tv The Kelly File FOX News June 21, 2016 1:00am-2:01am PDT
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donald trump's unpredictable campaign lives up to its reputation with a shake up ahead of the gop convention. this is "special report." good evening. welcome to with washington. i'm in for bret baier. it's monday and there have been plenty of fireworks for the gops presumtive nominee. trump doubles down on his immigration policy, clears up a gun control statement and says, "you're fired" to the campaign manager a month out from the convention. >> reporter: with a month out and poll numbers going the wrong
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way, donald trump took the step of firing his long time campaign manager corey lewandowski. >> i'm proud of him. he did a great job. we are going a different route. >> reporter: it came to a somehowdown between lewandowski and paul manidor. >> trump's children were upset when they saw him as fatal to the campaign. the strategy call where they saw nothing amiss. lewandowski said he was no longer needed. he said, quote, paul has been in operational control of the campaign since april 7. that's a fact. >> it's been amazing.
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i wouldn't change one second of my time with mr. trump other than the say, thank you. it's been a great privilege and honor. >> wow wharks a group. >> reporter: the move clears the way for washington hands to guide trump toward a traditional campaign, less assumed with the controversy of the candidate's own making. today, he had to clarify remarks from the orlando shooting. he said if people inside had guns, the carnage may have been contained. >> if one person in the room would have had it and went boom, boom, that would have been a beautiful, beautiful sight, folks. >> reporter: after being criticized and advocating party goers into getting into fights he said i was talking guards orem ployees. trump raised eyebrows over the weekend. law enforcement may need to resort to profiling to combat
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terrorism. >> other countries do it. it's not the worst thing to do. i hate the concept of profiling but we have to use common sense. we are not using common sense. >> reporter: trump supporters have no issue, but republicans get queasy. he wishes trump would change his ways. >> there are things he has said i don't agree with. there are policies i don't agree with. in the legislative branch, we will litigate those things in the future. >> reporter: trump is in urgent need of a reboot. he hopes to set his campaign back on course. he said over the weekend, he plans to campaign in utah where polls show a very close race with hillary clinton. utah hasn't voted for a democrat since lyndon johnson in 1964. most republicans have won the state with margins between 30% and 50%. >> we will break it down with the panel. john roberts, thank you.
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there's probably no group of people more encouraged to hear about the shake up at the trump campaign than the never trump movement. james rosen has a status update and a reality check on the determined ban of party activists. >> people that have said the worst things about me -- >> reporter: in the 48 days since indiana made donald trump the republican party nominee, the so-called never trump movement with a hashtag before it has #neverfullygoneaway. they plot more about how to block the winner of almost 14 million primary votes from becoming the gop standard. >> the words you hear from donald trump day in and day out and the effort i'm sighing and the movement that donald trump will not be the nominee of the republican party. >> reporter: the never trump movement carried an air of never trump.
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>> i didn't want to make comments about a particular candidate until that was absolutely necessary. >> when mitt romney intervened in way that mostly served to republican base to back trump in the first place. >> it's a disorganized movement. there's no clear goal. there isn't an alternative that has emerged. there hasn't been a clear alternative to emerge someone wanting to get involved in this race. a lot of this is because they, you know, started a little too late. >> reporter: the latest hinge on altering the rules governing next month's republican convention. historians see the never trump movement as a response to more than the candidate himself. contributing to the rumor mongering the fbi probe that's loomed over the democratic nominee. and anxiety over terrorism, the economy and the digital revolution. the author of how the scotts invented the modern world.
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the decline in western history and american warrior. >> the old system of gate keeping for both political parties have been shaken to their foundations through the spread of social media. we are in a post ideological age where the old ideologies of conservative, progressive liberalism are cracking at the seems. >> denying trump the nomination he won. focuses on an independent candidacy. it's all but killed that idea and more on the republican convention. the fer ver of the activists are such that is easy to manage the movement even if they win all the way to inauguration day. >> we shall see. thank you. a man arrested saturday at a donald trump rally in las vegas other the weekend may have been trying to kill the candidate.
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he was arrested at the rally after he tried to grab an officer's gun. a complaint filed in court said he told officers he drove from california to kill trump. hillary clinton is sticking close to home today, relishing in the joy of a grandchild and attending fund-raisers in her own state. joe biden is filling the void. a veiled attack on the gop's presumptive nominee. the assault on donald trump, without naming names. >> hillary. hillary. >> reporter: the clinton's accompanied their daughter chelsea as she left the hospital with their new grandson. photos of them celebrating the birs of her son, aiden. a family moment revealed before clinton began campaigning attacking donald trump on his business practices and economic policies. she got help from vice president joe biden, who warned about the danger of alienating 1.5 billion
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muslims around the world should trump become president. in a speech, he never used the republican nominee's name. >> that's what has always been america's greatest capability, not empty bluster. not a sense of entitlement that's fundamentally disrespects partners. not an attitude and insecurity of a bullying. >> reporter: a new poll shows clinton leading trump by seven points. in eight battleground states, a new clinton ad questions whether trump is presidential. >> i know more about isis than the generals do, believe me. >> reporter: the campaign put out a fund raising appeal on sunday. quote, trump may be a thin-skinned bully who goes through life in a moral vacuum, but he's not stupid. he's using his 24/7 media coverage to attack hillary and the team, all day, every day,
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for free. clinton is attending three fund-raisers in new york monday, one at a home and a dinner hosted by hollywood mogul, harvey wine steen co-hosted by leonardo dicaprio. video after massachusetts senator, elizabeth warren visiting clinton headquarters adding to rumors she is still in the running for vice president. >> i have one message for you, don't screw this up. >> that was jennifer griffin reporting from clinton headquarters in new york. a shooter shot 49 people and wounded 53 others at an orlando nightclub. partial 911 transcripts were released. after uproar, the justice
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department reversed the decision and released the entire call. >> partial transcripts released by the fbi give a detailed time line of phone conversations between the killer and authorities during the massacre. the first call to 911 comes 30 minutes after shots are fired. i let you know, i'm in orlando and i did the shootings. ten minutes later, three calls between the killer and police crisis managers. the calls last nine minutes, 16 minutes and three minutes. he claims to be an islamic soldier and calls on the u.s. to stop bombing iraq and syria. authorities have refused to release audio from the calls but they describe the killer's tone. >> the killer made the murder statements. he did so in a chilling, calm and deliberate manner. >> reporter: the fbi redacted parts of the transcript where the killer swears support to the islamic state.
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officials changed their mind siting an unnecessary distraction from the criticism. now the shooter's motivation is identified. i pledge allegiance to abu, bakr al baghdadi. it drew criticism. paul ryan tweeted it was propostrouse. we know the shooter was radical islamist inspired by isis. ash carter invoked the orlando tragedy talking about the ongoing coalition fight against isis. local police had to answer the question of why they waited three hours to breach the nightclub wall, whether some of the wounded could have been saved if they entered sooner. >> there was a misconception we didn't do anything for three hours. that's absolutely not true. off club within minutes, exchanged fire with the suspect, forced him to stop fire. from there, our negotiator took
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over and tried to negotiate to a peaceful resolution. >> reporter: the killer told police he put suicide bomb vests around several hostages, making a forced entry more risky. shan shannon? >> thank you, steve. what was left out of the calls angered many conservatives who believe the move was more political than anything else. within hours of the outrage, they backtracked, releasing the full transcript. brit hume joins me with his thoughts on the justice department's reversal. hi, bret. >> the department planned to sensor all mentions of isis and the leaders from the transcript of omar mateen's phone calls to avoid spreading his propaganda. that may be true, but it dove tailed perfectly with the oba
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obama -- deny or minimize the threat and to the extent possible, it had nothing to do with islam. not only does he refuse to use radical islamic terrorism and to say isis is not islamic at all and compared terrorist organizations to a jv team. it is possible to disearn in this. alienate muslims in general and give terrorists more glory and attention than they deserve. isis had been contained and pulled off the paris massacre. after orlando, isis was losing ground. two days later, the cia director testified the isis threat is undiminished. the president's approach is overtaken again and again by events, which is another way of saying what seems true, it simply doesn't work.
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>> this morning, we have the transcript. by afternoon, we have what we believe is a full transcript. what the quick pivot and do you think the administration didn't see it coming? >> someone in the justice department, including the attorney general who announced the decision on sunday television, thought this was, in keeping she must believe with the administration's approach. unfortunately, in this case, the toothpaste was already out of the tube and impossible to keep it back. anybody who paid attention could read through the transcription, see what was left out. it bordered on the ridiculous, that's why they backtracked. i think the impulse gave rise to centering it is clear. >> thanks, brit. up next, the controversy over an old war. first, here is what fox affiliates around the country are covering tonight.
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fox 8 in cleveland where they celebrate their first nba championship in 52 years. thousands of fans gathered at the airport to welcome home the cavs today. lebron james is holding up the trophy for all to see. fox 45 in baltimore where lawyers made closing arguments. he is the third of six baltimore officers to go on trial in the arrest and death of freddy gray. goodson faces the most serious charges. the judge is expected to rule in his case thursday. this is a live look at los angeles county, california. excessive heat hindering the battle against wildfires across the west. firefighters are battling several fires in arizona and new mexico where fires top 100 degrees. that is a live look outside the beltway from "special report." we'll be right back. they brought this on themselves.
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with one tasty chew. starts killing fleas in two hours and kills nearly 100% in under twelve. and it's fda approved. bravecto is for dogs 6 months of age or older. don't worry, princess, we'll settle the score. tonight we ride, with bravecto!! ask your vet about 12-week protection with bravecto. 65 million people have been forced from their homes in the past year. that's the word from a global trends report released by the high commissioner for refugees. this is the first time since world war ii refugee levels crossed the 60 million mark.
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the united nations refugee blame afghanistan and syria for the increase in numbers. iraqi security forces say they are in the final stages of clearing isis out of fallujah. they tell the associated press the remaining are holed up in houses in the northern part of the city. isis controlled much of fallujah since may. the president's plan to get out of afghanistan seems to be falling apart as violence in the country grows. taliban attacks increased with afghan forces and civilians caught in the cross fire. tonight, kevin corke reports from the white house on what america's longest fought war need as new strategy. >> reporter: the number of dead has reached nearly 2 dozen with more than 20 people killed including a minibus including the poly security guards in kabul.
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military officials of the resurgent power of the terror group and levels not seen since 9/11. in a report delivered to congress friday, the pentagon said the rise in violence has been especially acute in the past six months noting that the fighting and suicide attacks have increased in more populated areas and the number of women and children included among casualties increased. >> the white house, for the past seven years, going on eight has driven the afghan policy. >> the colonel who served in afghanistan said the plan to get the afghan government to fend for itself backfired renewing calls for an overhaul of policy in the country. >> after over 12 years and billions of dollars, we are still at risk of allowing afghanistan to slip back into chaos, after a large investment. >> reporter: an investment in manpower. troop levels in afghanistan decreased from nearly 100,000
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back in 2011 to 10,000 today, the administration plans to cut that number in half by the time the president leaves office, a plan that's under review. >> i don't think anybody can be satisfied with the ongoing violence that we see there and the good news is, we still have seen security forces resilient. >> i want to be clear, the number you heard about slightly less than 10,000 forces in afghanistan is completely clear because there are more than 26,000 american civilian contractors that are operating in that theater. it's that large force that has a number of people concerned that it could ultimately erode the skill set and the cohesion of the forces that are officially there. shannon? >> all right, kevin corke live at the white house. thank you, kevin. predictions are looming large over thursday's vote on whether britain should stay or
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leave the european union. an exit would have minimal effect on the global economy, hurting only the country itself. the monetary fund warn international trade and investment globally would shrink. the white house seems unconcerned. josh earnest saying he's sure somebody, somewhere in the government is working on a contingency plan. the dow finished 130 points in the green. s&p 500 up 12. nasdaq closed up 37. real progress or just a political show? next. the latest on the debate over gun control in the senate.
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good evening, doug. >> the last time they passed it was the clinton administration. today, there has been none. the lack from either party with the 60 votes to end debate appears to be on the cusp of dooming all four amendments. >> the proposals are likely to fail again and we will be right back where we started, no safer, no smarter, no more successful in protecting our citizens. >> here is a look, now, at the breakdown of the four amendments. the glassley failed. senator chris murphy amendment failed.
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it would increase background checks. senator john cornyn's amendment is coming up next to allow them to delay suspected terrorists from getting a gun up to 72 hours. defense could not prove the suspect was a threat, the ban would expire. last up this evening, probably about 6:35 or 6:40, senator feinstein's amendment. it would have permitted the attorney general to deny the purchase of firearms to anyone on the terrorist watch list. the left and the right has left both parties leveling charges. a denial of a bedrock institutional right. feinstein fired back about cornyn's noting felons, fugitives and drug users and ten categories of people from getting them. >> the fourth or fifth amendment.
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how many more provisions of the bill of rights do our democratic friends believe can be denied due process of law. >> one group that cannot be blocked from buying guns are those who are known or suspects terrorists on the fbi's consolidated terrorist watch list. they can buy guns. >> expect all four amendments to go down in defeat tonight. there is one more option, senator susan collins is offering another amendment, not being taken up tonight. she claims to have broad bipartisan support. we have heard that before. >> we will check back on that, doug. thank you so much. the supreme court turned away a challenge to assault weapons in connecticut and new york. they left in place a lower court ruling that upheld laws following the shooting of newtown connecticut. the families of nine are suing
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the rifle company that made the gun used in that shooting. a judge heard arguments in that case today. they report on what's ate stake. >> reporter: relatives of the victim that is died at the sandy hook elementary school mass shooting spent the day in court. they are suing remmington, the manufacturer of the ar-15 that adam lanza used to kill the people. in court papers, the attorneys described it as a military weapon for mass casualty assaults. matt lost his sister, a third grade teacher at sandy hook. >> our actions are meant to bring about change. >> reporter: remmington, the distributor and dealer filed a motion arguing the lawsuit shouldn't be allowed to move forward citing a 2005 federal law that shields gun makers and dealers from litigation if a weapon is used to commit a
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crime. remmington told the judge, lawmakers, not the courts should set the policy. >> the case in front of a jury is not the place for a new policy to emerge on who should own firearms and the type of firearm that is should be owned. >> reporter: attorneys say the case should be allowed to proceed because banning lawsuits against lawmakers contains an exemption. they argue selling an ar-15 to a civilian is negligence because of the firing power. >> it is the most dangerous, most lethal instrument readily available to the population. if it wasn't, it wouldn't be in the militaries weapon of choice. >> reporter: ar-15s are the most popular rifles sold in the u.s. a gun group brought appeal. >> there are millions of persons across the country who buy the
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firearms for target practice, for home protection. >> reporter: the judge, here in the case, says it will be several months before she decides if it will go to trial. as of now, jury selection is slated for april 3rd, 2018. shannon? >> david lee miller, thank you. next up, trump fires his campaign manager. is it a sign of things to come in a campaign? we'll tata
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with corey, i'm proud of him, he did a great job. we are ghoung a different route. >> a different style? >> a little different style. >> i have no regrets when it comes to the campaign. i have been given such an opportunity. somebody said to me 18 months ago, you'll be managing the candidate through 37 state victories, 14 million votes,
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more votes than anyone in the history of the republican party, i would say, is that possible? look what he's been able to achieve. i've been a small part of that. >> there is a shake up today. more, steve hayes, lisa boot add, adam keefe reporter with "the washington post" and charles krauthammer. welcome all, steve, i start with you. is this shake up a reset? what does it say? >> an attempt at reset. look, anybody who's been covering the story knows about corey lewandowski chewing people out and having problems with paul manafort. i think some kind of shake up was likely. he had a high profile problem with michelle. his name has been in the news. this is an attempt to reset the campaign. this is a campaign that's had
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several bad weeks. bad weeks back since indiana with one controversy after another. unlike the primary season where the controversies didn't affect him, his poll rating or the ability to win primaries, they are reflecting him now. you are seeing them in other comments from other republicans about the party's nominee. more skepticism about him as the nominee. this is an attempt to put all of that behind them to say we are about to get serious and here is the reset. >> all right. speaking of polls, we have a new one out from monmouth putting him and hillary clinton het-to-head. he is down by seven points, likely voters, eight points. clinton is at 6% points positive against trump. lisa, with paul manafort at the head, how do they tackle the numbers? >> i think this is a positive step for the donald trump
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campaign. corey lewandowski failed donald trump, in my opinion. he failed to set him up for a primary to go to the general election. no infrastructure, no political team, no communications team. he was not prepared for a general election. he was inadequately prepared. this is a positive step. donald trump had a semblance of a ground game in iowa, he could have put this away sooner than getting to indiana. he would have swept iowa and new hampshire. he would have swept south carolina and nevada. by that time, this would have been over. mitt romney would not be swinging against him. tens of millions of dollars in negative ad buys spent against him. i think corey lewandowski failed him. it was time to let him go and move toward a more serious campaign. >> the favoribility. both trump and clinton is upside
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down on this one. trump more so than clinton. his unfavorable 57%, clinton 52%. what do they do to turn that around? is it possible? >> you know, i spent a lot of time talking primarily to the folks who will formalize this thing at the convention in cleveland, the delegates themselves. i was struck. go back to may with the indiana primaries and the trouble brewing then, i caught wind in june when there was a fight going on in north carolina regarding the bathroom bills. in talking to delegates, they said, you know, we are hearing crickets from trump on this. any other republican nominee, whether it was ted cruz, marco rubio, jeb bush, would have been in north carolina and the republican legislature saying i'm with you on this. there's no doubt that the republican party stands for these social conservative principals. this past week, they are concerned about the fact he's calling for new gun laws that are failing on capitol hill.
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he's not cultivating conservatives in the party. >> some of what people love about him, charles, is that he isn't a party guy. that's a big appealing principle to folk who is really do like him. they reported on the big move, never trump, turn the delegates to turn against him to change the rules. does that go anywhere? >> depends on how trump behaves. if he continues on the trajectory he's been since he wrapped it up in indiana, i'm not sure i could see the revolution succeeding. i could see a revolution and i can see a raw ruckus convention. this hinges on how trump behaves himself. when a baseball team is losing, as you know, they fire the manager. that, of course, is a way of pretending to do something. it's the players, not the manager. this is nothing to do with the campaign manager. he was trying to acocommodate
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himself to the candidate. it's trump who doesn't believe in analytics, doesn't believe in infrastructure. he lands in a plane, makes a speech, has a crowd that the delirious. that's how he's won all the way here. that's not going to win a general election. he's insistent on that. it will depend on whether manafort can contain self-control and does what you are supposed to do. if he does, he has a better chance in the general election. being eccentric might work with a small universe of a primary, not in the general election. >> what is the likelihood of that happening? why would anybody think that donald trump, a, could change and b, would change. we have seen the same donald trump since before he announced. they love donald trump. he's been encouraged by paul
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ryan, mitch mcconnell, other washington republicans. he's been begged by conservatives to speak about their issues. he simply refuses to do it because he's donald trump. it has some appeal. obviously, it got him as far as itd got him. there's no reason to think donald trump is going to change right now. >> he has had to clarify a number of issues, the bathroom bill and gun control. there many times he speaks. then others speak up and he's modifying, backtracking or explaining. >> there's no doubt he's had a series of missteps. watch the news to figure that out. the one thing donald trump hates is losing. look at the general election polls right now. he's more competitive if you look at the battleground states, he's where mitt romney was. sanders fans haven't gone to
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hillary clinton. that could change. there's nothing he likes more than losing. looking at the polls is a wake-up call for him. we have seen the fact of his usage of a teleprompter, which he hasn't done throughout the duration of this and the firing of lewandowski and the steps toward that realization, he needs to realign his campaign and get more serious. >> we have to leave it there. stick around, panel. next, we talk about the gun control debate.
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an opportunity to push a partisan agenda or craft the next 30-second campaign ad. colleagues are pursuing real solutions to keep americans safer. >> hasn't mattered how sensible or terrible the tragedy, the n national rifle association, the nra, not the people that elect them. >> senate voting is ongoing. looks like all four gun measures two by republicans and two by democrats are going to fail. it's another instance of we have four measures but you are not going to get to 20i6 votes.
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>> this is 2013 all over again. we had a few more weeks of it back then. this was rushed, despite what democrats think, chris murphy is what caused gun laws, plus this surprise filibuster by democrats last weeked that boxed republicans into a corner basically and forced them to the table. but they knew that if we offer this old cornyn easement that failed if we sent susan collins out to claim she is working with democrats maybe we will stir conversation to make it look like we are trying, we did something even though it's going to fail. the political will, it's unclear if it's really there i think if they were given the lowway in the next few days, next few weeks to get those in the middle who want to work on this and come up with something, maybe this would pass. both parties are perfectly comfortable with using their familiar talking points to say that republicans are against it or democrats are trying to take away your guns. and neither of those are entirely true and that's politics. >> both sides will be able to say they offered
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something up and they couldn't get the votes from the other side so there was nothing bipartisan to it. grbing headlines, release of some of the 911 phone calls with the orlando shooter during the protestor says of that shooting unfolding. they were redacted this morning when we first got them there were words omitted that just about any of us could figure out what the missing words were. there was an uproar about that brit hume had commentary on that tonight. by in afternoon we got unredacted portions of the phone call. still there are things missing that we might have questions about, charles. that was a quick pivot. we're told by the white house tonight they had nothing to do with the decision to redact or unredact. >> they may not have issued the order but everybody understands under president obama you are not to make any reference that could possibly indict islam or radical islamism in a mass murder. so you have to pretend otherwise. look, the reason they did a pivot is because it was beyond stupid. it was ridiculous.
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it was an embarrassment. as say, everybody could see what the words under neath were. and what exactly are they accomplishing pretending they weren't said? and it exposes the administration as fanatical in trying to cover up and connection with islam. guy goes in there and says i'm doing this as a soldier of allah in the name of baghdadi and essentially declaring his allegiance and you are going to pretend it is something else and has to do with guns or has to do with homophobia? it's not going to work. the other thing is, put this in the context of the eight minutes or 10 minutes of the state department record of the rosen inquiry having to do with lying in the name of protecting the negotiations, you have got the administration no respect for historical record for actual events. that's a larger issue and that's disturbing. >> back in february of 2013 i think it was, the
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president said this would be the most transparent administration in history. and today the fbi. >> he said that on day one. >> yes, they did. and he has continue to do say that you know, through the years. >> it's been down hill ever since. >> we report. you decide. about that. but today, when the reactions came out, there was a swift reaction. house speaker paul ryan said this is outrage just. they need to release the whole thing, this afternoon he said when they did or more complete release than we have had. we are not sure this is the whole thing. this should never have been an attempt the attempt to selectively edit the record reflects a broader, more serious problem of the this administration's continued effort to down play and distract from the threat of radical islam terrorism. it's not just the state department editing the james rosen answer which i think makes the point as well. but you can go back to the
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white house having the director of national intelligence rewrite the assessment on iran in the middle of the debate about the iran nuclear deal where they took out some of the passages that had been in year after year after year about iran's ties to terror. you look at the obama campaign and claims that al qaeda was on the run. that's why we haven't seen these documents captured in bin laden documents. you look at the president saying we don't want to acknowledge an al qaeda attack six weeks before the election so they said it was about a video. they said that it wasn't a preplanned attack and you go all the way back to guantanamo where you have the administration literally from the beginning the administration continuing to this day rewriting detainee assessments that were prepared by the intelligence community to take out the things that some might find offensive so that they can be released. >> lisa, do they get credit for finally making the release even though there is still a lot more that we don't have. >> i think this was embarrassing attempt to transparent -- which is very
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transparent and failed attempt to down play what islamic extremism and put the onus on gun control which is the narrative that the democratic party has been driving since the orlando terror attack. very problematic for president obama and hillary clinton who wants to essentially be an extension of the obama administration because it plays into this perceived weakness of president obama in dealing with isis. and that's a weakness that both the cia director last week under cut president obama's rosy picture in the narrative that he was driving on isis and also something that's been reiterated with someone like leon panetta and robert gates who both served under president obama who had been highly critical of his fight against isis and the fact that we are not doing enough. >> all right. panel, thank you very much. >> thank you. >> that is it for the panel. stay tuned for a new take, new slow began for the trump campaign.
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trail. sounds like is he trying to make a new catchphrase stick to stick this time around. >> shuck it duck it. sounds like a shuck it duck it kind of crowd on a shucky ducky kind of day here to support an awe shucky ducky kind of candidate. this sounds like a shucky ducky crowd ♪ shucky ducky day ♪ trump shucky ducky candidate day ♪ allow me to set the record straight ♪ and make america great. >> oh, shucky ducky. >> listen, i'm from the south and i don't know what shucky ducky means. we will investigate, thanks for inviting us into your home tonight. that's it for "special report," fair, balanced and shucky ducky oh oh good morning >> good morning, friends, it is june the 21st. donald trump targeted.
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grabbing a police officer's gun and trying to kill the gop nominee. a campaign shake-up. it is time to part ways with his campaign manager. i did the shooting. the worlds the killer revealed after a firestorm of criticism forces the justice department to abruptly change course. >> could disney princesses actually harm your child? >> well, the pc police sounding the alarm about characters that have been around for 80 years. "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪
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>> you make my dreams come true. the i love that song. >> i am abby hunts man. >> i am anna kooiman it for hith heather childers. donald traufrp targeted an illegal immigrant who tried to assassinate the presidential nominee with a police officer's gun. >> we are live in washington, d.c. with the latest. >> good morning. it has been a wild ride. first a man is arrested for allegedly trying to kill trump. then his campaign manager corey lieu wan could you slewandowski is let go. after months after his aggressive management style he got a phone call from trump yesterday saying his services were no longer needed. >> i think corey is
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