across the goal line. >> i've got to believe this will go a long way with maybe conservatives that had doubts about donald trump's commitment to conservatism, one of the most-important jobs a president will have. thank you for being with us, appreciate. >> coming up, we'll have more of this special edition of "hannity", donald trump, road to the issues, coming up. (vo) if you have type 2 diabetes, you may know what it's like to deal with high... and low blood sugar. januvia (sitagliptin) is a once-daily pill that, along with diet and exercise, helps lower blood sugar. januvia works when your blood sugar is high and works less when your blood sugar is low, because it works
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>> this is the national law enforcement officers memorial. more than 20,000 names line these walls and each of them the name of a law enforcement officer who gave everything in the line of duty. on this memorial day, we pay tribute to our heros in blue. earlier this month, law enforcement from across the country participated in national police week. here's griff jenkins to explain. [siren] ♪ >> scenes like this play out every day. law enforcement officers putting themselves in danger to keep us safe. >> it's been a tough year for law enforcement in this country.