tv Fox Report Sunday FOX News June 6, 2016 1:00am-2:01am PDT
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news channel.com. we're back here next sunday at we'll start with a fox urgent. polls closed a couple hours ago local time where democrats were voting in puerto rico. a fairly slow count. hillary clinton, bernie sanders. we'll cover the breaking results this hour. and this is it. the march toward the final nominating contest. six states vote less than 48 hours from now, and bernie sanders is making a big play for the biggest prize of them all, california. i'm harris faulkner. this is "the fox report." the long primary between hillary clinton and bernie sanders has come down to this. both candidates have spent a lot of time in california. 475 delegates at stake there,
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and if clinton can hang on to her super delegate, she only needs 60 to clinch it. >> i'm going to keep fighting hard here in california and in the other states that are voting on tuesday. because i want to get as strong a vote as i possibly can. >> so if the delegates to the democratic national convention want to make sure, and we better make sure that we defeat trump and defeat him badly, we are the campaign to do that. >> win or lose, sanders says he will fight all the way to the convention in philadelphia. counting the voters in lifornia could go well into the night if it stays this close. but five other states hold nominating contests on tuesday and clinton could get it done there. new jersey, montana, new mexico. both north and south dakota on that list. the current count shows hillary clinton needs just 60 delegates. i said that. to become the presumptive nominee. is it tonight? is it tuesday?
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looking more like tuesday with puerto rico. jennifer griffin begins our live coverage this hour. she's in l.a. how do the candidates split their time in cali today? >> well, we were here in mariachi plaza with bill clinton in east los angeles today, harris, and we asked bill clinton about bernie's threat to keep campaigning through the convention. >> we do have rules. this is still a democracy. and somebody will have more votes, and someone will have more delegates. and so we'll see what happens. >> hillary is campaigning in northern california. she spent the morning in a baptist church where she referenced the nba finals tonight in oakland.
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>> it's an exciting nba finals. but it also, i think, has some lessons. you get a game plan. everybody knows their part. people work together. they set the goals. you know, we know some people have different talents than other people. but we also know that we do better when we're all using everybody's talents. >> reporter: bernie walked around hip l.a. spots frequented by young people out partying on a sunday, decrying what he called her anointment. she will be back in new york on tuesday, and depending on how things go in puerto rico today, she could cross the finish line as early as today. >> it's important, i was watching a little bit of what you were getting from bill clinton. he was pretty sticky out there with those bernie supporters. at one point, he was telling them, as i was reading from your notes, bernie's going to be toast before election day. how important is the latino vote
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on tuesday? >> well, the latino is extremely important, to both hillary clinton and bernie sanders. it's one of the reasons they're campaigning so hard in this area. they also are taking a lot of shots at donald trump's remarks about mexicans. here in california, there are 15 million latino voters. that's about 40% of the population. 7 million are eligible to vote. they could make up 30% of the vote on tuesday, if the 2008 primary is any indication. what's remarkable about these figures is that hispanics made up just 11% of the vote during bill clinton's election run in 1996. an example of how strong this latino vote, this voting block has grown in recent years. >> they love hillary. don't mention trump. they start throwing tomatoes and avocados at us.
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hillary! hillary! hillary! that's what we say about bernie. >> we do not want to waste our vote. i think the writing is on the wall. secretary hillary clinton will be the nominee to lead the democratic party to victory in november. so we are going to be giving her our vote come tuesday morning. >> reporter: clinton and sanders are just one or two points apart. so it is going to be very close here on tuesday. >> good to see you. let's look at the republicans now. donald trump is facing criticism from some of his strongest supporters. it's all about what trump has been saying about the federal judge presiding over a civil lawsuit against the former trump university. donald trump has repeatedly cited the mexican heritage of the judge as a "conflict of interest." house speaker paul ryan has condemned what hely tinged atta.
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the strong supporter says trump should just drop it. >> this is one of the worst mistakes trump has maesmd i think it's inexcusable. he has every right to criticize a judge. and has every right to say certain decisions aren't right. and his attorneys can file to move the venue from the judge. but first of all, this judge was born in indiana. he is an american, period. >> let's bring in kristin fisher live on the news in washington. is dwruonald trump showing any signs of dropping this issue? >> not one bit. if anything, he's going to the opposite direction. on "face the nation", trump said he would probably be arguing the same thing if the judge in this case were muslim. >> my question is if it were a muslim judge, would you also feel like they wouldn't be able to treat you fairly because of that policy of yours? >> it's possible, yes. it would be possible,
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absolutely. >> isn't there a tradition in america that we don't judge people by who their parents were? >> i'm talking about common sense. >> and that is the crux of trump's argument. he says this has nothing to do with racism and everything to do with common sense. he believes his plan to build a wall along our border with mexico has influenced this judge, who in trump's mind is now showing bias against him. >> some interesting details i was reading about this judge. for one, former governor arnold schwarzenegger at one point in san diego had appointed him to the bench. >> right. so yeah, let's just dig a little bit deeper here. he's a federal judge from california who is no stranger to being targeted by powerful people. back in the '90s, he was reportedly on the hit list of a mexican drug cartel. the arguments against him are his mexican heritage and his appointment by barack obama. that's all true. but here's some context. his parents were born in mexico, but he was born in indiana. he went to college in indiana. he practiced law in indiana. he then moved to california where he was first appointed to
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be a judge by then republican governor arnold schwarzenegger. so this is a judge who has bipartisan support. he's well respected among both republicans and democrats, which is why today we saw so many republican leaders, newt gingrich, mitch mcconnell come out and say that trump's attacks against him should stop their concern that these racially tinged rhetoric will alienate latino voters. >> kristin, thank you very much. all of this is sure to come up at the bottom of the hour, when my guests slide in at home base. doug, john, and pat are all in town and they'll break it down for us and what to look for on tuesday, including what impact the surge could have. i'll ask them also about donald trump's claims that he could make a play in california in a general election. that's a blue state. could we see something on tuesday that could support that? and lessons from ronald reagan, what the insiders say donald trump can learn from reagan's outsider campaign of 1980.
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i can't wait for that. setting up for a busy week. let's go "fox fast forward." tomorrow, federal reserve chairwoman janet yellen is scheduled to deliver a speech at the world affairs council in philly. it's something that will be closely watched after the latest jobs report showed potential trouble for the u.s. economy. we'll take a look. in may, the economy added only 38,000 jobs, well below the 164,000 economists have been expecting. experts say this poor jobs report complicates the fed's decision on whether to increase interest rates either this month or next. and tomorrow's speech could shed some light on writ all stands. right now, the world is bidding farewell to a man who meant so much to so many. >> he fought for all of us. a minority, a woman, a christian, a muslim. we're all different, but we're all here together. we're on this planet as one. we have to stay united and keep fighting. >> and fight he did. from the start, as the louisville lip to his work later
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developing respiratory problems. one of his daughters reportedly said that even in his final moments, he showed his strength and will, the remarkable fact his heart continued to beat for 30 minutes after all of his other organs had failed. in louisville, gifts and handwritten notes quickly began popping up outside his home. a public funeral is set for this coming friday afternoon. we're getting some more details on that. mike tobin is reporting live. >> reporter: the remains of muhammad ali have arrived here in louisville. they landed by plane this afternoon. he was accompanied by his wife lonny and some family members when the plane came in. the remains of the champ have been taken to a funeral home in preparation for the memorial service planned for friday. this, of course, is the hometown of muhammad ali. just a few miles away from where i stand, a little pink house in which cassius clay was born and raised. it is now a museum to muhammad ali. people have been going there to
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learn more about the champ. it is the house where he was raised with his brother. >> a moving person. he came close to perfection. >> the funeral is planned for this friday. there will be a public service, in an arena known as the kfc yum center. the tickets will be available, but they're limited, in high demand. people in the city are suggesting if you want a look at the champ, your best bet would be to go along the route of the funeral procession and possibly get a look at the hearse as it moves by. >> and along that route, i'm getting that idea that many from the boxing world are going to be there, too. >> reporter: we've heard so much from some boxing greats. george foreman, who famously hated muhammad ali when he was his opponent and learned to admire him later in life.
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lennox lewis, who largely followed in the footsteps of muhammad ali. first with the gold medal, then with the heavyweight title. both have been speaking about how much they admired the champ. >> you saw him on television. there was no one more beautiful. you saw him walking down the street. he was a beautiful thing to see. what a phenomenon. you had to see him even if you pulled against him, you wanted to be a part of it. he moved around the ring. he had style and class. >> he touched me many times, and i guess the first time was, you know, when you go to school, and the teacher says well, can you write down your heroes? and, you know, i wrote down muhammad ali. and when he passed, that's what i thought about, that he was basically my first hero. >> lewis said after he won the title, he had an opportunity to speak with muhammad ali. and ali told him you're the greatest now. he said there can only be one greatest. never give up that title.
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>> thank you. now a story that's a reminder it's never too late to go after your biggest dreams. a 90-year-old grandmother parachuted into the hearts of fans around the world. if she can do that, i can handle these allergies. goodness, gracious. in germany, she touched down safely after an epic tandem sky dive. she says she took the flying leap in honor of queen elizabeth's 90th birthday. it's not the first time she's gotten attention for being young at heart. she competed in a 2012 gymnastic competition, earning the guinness world record for the world's oldest active gymnast. wow. texas is suffering with a deluge of rain. the latest on recovery efforts there and the investigation into the tragic accident that left nine ft. hood soldiers dead during a training exercise. and millions of americans now in the path of more d
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this has been going on for days. fox extreme weather alert down in texas. let's take a look at the deadly flooding. water has overflowed a river there and it's slowly moving downstream toward the gulf. homes, businesses under siege by water. today, ft. hood released the identities of all the nine soldiers who were killed when their truck overturned in a rushing creek. among them, the youngest, just 19 years old, he joined the military last year. they'll all be missed. 17 million people along the east coast are in the path of the storm that could be another round of devastation. janice dean has more on that in the kpleem weather center coming up. first, though, let's go to will
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carr who's on the ground there. coming up. first, though, let's go to will carr who's on the ground there. >> reporter: law enforcement is not letting us into the area that's being hit the hardest. they tell us it's simply too volatile. where we are, you just go and see house after house flooded, the yards just filled with water. roads have been washed out. along every yard, you see a member of law enforcement or the national guard shutting the roads down. this is a business, just completely swamped. right now in brazoria county, 15,000 people are under mandatory evacuation. the problem is the brazos river has crested, but doing that, there's just so much water continuing to flood the area. the water levels are continuing to go up. we're told that residents should expect that. for several more days for the water levels to continue to go up. with that in mind, local authorities are asking for residents to heed their warnings and they safe.
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>> i'm asking them to please get out. it's much easier to get out now in your own personal vehicle rather than to have an airboat come pick you up in a day or two, putting first responders at risk and also leaving their vehicle and whatever else. >> this is the third highest crest of the brazos river ever in this area. you have to go back to 1957 for a higher crest. before that, 1913. >> i've covered that area down there. i know that there's a lot of livestock in jeopardy. that's their livelihood. you were talking about businesses down there. that is really bad for them. >> reporter: absolutely. this is a very rural area. they saw some horse. they're standing around in water. we've seen cowboys, ranchers, racing around throughout the course of the day. doing everything they can to get their cattle, their horses. it's something you've seen continually over the past couple
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of days. we saw where local authorities to our north were having to herd cattle through massive amounts of cattle, trying to keep them safe. we've seen kids, we've seen horses who have drowned. so a dangerous situation, har lis, as y -- harris for the livestock as well. >> will, thank you very much. there's some pictures of it. look at that. wow. and from texas to a tropical depression now, and that's headed north. let's bring in janice dean. i know the seasons are kind of colliding now. this is that time of the year where you've got all that turbulence in the middle of the country brought on by those hot severe weather storms. and you've got it coming in in the gulf. i'm quoting you. >> yes, absolutely. we have severe storms in the springtime. the good news with tropical storm colin, it's the earliest we've seen the third named storm
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on record so early in the season. the good news is this is not going to affect texas. can you imagine if this tropical storm went into texas, houston, austin? it would be awful. florida is going to get this one, and they haven't had a tropical system make landfall since 2013. so it's been a while. tropical storm advisories for the west coast of florida, as well as the rescue of florida and georgia. here's the tlrack. this time tomorrow, we could be dealing with landfall from this is. we think a 50-mile-per-hour tropical storm making landfall, moving off into the atlantic very quickly. so by tuesday, wednesday, it will be offshore. and making its way very quickly to the north and east in the atlantic. for the meantime, we're going to see the potential for flooding across the sunshine state. so around the tampa area here, easily six to eight inches of heavy rain, depending on how quickly this storm system moves. we could see the threat for tornados tomorrow.
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so we'll be watching that. now, harris, east coast, we are watching a cold front move through. severe thunderstorm watches in effect. we were under severe thunderstorm warning earlier for new york city. we still have severe thunderstorm warnings dotted here all along the mid-atlantic, up towards the northeast. this will move out in the next couple of hours, but we still look for the risk of strong hail, damaging winds, isolated tornados. but it will be out of the way overnight tonight. better day tomorrow for the east coast. back to you. >> like half the country is active right now. >> it's very true, yes. >> janice, thank you. bernie sanders says he can win california. polls show a tight race between him and hillary clinton. but even if sanders does win, will it really change his chances of getting the democrat nomination? plus, donald trump also is doing some california dreaming, you might say. saying he can be the first republican since reagan to wind the golden state in a general election. what's the evidence to support that? we'll take a close look at that. the early indications about why that could be true.
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sanders has spent days campaigning in cali, and he's still fighting, taking this shot at clinton over the foreign money that has gone to the clinton foundation. >> if you ask me about the clinton foundation, do i have a problem? when a sitting secretary of state and a foundation run by her husband collects many millions of dollars from foreign governments, governments which are dictatorships, do you have a problem with that? yeah, i do. >> let's bring in our fox news political insiders. john leboutillier. pat caddell. doug schoen. too little, too late, pat? for bernie sanders? >> he's very close in california. we go back to the comment, nobody gives a damn about your e-mails, and not going after the
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corruption there. or raising questions that are serious, which is her basic weakness. even though democrats like her, even with democrats, there are concerns. >> what if he wins california? >> it doesn't matter. we're going to the convention anyway. i went through this in '84 with gary hart, winning california, allowed us to go on to the convention, and have sort of trouble or not. whatever deal we were making. we have these things. he's going to go anyway. he has to. he's got to address the super delegates. >> a memo to donald trump. watch that clip from bernie sanders. that is the case to be made effectively against hillary in the general election. the foundation, the corruption. that's her biggest weakness. and that's where he ought to go. but that's for later on. >> we'll get into that a little bit later. i am seeing something trend now in my twitter feed, and that is
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this idea that he can go back to that. we are going to get to that. >> the registration numbers. >> let's talk about that a little bit. we've got a graphic we can put up. >> anecdotally, i would guess those are bernie sanders voters. >> look at how many new voters have registered in california. 650,000. 500 of them democrats. what do you make of it? >> if my memory was correct in the last 45 days, since the beginning of the year, i think there are another million or so. this is all very, very good news for bernie. just to talk a little technical politics for a second, i think pat would probably agree with me. very tough to pick up new voters in traditional survey research. so i think there's a chance the polls are underestimating b bernie's support. >> when i look at that huge surge last five weeks, a giant
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surge. unprecedented in california, the numbers that came in for sha short period of time. got to say it's bernie's. and the other problem is they're making quite a case, because it is difficult. independents can vote. the democrats invited them in. and they made it very difficult. because no one will give you a ballot or ask if you want one. you have to ask for one. the people who have already mailed in their ballots, they are basically -- we shouldn't have early voting in primaries anyway too early. so they're out of it. i've looked at that and looked at the field poll. which i have a lot more respect for than any other polling in california. and boy, it lacked internally to me that i would -- if i had money, i'd probably bet it on bernie. >> here's the thing. the younger voters, harris, as pat suggests, the new registrants are breaking 65/35
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or more for bernie. that's what gives him a shot. and as pat said, if he wins, it gives him new life to go forward. he's got a movement. he's raising money. and secretary clinton, even though she had a very good week last week, still has major credibility problems. >> yeah. >> but you know what? from what i understand, before the votes are counted in california and announced, she will have won enough of the elected delegates on tuesday night, when you add the super delegates. >> but they're not elected. >> she will have won enough, plus the super delegates who are pledged to her, to effectively be called the nominee. >> we're waiting on puerto rico at this hour. it's been like three or four hours. >> and we're not even being facetious. >> prisoners in prison can vote -- >> we heard they were voting overwhelmingly for hillary. >> and they were voting for hillary.
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i didn't want to make a comment. >> i couldn't care what the results were in puerto rico. they don't have a democracy there. >> i did a little research on this. more than 1,500 polling locations were ori to people in territory. however, the democratic party announced that over a thousand of those locations would not be available. >> basically trying to help the establishment candidate. secretary clinton. one piece of -- >> what do people in your party do? >> that's about what i was going to speak to. it's not been confirmed. there have been multiple reports that after secretary clinton crosses the threshold for the nomination, that president obama will endorse her candidacy, which is the answer to your question of what will the democrats do. i think rally around secretary clinton, not only for political reasons -- >> they don't want to wait for
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her to talk to the fbi? >> that's exactly what i was going to say. >> the president said in his last interview with chris wallace. he said she had nothing to worry about. she told our chris wallace -- >> he said the word. >> he said i can't really say too much right now. because they're investigating. >> on the verge in one of the civil cases where brian pagliano, the i.t. guy who's got immunity. he's going to take the fifth apparently in this civil litigation. when you start throwing around the fifth amendment, it sounds crooked. >> do the polls really even mean much at this point in time? >> we're several days away and they may or may not mean something. i suspect in california, they may. >> she was way ahead three months ago in california. >> we know from the polling, it is close. i want to go back to this other point, what we just said --
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there was a piece kim strosel did, on the fact that her lawyer was taking it in the haerearing. donald trump has said repeatedly he could put that staunch democrat state california in play and win in a general election. so what's the evidence that analysts see to back that up? i'm going to bring in the guest insiders one more time. and your voice makes us better. so hit us up on our fox news social pages, twitter and facebook. stay with us.
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always give up in california as a republican because they say you can't win. i think we can win. we're going to come in, we're going to work california hard. i think we have a chance. i think we have a good chance. and no other republican would say this. but we are going to play for california. we're going to win california. you watch. you watch. >> he's actually spent a lot of time out there. he's got some more rallies set for california coming up. he says he could win it in the general election. can he put that staunch democrat state in play? why not? >> i don't care what he says, listen, 20 years ago, all the republican voters left the state. they went to arizona, idaho,
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oregon. they're gone. that state is a democratic state. and he is down already in some poll i saw hypothetically 19 points to either democrat. it's not going to happen. maybe he's trying to feint and fake out the democrats. but every day he campaigns in the general in california is a wasted day when he ought to be in pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin, ohio. >> and look, by the way, if a tide takes over this election, california will be the last state to fall. so, i mean, a lot more stuff is going to move. this is an election where i believe the electoral map will change, but it ain't going to change that far. >> the problem is, donald trump is clearly operating on instinct, which has been terrific so far. but a strategist would tell him to go to the midwest and cons translate on working class democrats and independents, not try to play everywhere. this isn't going to fool anyone. >> but everything that's been conventional, that he's been told to do, he hasn't needed to
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do to win. >> let's just look at the last -- >> but that's primary, and that's general. >> and i think since he won the nomination this last month, it's a month and a day from may 3rd to june 4th, it hasn't been that good. his instincts aren't that good. to be giving interviews, trashing a federal judge about trump university, please. he's running for president of the united states. he should bag his business stuff. forget it. shouldn't be going to scotland to open up a golf course. presidential nominees -- >> he's still working on his business. >> and he's great at it. but put it aside. you've got three wonderful kids who can run it. be a president in the making. >> well, look, the point on that is he has seized the nomination. that's the word for it. seized the nomination of a major party and wiped out many of its leadership establishment. they don't like it. but he's there. he is on the verge. he's plausibly a real winner in this presidential campaign. he has all of the issues.
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and he has all of this. he's got a problem. he screams on tv, which is awful. i recall's speech to him the other day, when she attacked him, let me just tell you. with a little sarcastic humor, you could have eviscerated her. because she has no business talking about being in the situation room when she was asleep during benghazi. i could do you a ten-minute speech that would have eviscerated her, and despite the fact that her press, which is all of them, are in the business of promoting her, that was not the gettysburg address. >> the speech that she gave was a detailed, point by point critique of positions that trump has taken. and that was last thursday. today is sunday night. he's never answered that speech. >> he has come back, but he's -- >> no, he hasn't. you can't say oh, she's incompetent and a liar. here's what he needs to do. >> well, he can. >> four points you can make.
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you can do them satirically. it has to do with that and libya. >> some beginnings of polling evidence to suggest that he's slipping and she's increasing. now, we don't have confirmation. but clearly there's movement against him. >> i want to get to a couple things from viewers. steve says to ask you guys about the clinton school and taxpayer money going directly to bill clinton. you know a little something about this. >> sure, there's a clinton school of public service at the university of arkansas. it's an accredited university. the university of arkansas. the school produces graduates who work all over the country and world on issues relating to poverty. >> the taxpayer money. >> of course. it's the university of arkansas. of course there are. >> is that a conflict? i'm just asking. >> everything's a conflict with the clintons. are you kidding me? >> that isn't going to the heart of it, which is doing special favors for money, being paid to your husband in a foundation.
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to give less than 10% of its money, except it's -- let me just make this point. which is that every time she's made a decision to help swedish telephones, whatever, what bernie sanders said is the campaign should be waiting. it's a killer. >> your mouth is gaping open. >> well, i agree with everything. i think that the movie, that should be taken up by trump, broken into one-minute vignettes. >> not going to happen. >> and he also should give a speech detailing these conflicts of interest. >> two of you weren't -- i think it was john and pat. were schooling us a little bit earlier today about what happened in 1980 with an outsider candidate named ronald reagan, and some of the lessons
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history meeting the future. reagan entered as a washington outsider. he managed to win over many skeptics, shedding his hollywood image to beat jimmy carter in a landslide. what are the lessons donald trump maybe could take from reagan? >> none of us took ronald reagan seriously. we saw him the way trump is seen now, as an extremist, no experience, couldn't be elected. he then got into a debate with jimmy carter. pat knows better than anybody. he looked reasonable, rational, responsible. the rest, as they say, is history. >> one of the things that i don't remember reading about that ronald reagan had to face were these protesters. and t.m. freeman wrote, how do the fox news insiders feel about
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the protester behavior and the blame game for that behavior? >> well, i'll do that, because we need to hear pat a little bit on reagan. the protesters are disgraceful and i think they're almost helping trump. i don't know where it's going to go among independents and the votes he doesn't yet have. it's an issue. and it's going to get worse, by the way. >> what i see on twitter and other places on social media is stop calling them anti-trump. some of these people are violent. they're breaking the law. wouldn't you have another word? >> i was with him, people waving mexican flags, burning american flags and causing violence. makes a lot of people unhappy. remember what we have here. and trump touched on this and it was important. and i'm going to go back to the reagan thing and the context of that. which is reagan's problem was we had nailed him as too risky. but the flow of the events were so much against us, that as you said, he got on the debate
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stage, which i pleaded with him not to do. there's a lot of history there. reagan had some rough days in 1980. made a lot of mistakes. but learned from him, his team did. he lost his temper in the primaries there. are many things that could be learned from this. the most important is, can you use your big issues, which will work for you, or is it going to be risk and personality? much bigger issues now. but let me say this about the rioting. after a while, people will not like him on one end, but do they want a president? i want to tell you what he was right about, which was assaulting the press, which has been -- this week it's outrageous. and he should take them on. because of what "the new york times" writes a piece about rule of law, and they're all talking about this, while obama has shredded the constitution from end to end, which nobody cares about. when you have him, the front page of these papers being nothing but propaganda sheets
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for the democratic nominee, whether it's bernie sanders or trump -- -- >> what trump lacks now is a coherent narrative. he lacks a message. and until he gets an anti-hillary, pro-trump message, one other quick point, if i could. 38,000 new jobs created. he needs that theematically. >> if he does those things -- and still lasts as the anti-systemic candidate. in a year when people want to throw them all out. and her particularly. that is the way to victory. these things of taking every slight as something you must attack. >> i would say hillary won the week, of the three of them. >> and she should have been slaughtered. >> that speech shaped her whole campaign against trump. >> so going forward, something in ronald reagan that you would
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now, i don't want to pick a fight, but if i were them, i'd be screaming, too, because if you figure this out, they're toast for election day. >> remember top of the hour, jennifer griffin was out there. she's on the stump with him, covering bill clinton. he's saying that about bernie supporters who finally turned that sound around so everybody could see. your final thoughts? this is a problem. >> a mistake. i know what the president was trying to say, that they don't have enough dell gegatedelegate. this party has to come together. referring to them as toast is probably not the way to do it. >> i want to -- >> go. >> i wrote a piece today with greg orman, who ran as an independent candidate, which is the argument for a real independent candidate. you have this this country unprecedented people who are unhappy with the tickets, who want somebody that can attack the two parties.
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tax systemic corruption. but at the same time, offer hope and common sense. and that is important, because without that, god knows what this election will turn into. >> my last thought. we talked about reagan a minute ago. and trump. donald is using the same slogan that reagan used in 1980, make america great again, but he's not gsz guys. we lost a legend. not just a champion boxer, but an american with dreams that actually came true. we >> it is monday june 6th. hillary clinton closing in on the democratic nomination. but bernie sanders getting ready to pull off an upset in california. this as donald trump doubles
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down aut criticizing that judge in the trump university case. >> i am talking about common sense. >> we have fox team coverage in just a moment. >> we are tracking a dangerous tropical storm. millions of americans bracing for high winds that churns up in the east coast. >> district of columbia. >> from the military to miss usa. this winner's story that will make you even prouder to be an american. "fox & friends first" starts right now.
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>> little country to get the week started as the sun comes up in new york city. you are watching "fox & friends first" on this monday morning. i am abby hunts man. >> i am heather childers. thank you for starting your day and a brand new week with us. we begin with the race for the white house. we are just one day away from a crucial primary day. hillary clinton closing in on the nomination following a win in puerto rico. >> bernie sanders is not backing down. rich edson is here. >> hillary clinton is 30 delegates shy from clinching the democratic nomination. tomorrow is the final primary tuesday when several states vote including new jersey and california. clinton supporters say polling in new jersey should give her enough delegates for the presidential
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