tv Happening Now FOX News June 8, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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bill: john kasich has a lot of things on his mind. we'll have that for you tomorrow during "america's newsroom." i have got to run. martha: i'll see you on the radio and o'reilly. bye, guys. gregg: making history on the road to the white house. hillary clinton becoming the first woman to clinch the nomination for the democratic party. melissa: donald trump and hillary clinton both hitting each other hard last week after wrapping up california. bernie sanders says he's still in this campaign.
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donald trump coming off his own sweeping victories and tries to unify republicans behind him as all three candidate look to the race and the future. >> thanks to you we reached a milestone. >> we closed one chapter in history and begin another. >> we'll not allow donald trump to become president of the united states. >> the first time in our nation's history that a woman will be a major party nominee. >> i fought for my family, i fought for my business, i fought for my employees. and now i'm going to fight for you, the american people. >> we take our fight for social, economic, raig and environmental justice to philadelphia, pennsylvania.
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gregg: we have live team fox connell outside trump headquarters. reporter: the headlines "hill makes history." another saying "her." aides say she was working on her speech up until 30 seconds before thee went on stage. we were struck by how the tone was more subdued. aides say this was by design. she had to walk this fine line noting how she was making history, but also being careful not to alienate the supporters of bernie sanders who still refused to concede. >> it may be hard to see tonight, but we are standing under a glass ceiling right now.
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but don't worry, we are not smashing this one. reporter: before she spoke the campaign played a 2.5 minute video called "history made," a history of the would even's rights movement starting in seneca falls. she talked of the 19th amendment when women received the right to vote in 1920. she spoke about her mother. she called bernie sanders to congratulate sanders on his wins in montana and north dakota. unusual since she won by a very large margin in california showing how wrong the polls can be. >> i know it never feels good to put your heart into a cause or candidate you believe in. and to come up short. i know that feeling well. as we look ahead to the battle that awaits.
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let's remember all that unites us. >> her campaign would like sanders to concede to bow out so she can unify the party going into the convention. not clear when or if that's going to happen. >> our team coverage continues with donald trump pouring even more mentioned delegates after locking down his spot on the ballot. he celebrated by laying into hillary clinton as each candidate gets ready for a presidential elect that promises to be a real barn burner. john roberts is live outside trump tower in new york city. what is it like there today, john? john: a celebration at trump tower today after getting 1,538 delegates. 331 more than donald trump needed to clinch the nomination. but it is rather odd having covered politics for a long
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time, for a presidential candidate to be making headlines for behaving in a presidential fashion. but that's where we are today after coming under heavy fire for his off-the-cuff remarks about the judge overseeing the trump university litigation, donald trump struck closely to his prepared remarks, even using a teleprompter. after being admonished by senate majority leader mitch mcconnell to behave like a serious candidate. last night at the trump golf course, the candidate over blinding. >> you have given me the honor to lead the republican party to victory this fall. we are going to do it. we are going to do it, folks. i understand the responsibility of carrying the mantel, and i will never ever let you down.
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reporter: trump's speech got high marks by reince priebus. quite a sharp contrast to what he said about donald trump in the hours preceding that speech. trump university will launch an interactive website. people are being asked to go to the website and give the rnc what they would like to see in the platform. >> we believe in listen together voice of every american. that's why we want your input, your ideas, and your vision. the principles we stand for are at the heart and soul of our party. let us know what's important to you. reporter: that website will go
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active. based on how this campaign has gone so far, they are going to get a lot of interesting responses. gregg: california has voted for democratic presidential nominees the last 20 years, but donald trump says he wants to win the golden state. california, 41% are registered democrats, 28% registered republicans. so democrats have a huge advantage. but a third of voters are independent. can trump win that state?
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>> it seems unlikely necessary wins in a landslide. as you saw last week when there were republican insiders and establishment people getting angry at trump. not all of it was rhetoric, some of it was tactical. the top two finishers in the senate race which is open to everyone to vote were both democrats. so there won't even be a republican on the balance not the senate race. gregg: she smashed the glass ceiling as the first female candidate for president. she attacked donald trump. she says he's temperamentally unfit. den graze muslims and immigrants and reminds us daily how great he is. for somebody who urged civility, she didn't have much last night, did she? >> we'll see a pretty nasty fight here.
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i think both candidates have pretty much thrown it out the window, the idea they are going to approach this in any kind of civil manner. gregg: trump's support -- hillary clinton's support among women is quite impressive. she is losing men, though, by 15 points. there is a gender gap for both of them be isn't there? >> you saw that in california last night. that was the reason she was able to bring up such a large victory over sanders in the state. you also have a large latino voting population which is another area she'll rely on in the general. she'll be flying her base. california is not a state that will probably be up for grabs, but it's a good demonstration of the kind of campaign she wants to run in the general. gregg: she turned personal
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enrichment into art form and turned the state depth into a personal hedge fund according to donald trump. how does she counter that perception of dishonesty and untrustworthiness in the polls. >> that will be her biggest challenge. this will be a race of who you like less. what she is doing is saying he's war than me. she had her big speech in foreign policy calling shim dangerous and saying he was temperamentally unfit to be leader. and she is also going to try to do what she has always done which is to say that these things are small in comparison to the big picture. and they are overblown by her enemies.
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gregg: some about rrp supporters are bitter over hillary clinton's presumed nomination. donald trump says he can get those supporters of bernie sanders. can he? >> that was an interesting part of the speech. you notice he did not ask to get hillary clinton's supporters. he asked to get bernie sanders's supporters. can he do it? it doesn't seem likely. these are people who are generally far to the left and not looking for somebody who is calling himself a conservative. gregg: and materials is a full-throated endorsement, the likelihood is even more remote. >> i spoke with sanders months before he launched the campaign and at that time he wasn't going after clinton at all.
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but he was adamant early on that he did not want to be considered a spoiler. he did not want to be somebody regarded by democrats as the guy who elected trump. gregg: he has never been a democrat until recently. >> i don't think he wants to be blamed by his supporters temperature. gregg: tune into a special report tonight with bret baier. he will be speaking to hillary clinton 6:00 p.m. eastern time on the fox news channel. >> the prime minister con terming six people were killed and dozens injured. benjamin ham is following this story from london. what details do we know?
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reporter: this is the second major fatal attack in turkey in two daves which has been blamed on the kurds. it comes as the peace process between the turks and the kurds is breaking down and all but unraveled. the blast killed at least three people including a police officer, wounded some 3 others. news reports say the vehicle rammed into a busy street filled with shops and businesses. the attacks come after another car bomb hit a vehicle in istanbul. this was also blamed on kurdish rebels. the prime minister calling them the murderous pqk organization. the conflict between the kurds and the turks has gone on for defend kids and claimed the
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lives of tens of thousands. the pkk, long considered a terrorist group by the u.s., has picked up its attacks. the kurds have long been seen as the most effective fighting force against isis in syria while turkey is a may controversy ally. and we are trying to work with both of them. difficult times ahead for isis and the region. gregg: the man convicted of shooting and killing a teenager over loud music coming from his car wants a new trial. what his attorney says the prosecution failed to do. why illegal immigrants are taking custody of children traveling alone, pretending to be a family. what border patrol agents are trying to do about throngs of kids surging across.
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gregg: . at the australian open in january sharapova provided a urine sample and she was suspended for two years. what she achieved during that period is erased from the record books. a young detroit man wrongfully convicted of murdering four people will walk out of prison. he was 14 years old when he confessed to the quadruple homicide. but he was cleared when another man confessed to those murder
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and 8 others. darcy patrell has been mission since last week. attorneys for michael dunn are asking for a new trial after he was convicted of shooting and killing a teenager at a gas station after loud music coming from a teen's car. the teenager he says threatened to kill him. melissa: officials say refugees are streaming across the border and they are not coming from mexico. rather central america, china and romania. and many are children fending for themselves. reporter: what they are doing, some of these children are being
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embraced or appropriated by unrelated adults so they can cross the border as a family which under administration policy means they are quickly released together. at a phoenix bus station these 13 central americans claimed to be a family. the border agents tell me the agent never verified where they were going. i.c.e. released the group because it doesn't have any more bed space for families. and a detention center was shut down because of a measles outbreak. they have 10 days to show up at an i.c.e. facility where if they show up they will get a court date in 3 to 5 years. he asked for $12 million now and $20 million later to handle the surge.
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texas will feel the brunt. yuma apprehended 1,500 kid by march compared to 178 in 2014. in san diego agents detained 700 chinese compared to 48 last year. they paid smugglers $70,000 to get them across the border. some are telling agents that nobody fears being deported. the u.s. sees 1.5 million new immigrant every year. about a third arrive illegally which is like adding a city the size of albuquerque every year. gregg: despite a string of losses to hillary clinton, senator bernie sanders says he's not going quietly into the night. >> we are going to fight hard to win the primary in washington, d.c. show me movies with romance.
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x1 makes it easy to find what you love. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. melissa: bernie sanders is doubling down on his promise to battle all the way to the convention. >> we are going to work hard to win the primary in washington, d.c., then we take our fight for social, economic, racial and environmental justice to philadelphia. melissa: here to talk about it, leslie marshall, lars larson, thanks to both of you for joining us.
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lars, would he have an easier time making this argument if he had won california. but now to stay in how does he justify it? >> i don't think he can justify it. even if you take away the rigged system of superdelegates. hillary clinton still wins on delegates and wins the race for the nomination by 3 million votes. if bernie want to make this a movement of the people and social justice, he has to accept more millions of democrats chose her and not him, so he doesn't have a case. melissa: leslie, what is he hanging in for. maybe he sees an indictment is coming. >> i don't think he thinks it's an indictment. he thinks it's a revolution. and second of all web's a true believer. he does follow through with what he says.
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until the last vote is cast and the last vote is counted, until that convention and all the superdelegates blend to her are hers, he doesn't feel there is a nominee and he feels he is in it to win it. it was zero chance that the delegates would switch their loyalties. melissa: is he hurting her by staying in? sheer she is trying to celebrate her victory as the first woman to be nominated by a major party. in some ways maybe he's helping her. >> i think he is helping her, and he's helping my candidate, donald trump. a third of donald trump supporters say if they don't get the nominee they want, they will vote for donald trump about a third says that. i love it when leslie whistles past the political graveyard of hillary clinton's convictions.
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she is the first woman nominee of a major party, but also the first person in american history as far as i can tell who will be nominated for president under investigation by the f.b.i. and facing indictment. if comey dliforts an indictable case and loretta lynch fails to indict. >> there won't be an indictment. everything we are hearing coming out of the f.b.i. was it poor judgment, perhaps, was it a violation of policy? yes. criminal, i don't think so. that's why we see the support in the polls. melissa: how does she handle this gracefully? you have to think behind the scenes hillary clinton is
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furious and probably wants to run bernie sanders over with her car. >> i think she does probably want to run bernie sanders over with her car. she could do it the way any legitimate politician would. she can meet with the press and take some hard questions and settle some of these hardish yous. for leslie. hoik admits she destroyed public documents. that's a federal crime. and one of the punishments is you can't hold public office for at least three years. so she committed crimes, leslie, there is no two ways about it. melissa: we know where lars would come down if the were the judge. what is the way to get through this without running bernie sanders over with a car. >> you have a private meeting, you say what do you want? vp, secretary of state, supreme court nomination. and do you promise not to run for my second term?
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it's very clear with the president meeting with senator sanders as well as harry reid that a lot of democrats are talking to him about not taking this all the way to the convention floor. half of his staff will be done. the funds are almost gone. gregg: vehicular homicide. get a lawyer. we just hit a shopping milestone. we'll tell you what it is and what it means for the economy. donald trump adopting a more presidential tone as he tried to move past the controversial comments about a federal judge. did it work? we'll go in-depth. i laugh, i sneeze...
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so if 65 is around the corner, think about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. so don't wait. call to request your free decision guide. and gather the information now to help you choose a plan later. these types of plans let you pick any doctor or hospital that takes medicare patients. and there's a range of plans to choose from, depending on you needs and your budget. so if you're turning 65 soon, call now and get started. because the time to think about tomorrow...is today. go long.
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to join the wednesday night league. because he loves to play hoops. not jump through them. that's the excitement of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you. melissa: shoppers make history by buying more stuff online than in stores for the first time ever. lauren, i have been shoppin line moyer than stores for a while, i'm glad everyone else has caught up. >> we are shopping five hours a week online. for the first time ever consumers as surveyed by ups said they bought more of their purchases on the web than in the stores. 51% of folks buying online and on their phones. 44% of people with a smart phone
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say they made a purchase with it this year. that's not good news for the brick and mortars. seeing sales fall at j.c. penneys and kohl's. oil prices hitting $50 a barrel. fresh inventory data showing oil supplies falling more than expected and more of us driving as the weather gets warmer. amazon.com investing $3 billion in india bringing the total investment to $5 million. this as the stock hits an all-time high. and how about this one? there is an analyst telling barrons that amazon could be the biggest company in america by the year 2020.
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melissa: i'm doing my part. i order everything on prime. i think i may be making that happen single handedly. gregg: donald trump trying to turn the page about controversial comments he knead about the federal judge overseeing the trump university case. though he did not apologize he did strike a more presidential tone. >> i'm not a politician fighting. i'm me. you are going to see some real good things happen. just remember this. i'm going to be your champion. i'm going to be america's champion because you see, this election isn't about republican or democrat. it's about who runs this country. gregg: doug schoen, a fox news contributor, former advisor to
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bill clinton and brad blakeman. gentlemen, good to see you. brad, trump has maligned hillary clinton or using a teleprompter. there is trump last night using a teleprompter, carefully scripted. is this the new, more moderate disciplined, the new trump, kind of like the new coke which never worked? >> let's hope so. donald trump can be bombastic. people like to see that at rallies. but he has to be more thoughtful. less on personality and more on policy. if he follows that template he will be more successful. i believe he will be attracted to independents and reagan conservative democrats. we'll be look for a fiscally responsible candidate. running for president is not about them, it's about us. if he follows that tone like he said yesterday in his address, which was teleprompted.
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less about personality, more about policy. gregg: donald trump loves to be donald trump. in his work for him until it didn't work with his comments about the federal judge. and the criticism from prominent gop leaders was deafening. does he need to scale back the extemporaneoused extemporaneous. >> yes. this is about addressing america's issues, not his concerns about a federal judge or particular sliets or insults or feuds he has had in his personal, professional or political life. he's got to bring the country together. unite the republican party for a vision going forward.
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gregg: the republican leader in the house called it the definition of a racist comment. mark kirk rescinded his endorsement of trump. could this sort of cascade with more defections? >> it could. if donald trump doesn't learn the lesson that he now represents not only himself, he represents the republican party. if you are going to be the standard-bearer of the party and the future president of the united states. we are going to call you out. if we don't police our own shame on you. when i saw republicans go on television and couch the terms donald trump used, it disgusts me. donald trump's words were racist. that's the truth. and that's what hurts. i hope it's not in his heart. but it was in his head. he's got to change that type of rhetoric. there is no place for that. not only in our party but in america.
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gregg: on a talk show trump was asked have you ever said "i'm sorry" for anything? and his answer was no. everyone knows americans are very forgiving. but trump is not going there. instead he issues a statement saying his words were misconstrued. doug, isn't that like saying it's everybody else's fault because you misunderstood me. >> i think there is a tactical reason for that which he wants to appear to be the strong political leader going forward who is sort of the man of steel. gregg: how about human? >> he created a persona through reality tv, and the republican nominating process. i think he has to position away from all of this.
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one of the things i would say, i know the man, he's not a racist. but he certainly has said things that would raise questions. i have spoken to his employees. many of them. they all say the same thing. i said why don't they show the human side of them, the side that's strong, compassionate and honest. gregg: brad and doug, good to see you. melissa: parents and teachers have used building blocks for hundreds of years to teach kids the basics. now there is a new kind of block designed for a 21st century toddler to teach skills for jobs that haven't even been invented yet. muhammad ali, tickets made available for his funeral, they didn't last long. you pay your car insurance
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gregg: muhammad ali's funeral is set for friday. 15,000 tickets were distributed, all gone by mid-morning. it's a public funeral to be held in ali's hometown. he helped define the 20th century and the civil rights movement. he died at age 74 after a long battle with parkinson's disease. bill clinton and bryant gumble will all deliver you'll jis. president obama cannot attend but a statement will be read. melissa: did you play with blocks as a kid. there is a new block that represents computer command
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children can manipulate giving instructions to characters on the screen. you can teach your kid even if you are clueless about this. thank you so much for joining us. you are a master of this. you get kid excited about this exact kind of thing, whether it's chess, legos or bricks at a young age. what do they have in common to help children learn about coding? >> kid are good at different things. some kids are great with spatial, other kids are great with numbers. they are tapping into all these things to give kids a chance to see what they are good at.
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a running start. melissa: i have two kids. one is drawn to coding and the other is an artist. if you have a child who isn't drawn to koagd and math and science naturally, do you push them in that direction? can you change them with toys like this? >> the job of a parent is to expose them to everything so you can observe what your child is good at. you always want to follow the fun. through play and repetition, as a parent you want to see does the child have an inclination. if not do you expose them and see how far you can take it? you don't want to force a child. but exposure is sometimes not enough. melissa: it can be frustrating the mixed mess ands you get. on one hand you need to limit their screen time. on the other hand you are afraid
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they are falling behind. how do you bol those things? melissa: screens aren't bad or good. it's better to watch a special about insects and "sponge bob." melissa: come on! >> beyond that it's bert to do something actively while look at a screen than passively. and it's good when kids come together or with their parents. melissa: rather than reading you are doing math problem and talking about math and science with your kids. what about a parent who doesn't feel comfortable with math and science. you are responsible for getting your kid into it, but you are not good at it. >> engage with your child is
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important and teaching them how to problem solve is important. tim kid just are drawn, and then you expose them to teachers and classes where they can further that interest. the important thing is that you show an interest in your child and what they are interested in. i think that's the key, encouraging your child. melissa: you look at the millions of jobs that go begging in this country. these are the jobs of the future. a lot of our schools aren't training our kid to do this, to become koarsd and scientists, as a parent what can you do to get your kid ready for the job of tomorrow. >> doing these thing at home and exposing kid at home is important. if you add it up, kid spend four times as many waking hours at home as in school. school feels like it's the whole day. kid are at home and that's a chance to play chess and do robotics.
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what's great is when toys like this could make it approachable. that we do with bedtime math. >> that's one way to tackle it. thanks to both of you. gregg: you will make me have more gnat nightmares. donald trump is looking to flip blue state in his general elect matchup with hillary clinton. according to recent polling one reliably democratic state is already looking live at the new battleground. the state of the art device gives you a main leg up on housework. what are you doing right now? making a cake! ayla reminds me of like a master chef and emiana reminds me of like a monster chef. uh oh. i don't see cake, i just see mess. it's like awful. it feels like i am not actually cleaning it up
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>> hillary clinton make history, but bernie sanders vows to keep fighting on all the way to the convention. can democrats unite their party by then? reporter: a new whopper in the hillary clinton state department investigation. the state department says it will take 75 years to release all the emails. reporter: a judge who sentenced a rapist to 6 months in jail. should that judge be recalled? harris: outnumbernumbered at thp of the hour.
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melissa: according to recent polling the election in november could be a hole lot closer. reporter: it looks like there will be a great deal more political fallout following yesterday's primary that could make for a very contentious general elect. as expected here in the garden state, hillary clinton captured 63% of the vote compared with 27% for bernie sanders. donald trump meanwhile captured 51% of the vote on the republican side, but protest votes gave john kasich 13% and ted cruz 6%. chris christie defended donald trump's remarks about a federal
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judge that's critics say was racist. >> i have known donald trump for 14 years and donald trump is not a racist. the allegations that he is are absolutely contrary to every experience i have had with him the last 14 years. >> new jersey's former government christy todd whitman said christy was only defending trump hoping to secure a position if trump makes it all the way to the white house. she told the knowledge advance media today, as head of trump's transition, he's in a position to carve out whatever he wants. the election will be a close one in new jersey. the recent polling shows hillary clinton has only a small lead over donald trump. the last time a republican captured the state of new jersey was 1988 with the election of george herbert walker bush.
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if you're approaching 65, now's the time to get your ducks in a row. to learn about medicare, and the options you have. you see, medicare doesn't cover everything - only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so if 65 is around the corner, think about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. >> ...
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to help you choose a plan later. these types of plans let you pick any doctor or hospital that takes medicare patients. and there's a range of plans to choose from, depending on you needs and your budget. so if you're turning 65 soon, call now and get started. because the time to think about tomorrow...is today. go long.
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at the bit to get their hands on this new laundry folding robot pulled folding eight. is it doesn't look fantastic? i love it >> you really want one, don't you? >> i do. we will be back in an hour. >> this is outnumbered. i'm sandra smith. here today, harris faulkner, moses kennedy on foxbusiness, democratic strategist julie brezinski and today's hashtag, one lucky guy, washington times columnist charlie hurt is here and he is outnumbered. >> outnumbered indeed and glad to be here. >> it's good to have you back, big night last night. >> truly historic. >> let get right to it. let's begin with what was a historic night, hillary clinton becoming nation's first woman to top of the
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