tv The Kelly File FOX News June 23, 2016 1:00am-2:01am PDT
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>> but republicans applauded the speech as a much-needed exclamation point on the trump campaign reboot. bush white house spokesman ari fleischer said trump gives powerful well-delivered takedown on what's wrong. well done. two things remain to be seen. will the new scripted more disciplined trump attract more supporters to his side? and chris, how long will the new scripted more disciplined trump be around. will he last? chris? >> a couple of good questions there. john roberts reporting from outside trump tower, thanks for that. trump is clearly not your typical presidential candidate.
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a new election filing showed he's charting new ground when it comes to campaign financing. a review of sec reports from may showed that the campaign paid millions for trump's corporate products and the candidate also received payments. chief washington correspondent james rosen tonight looks inside the numbers. >> i have ivanka and eric and don sitting there. run the company kids, have a good time. i'm going to do it for america. >> that's how donald trump answered when fbn's maria bartiromo asked what would become of trump's empire if he wins the white house. however trump's filing with the federal elections commission show him as actively engaging his companies as vendors. the trump campaign pays for the use of his private plane. it leases office space in trump tower. pays rent and catering fees and contracts with trump-owned firms to purchase logo-emblazoned hats, bottled water and wine
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among other things. >> "associated press" reported that among the relative pittance he has raised, $6.2 million has gone back to trump companies and entities which might make some people wonder am i going to a campaign that is spending wisely? >> trump sees no reason to enrich his rivals in the real estate market or other areas of the private sector in which his own companies compete. it's all 100% legal so long as reasonable commercial rates are charged. kenneth gross of a law firm is a leading elections campaigns and finance attorney who has advised major figures in both parties from daniel moynihan to bob dole and mike bloomberg. >> he may promote that as part of his business acumen. i'm a candidate and make money. that can come back to haunt as well. people may say wait a minute, it looks like too much self-dealing here. >> trump also appears multiple times in her fec filings. federal campaign finance officials told us he appears
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simply to have reimbursed his out of pocket expenditures. some analysts warn against second-guessing trump's raising of money. >> he had $57 million, gretchen and he took out 16 candidates, that's $3.35 million per kill. she had $183 million. she took out one 74-year-old socialist who wasn't a democrat until 23 months ago. >> through may 31st, roughly 10% of trump campaign expenditures went to trump products or services. ohm one notable instance, when the pga withdrew at a trump-owned golf course has the trump campaign seemed to hurt the trump portfolio. chris? >> james, thanks. after saying for months he was done with the senate regardless of how his presidential campaign went. marco rubio announced today he will seek re-election in november. i sat down with rubio and asked him what changed his mind.
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>> i know that people in politics don't like to admit they changed their mind. but i changed my mind. and people sort of deserve to know why. there's a lot of reasons. i think it's clearly outlined that i'm frustrated by what's happening here in the senate. most americans are, with the gridlock and the inability to move forward on things, the senate is a place where you can serve your constituents with constituent service, it's rewarding. i said that during the campaign. it's a place where you can hopefully be able to move on some major issues, a lot hasn't happied enough. we were able to do a little of that the deepest reason was that no matter who wins the presidential election, the senate's role on being able to act as a check and balance. i think are going to matter more at 2017 than they perhaps ever have in our history. that's saying a lot, given what we're facing now. i deeply believe i can contribute to that. i want to contribute to that. i think whether it's hillary clinton or donald trump, we're
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going to need senators willing to encourage them to make the right decisions, but ultimately to stand up to them. >> it would be obvious if clinton wins, that you would want to be a check. you're saying if donald trump wins, you want to be a check. >> sure, i don't think it's a mystery that i disagree with donald on a number of issues, i don't think it's a mystery that i think some of the things he has said, particularly many of the things he said about women and minorities are things i find to be offensive. i'll continue to encourage him to make the right choices on some issues. i respect the fact that we may disagree on an approach to something. if he makes what i believe is the wrong choice, we'll stand up, we'll stand up to him. i think i've proven the willingness to do that already. >> in the past you expressed frustration working with the democratic majority and second working with a democratic president. and the chances are, if the election were held today, according to the polls, you would one where both of those
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again. you seem to talk in less in terms of what you can get done, than what can you stop. >> that's the reality of the way washington is today. there's no illusion about it i have to be prepared, i am to come back and dot best i can, within the washington we have today, hopefully we can change that and get some positive things done for the country. the frustration is there, but the majority of americans have that frustration. it's why congress polls at 3% or 4%. because both parties are frustrated by the inability of congress to address major issues before this country. but there is a very valuable role for the senate to play as a check and balances the way the constitution designed the senate to be. i'm prepared to be a check and balance no matter who wins, clearly i disagree with everything that hillary clinton stands for for the most part so god forbid she were elected, we'd have a lot of work on our hands to stop her agenda. it's possible given my differences of opinion with donald there will be instances i'll disagree with what he's
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doing. hopefully we can encourage him to do some of the things that we believe in as conservatives and as republicans. >> let me ask you a question we know will be an issue in this campaign. during your time in the senate from 2011 until this month, you missed 234 roll call votes, 15% of the total. you got to know some florida voters are going to say he didn't show up for work the first time. >> first of all, that happened, a lot of it was because i ran for president, the same reason quite frankly why bernie sanders missed every vote this year up until a day ago. it's the same reason why everyone running for president missed votes. before that, yeah i missed votes, a lot of that this to do with things my kids were doing and my mom was sick for a couple of years. i'm proud of the work we did and the things we achieved in our time there. it's frustrating we couldn't get more done. but given where our country is today and the uncertainty we're facing in this election, i really truly believe that the senate needs to be filled with people who are willing to stand
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up to a either party when they have bad ideas and are willing to work with them and encourage them to make the right choices. >> you've been raising money for another candidate. the republican governor of florida. here's what you said about him a couple of weeks ago. >> i have a real good friend i've known for a long time running for the senate. i didn't run, i said i wasn't going to. he got into the race, he's the lieutenant governor of florida, i think he's a strong candidate. he's in the race, i'm not, i think he's put in time and energy to it he deserves a chance to see where he can take it. >> have you talked with the lieutenant governor? >> absolutely, he's one of my closest friends that i have and he asked me ten days ago to reconsider my decision and to actually run. >> does that mean he's dropping out and giving you clear path? >> he's asking me to run. it won't be a clear path. >> a clearer path? >> there was no scenario under which if he was in the race i would ever be in this race. it was only when he told me
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that, not only did he think i should run, he wanted me to run. that i took the time to go back to florida and spend the weekend, father's day weekend with my family. in between pressure-cleaning the driveway and watching the nba finals on sunday. we spent a lot of time praying and thinking about this. and we had two paths before us. one was the one we had originally intended, the path that would have been more comfortable and politically quite frankly perhaps even better. but it's a family together, we chose to try to make a difference, not just in the outcome of this election, but what the next six years will look like for america. >> you say you will support donald trump and you've even said you would speak for him at the convention. given all of his continuing controversies, given the comments he made about the mexican/american judge and the trump university case. some people are saying where are your principles? >> a lot of think things that donald has said and done, that i disagree with. but i disagree with everything
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hillary clinton stands for on every issue. with the recognition that yes, i ran for president, i wanted to be the nominee. not the choice i wanted us to have. that's what the voters have chosen. that's the choice before us now. i have to choose from what's in front of us. not what we wish would have happened. >> do you still want to be president? do you still entertain hopes of that? >> i'm done giving these unequivocal answers about anything. other than to say that three things, number one, we don't know was going to happen in this election. before anybody answers that question, we have to see what happens in this election. second if i want to run for president in 2020, running for re-election in this environment with a real risk of lose something a tough race, not the ideal political decision to make. and the third is this, i am prepared to come back and pour my heart and soul into the senate, as it is, not as i wish it were. and try to change it and the u.s. senator from florida, we can make a difference, i'll feel
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fulfilled by that. >> senator, thank you for talking with us, it will be fun covering you. >> it will be an interesting race. >> thank you, sir. thank you. up next, the lawmakers break the rules on capitol hill. first, here's what some of our fox affiliates around the country are covering tonight. fox 59 in indianapolis, with the arrest of an 18-year-old man on federal terrorism charges. the fbi arrested akram muslehn tuesday, on charges he was attempting to join isis. fox 46 in charlotte, health officials believe 18-year-old lauren sites was killed when she contracted a brain-eating amoeba on a trip to the national whitewater center in charlotte. it's found in warm lakes during the summer. a live look at tampa bay if fox 13, the big story there tonight, the search for a father and his three teenaged children who have been missing since father's day. the kimberlys left sarasota
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sunday on their sailboat. later the same day the father called his brother to say they were in rough seas, trying to stay afloat. his brother reported the family missing on tuesday. the coast guard has found a debris field linked to the boat. but the four remain missing. that's tonight's live look outside the beltway from "special report," we'll be right back.
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hillary clinton's former i.t. specialist invoked his fifth amendment rights more than 125 times in a deposition related to her controversial private email server. the conservative watchdog group, judicial watch said the lack of answers from pagiano marked a sad day for government transparency. we learned new state department emails indicate staffers temporarily disabled security features on clinton's private server. trying to solve a technical problem. previously emails disclosed hackers attacked the server weeks later, forcing clinton's staff to shut it down. clinton pushed for democratic unity today, from capitol hill to a key swing state.
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she started in washington where she met with party leaders before heading to north carolina to sell her economic plan and take more shots at donald trump. correspondent jennifer griffin reports from raleigh. >> at first it looked like hillary clinton would not respond to donald trump's attacks today on her economic policies and the clinton foundation. for 40 minutes she barely mentioned his name sfwhxt now look i know, donald hates it when anyone points out how hollow his sales pitch really is. >> adding this rare defense of her family's foundation. >> the clinton foundation helps poor people around the world get access to life-saving aids medicine. donald trump uses poor people around the world to produce his line of suits and ties. >> during her speech trump tweeted hillary says things can't change, i say they have to change. it's a choice between americanism and her corrupt
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globalism. #i'm with you. north carolina is a key battleground state that falls in the purple column this year. raleigh is a key economic hub and trump is still polling nationally ahead of clinton when voters are asked who would best handle the economy. clinton pushed back on trump's insinuation that he had seen no evidence of her religion. >> as we methodists like to say -- do all the good you can, to all the people you can. >> earlier at the day at the u.s. capitol, clinton walked the hauls with former house speaker, nancy pelosi. >> we're going to win the election, take back the house and the senate. >> she dropped in at a meeting of the democratic caucus, led by one of the names appearing on her vice presidential shortlist. javier bethesa, who took a little teasing from his colleagues. >> the should have seen the way in which javier poured so accurately the water and held it to her lips, tw a thing of
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beauty. i want you to know i'm proud of you. >> bernie sanders gave the first indication that he planned to concede. >> it doesn't appear that i'm going to be the nominee. so i'm not going to be determining the scope of the convention. >> he may not be the nominee, but sanders arrived at that c-span interview with a large secret service detail and a bomb-sniffing dog. protection that cost the taxpayers $38,000 per day. protection he would not receive if he dropped out. chris? >> jennifer griffin with the clinton campaign in north carolina. thank you. house democrats took more drastic measures today, in hopes of bringing another vote on gun control. civil rights icon and congressman john lewis called for action. >> we were elected to lead, mr. speaker. we must be headlights and not taillights. we cannot continue to stick our heads in the sand. >> he and his colleagues then
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staged a sit-in on the house floor and promised to occupy it to force a vote on gun control legislation following the orlando nightclub attack. democratic leader nancy pelosi vowed, democrats will stay on house floor all night and beyond if no gun control bill is brought up. democrats could face more fallout following tuesday's conviction of long-time congressman fattah. the democrat was found guilty on dozens of federal corruption charges, the conviction strips most of the congressman's power in the house. but fattah can still serve out his term unless democratic leaders step in. correspondent doug mckelway reports on the fallout over f fattah. >> moments after his conviction on federal corruption charges, federal congressman did not say whether he would resign his
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seat. for the speaker of the house that omission did not sit well. >> hope congressman fattah thinks about what the right thing to do is and i will have more to say about this later object. >> the government watchdog weighed in, calling his conviction quote the kind of ethical failure we should never see from congress. the house democratic leadership exuberant after its meeting with hillary clinton today, refused to address fattah's fate. >> do you think he should resign? >> let us concentrate on the visit that we had with secretary clinton. >> later the house's top democrat, nancy pelosi told fox news, quote, it's very sad, it's heartbreaking. house rules require a two-thirds majority vote to expel a member, but as a convicted felon, fattah is already prohibited from voting and he'll be gone next january regardless of what he does. adding to the awkwardness of his party's silence, fattah is a superdelegate at the democratic convention which takes place in
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his home town of philadelphia. as such, fattah is bound to hillary clinton, the first presumed nominee to be under active fbi investigation. fattah's crimes were serious, he accepted a loan and created a fake nonprofit through which he funneled taxpayer money to pay the loan back. >> the corruption demonstrated by congressman fattah and his co-defendants kroeds the citizens faith in government. >> after sentencing fattah will join his son in prison, his son was sentenced last february to five years on unrelated fraud charges. former house speaker dennis hastert is now behind bars, the 74-year-old republican arrived in a wheelchair at a minnesota prison today. hastert pleaded guilty last year in a hush money case after revelations he sexually abused at least four boys when he coached wrestling at an illinois high school. the former speaker will serve a
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fear over north korea's fire power has grown after the isolated regime laumpled two ballistic missiles one of them now considered somewhat successful. correspondent kevin corke reports from the white house tonight on the administration's response. . >> translator: if north korea carries out an additional nuclear test by any meeps, our government will respond to it sternly alongside the international community. >> intense condemnation from american allies across asia in the wake of a successful ballistic missile launch from north korea. the first after five failures in the past two months. >> translator: the missile launches today as with all the
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others are a clear violation of the united nations resolution and it's unforgivable and we strongly condemn it. >> dismissed in the u.s. as the communist country's latest failure, pentagon officials reversed course, admitting that after spectacular fiery crashes previously the last one flew 250 miles, a distance that's roughly a third of the way between north korea and japan. experts say this launch in particular is worrisome. >> it's significant because this is a mobile miss which will means it can hide and shoot. we cath destroy it, which means it's a real deterrent and one of their mobile missiles probably can hit the west coast of the united states, within two years it will have a warhead that will be nuclear. >> white house officials said the test would only serve to further isolate pyongyang. >> i think the impact of these provocations will be to only strengthen the resolve of the international community which has such serious concerns over north korea's behavior. >> with increasing for spore from iran, the north has continued its provocative path
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toward a nuclear weapon. leaving many wondering what if anything washington can or is willing to do about it. ? and tonight chris, north korean state media is quoting the leader of the community country, kim jong-un, as saying his country possesses a sure capability to attack the u.s. and its interests in the pacific. it pointed out that he personally supervised today's successful launch. chris? >> concern corke from the white house, thank you. rescuers have started a daring mission to evacuate two sick workers from the south pole. federal officials say a small plane carrying the workers left a remote u.s. science outpost there. normally planes do not fly to the south pole at this time of year, due to constant darkness and extreme cold temperatures that today reached 75 degrees below zero. but they decided to go ahead with the rescue. after deciding the workers could not be treated at the outpost. in just hours, voters in britain will head to the polls
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to decide if their country should leave the european union. prime minister david cameron went on television to explain why he thinks the country should remain in the 28-nation eu. while london's mayor, boris johnson toured the country in a final push for the so-called brexit. one of the biggest issues in thursday's vote is what impact a split from the eu would have on the global economy. wall street will be watching, stocks dipped today in anticipation of the vote. the dow fell 49, the s&p 500 lost 3, nasdaq dropped 10 points. firefighters in california are getting a little break from the heat, but the danger is far from over. 21 fires are burning across nine states in the west with some of the worst in california, arizona and new mexico. senior correspondent adam housley reports tonight on the battle to gain the upper hand on some of the worst fires.
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>> there's a lot of chaos, fire, all around. smoke, fire, fire trucks, people leading their horses, it was an evacuation. >> across the west, more than 20 major fires burned from alaska to arizona, colorado to california. >> they're working the fire hard and they're making sure that there's not going to be any issues later on. the weather is supposed to warm. we're trying to get a line around it right now, but it's real difficult. >> this video shows the fight from the air, taken from a firefighter's helmet cam in southern california. drops from planes and helicopters continued throughout the day and night. since last weekend, firefighters have faced record temperatures and extremely low humidity. winds have stoked flames and forced some home owners to try to save their homes themselves. >> we were prepped and ready to go. we had the pool pumps and extra hoses to hose down the houses. >> worried about smoke, vivian is one of the evacuee who is hopes coolers temperatures on
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wednesday will allow firefighters to continue to make headway as they battle the san gabriel complex fire. homes here have been saved and some 500 residents are being allowed to go back home zblixt hoping to get back as soon as i can. but i'm thankful that they're not going to let us sleep on the street. the fire here east of los angeles is officially 10% contained. firefighters hope to double the number by the end of the day today. just in time for another heat wave expected to hit this area by the end of the week. chris? >> adam housley reporting from california. thank you. the presidential candidates trade insults, who got the best of it? our panel weighs in next.
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doing favor for oppressive regimes and many others and really, many, many others in exchange for cash. i know donald hates it, when anyone points out how hollow his sales pitch really is he's going after me personally because he has no answers. on the substance. >> donald trump and hillary clinton trading fire today. both on economic policy and ethics. let's bring in our panel. editor in chief of life zed, laura ingram. a.b. stoddard, social editor of "the hill" and syndicated columnist charles krauthammer. laura, how do you compare trump and clinton's speeches in terms of policy and their political effect? >> i think it was a stark contrast in this way, chris. hillary clinton's been around public life, national public life for 25 years. not counting arkansas in her speech she really didn't make an
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aggressive pitch for her record. and why her record indicates her strength as a president. foreign policy, she didn't tick off we did this, this, and this. on economic policy, she was around when a lot of the decisions were made. if she had the secret to reviving the economy, maybe she should have shared it to barack obama and not just spring it on the nation on january 20th. i think she, she went after trump's temperment, trump university. but she didn't make the case for why her record indicates she should be the nominee. >> trump comes out and says look, this is what she's done. she's part of the corrupt regime of washington, d.c., i'm going to lead the country in a new path for renewal in our economy and foreign policy. i think he was pretty significant on regulatory reform, tax reform and foreign policy. i think it was a stark contrast. obviously he got very hopped up on the clinton foundation. i think a lot of that cuts right to the heart of corruption and what people think of washington. i think he had a good
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performance and i think hillary clinton is going to do what she's going to, do she can't run on record, because the record is really shoddy. >> one of the things that trump did that was interesting is he made an explicit appeal almost at start of the speech to bernie sanders supporters. take a look. >> the insiders wrote the rules of the game to keep themselves in power and in the money. that's why we're asking bernie sanders voters to join our movement. so together we can fix the system for all americans so important. a.b., did trump begin to stabilize his campaign for president today? >> it's an interesting comparison. you know compared to what, but trump has a great day. it was a very well-written speech. it was very focused, it was substantive. i thought the direct appeal on trade and corruption to bernie sanders voters was very shrewd.
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i thought he gave republicans every reason to believe that he's serious about coming up with a good contrast against hillary clinton and taking it to, right to her. it's a message that he has to stay on, but it was a good message tore him today. >> charles, you were critical of clinton's speech yesterday. saying that she offered platitudes instead of policies, the future lies ahead. she was much more specific today. in terms today of what her economic program would be. were you at all mollified? >> no, i but i ratherly am by hillary clinton. the fact is she doesn't really have a program, she doesn't really have a vision. she does small ball. she's going to patch the safety net of the welfare state. she's not, she doesn't offer large ideas like sanders or large hope the way that obama did in 2008. she basically says i'll fix stuff. people who are hurt, i will try to compensate, use the
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government to compensate. for example she says the coal miners will be driven into penry and unemployment. but the government will provide some billions of dollars to soften the blow. that's basically what her appeal is. it is extremely uninspiring. which is why as i said yesterday she had a line, where she said i believe in an america that moves towards the future. which i mean is as empty as you can get. >> let me push back for a myth. you can argue how good the program is she talked about infrastructure and clean energy, she talked about manufacturing, restoring those jobs. stopping people from moving overseas. i'm not saying that she's got the new secret sauce, but it's a program. >> infrastructure, green energy, obama has been talking about that for seven and a half years. we have the lowest growth of any recovery after the second world war. we're under 1%, even the democrats in the primary campaign argued against
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criticized, spoke against a government leaving the middle class helpless and squeezed. that's democrats speaking. all of the stuff we heard before, stimulus, attempts under obama. here we have a stagnant economy suffering middle class, there's no argument that she can make that sounds remotely visionary. and anything new, this is obama redux. if you liked his economy you're going to like her. that's her problem, there's no escaping it. >> panel? we need to take a quick break, next up, marco rubio changes his mind and decides to run for re-election to the senate. we'll discuss that and republican chances to hold on to congress in november.
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the senate's role of being able to act as a check and balance on bad ideas from the president, i think are going to matter more in 2017. than they perhaps ever have in our history. and that's saying a lot, given what we're facing now, i really deeply believe that i can contribute to that. i want to contribute to that. >> florida senator marco rubio reversing course and announcing he will run for re-election in november. and we're back with the panel. laura, after saying for so many
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months he was done with the senate, what do you think changed rubio's mind? >> i think in 2020 he's not going to be able to run for president if he's joe q. citizen working in an investment bank or something. that's my view on that. i know he said he got together with his family and so forth maybe -- the stunning question you asked answer, that he believes it's important to be in the senate to act as a check. no matter who is the president. and i was thinking to myself one of the reasons he lost his own state in the primary fight was because a lot of voters didn't think he was a powerful enough check on obama. so, it's very interesting that, you know, trump could be very well be president and he feels like i have got to be a check on populist guy who got a record number of republicans turn out and vote or hillary clinton be a check on her. a lot of people think in the first 100 days of hillary marco will agree on immigration we form and
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transpartnership. he might have a 100 day period more hospice tillable and comfortable than 100 day period with donald trump. >> i was struck when he said one of the big roles -- wasn't talking about affirmative things that the senate was going to do but being a check and balance against bad ideas from the president. then i said okay, i understand that with clinton. are you saying that with trump, too? and he said, yeah. >> i think that's actually part of the reason he can run is he is going to try to find this distance. and independence from the top of the ticket. he basically said today he is not going to be campaigning with trump in florida. he was obviously as you said, chris, under enormous pressure to do this. it's not what he had planned. but i think it is true that he was talked into the argument that this is a difficult time for the party and the country in which he could play a role. listen, democrats are going to attack him as being ambitious opportunist. he knows that. they will play all the tapes of the time he said he wouldn't come back to the senate that he doesn't want
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to be there. he seemed subdued talking about it because he wasn't planning on doing it. there might be in the future a role for him as an independent voice, as people clamor, particularly if trump loses to rebuild the party. we just don't know how that's going to shake out. but easier to do it from within the senate than the house. >> let's write a scenario here, charles, where hillary clinton wins. and let's say that it's part of a sweep and the democrats take back control of the senate. marco rubio as a reelected senator wouldn't he be one of the releading voices of the party trying to rebuild trump. i know there are a lot of if's in that scenario but it's not impossible. >> i think that's exactly what he would like if that were the sen neighborio. that's what he sees would be his springboard to running again. and, remember, we have a long history of candidates who lose once. some of them even twice. bob dole lost twice then he won the nomination on the third time.
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weave see mitt romney he lost and then he won the nomination. hillary lost in 2008 and then won. is he only in his early 40's. this is a guy with a future and i think he made the right decision in terms of his own future. as for being a check and balance, i think he sincerely believes that a muslim ban is a bad thing. i think he sincerely believes that deportation of illegal immigrants is a bad thing. and if he has a president who advocates that which would be trump, i think he would stand up against it. so i give him credit for both honesty about ambition but also about principle here. i think it's a combination of both. >> a.b., house speaker paul ryan said today that he is focused on raising money for house and senate candidates, not for donald trump. rubio is talking about campaigning for re-election apart from trump. path toomey who is doing quite well running for re-election in pennsylvania is talking about running apart from trump. can -- i mean, is it possible that you could have
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republicans succeed and try to hold on to the house and the senate running away from or at least aside, apart from their nominee? >> well, it's interesting. it actually really counters the argument that you need to have a delegate revolt if people in states obama run twice quote unquote struggling for re-election a few weeks ago. now in ohio and florida and rubio's numbers are doing well even if they're seeking stance from trump. it's probably not -- you know, it doesn't look like they can topple him in cleveland. that said, paul ryan is making it more than clear on a daily basis is he going to run. he wants his members who feel they can't support trump to run their own campaigns. marco rubio today. pat toomey has said the same thing. it's unprecedented. it's going to be very awkward. it sounds like they mean it. that's the only way to hold on. >> less man a minute, laura. can congressional republicans run apart from their nominee? >> i think it's really difficult. i disagree with this whole idea that you can have a
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two-track party where you have this guy who is controversial and obviously in some circles made some missteps but has had record turnout and has changed the debate in the republican party, represents the hopes and dreams of a lot of people. you get pat toomey over there in pennsylvania where trump is tied with hillary clinton, i'm going to run apart from donald trump? i mean, i think when they feel like they're dismissing trump for all of the vulgarities that they are offended by, they better be very careful because i think a lot of voters are going to feel like they are being dissed bay the g.o.p. establishment and they already feel pretty dissed as it is. >> that's it for the panel. stay tuned for baseball announcer handling balls and strikes and political turm
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the daughter of hugo chavez. hello. [ laughter ] anyway, 0-2. >> anyway, 0-2 tonight. the san francisco giants in a situation in crimea. thanks for inviting us into your home tonight. that's it for "special report," greta goes "on the record" next. #>> it is thursday, june 23rdrd. this is a fox news alert. chaos on capitol hill.
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>> tempers boiling over. we are live in washington, d.c. with all of the drama developing right now. >> killed in the line of duty. the death of a louisiana deputy being called cold blooded murder. the man in custody right now and why authorities say he did it. >> first there was a nightmare security lines, now problems with precheck. why the airport security short cut is making lines even longer. "fox & friends first" starts right now.
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>> hope ya'll are waking up to wild and lovely dreams this morning. look at the sunrise over new york city. you are watching "fox & friends" on this thursday morning. i am has been bee hundre-- abby. >> i am heather childers. chaos on capitol hill. >> tempers boil over as they a t gun control sit in. then breaking out in a broadway musical. ♪ >> let's get to garrett tenney. he is live in washington, d.c. with the dramatic results. >> this progress is still underway with a handful of democrats refusing to leigh cuddling up
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