tv Outnumbered FOX News June 24, 2016 9:00am-10:01am PDT
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(vo) get the ultimate all-included bundle. call 1-800-directv. jon: back in an hour, "outnumbered" starts now. >> this is a fox news alert. the dow plummeting more than 500 points early this morning after the uk voted to leave the european union. you're looking at the tao live rightnow. off the lows of the session but still up 455 points . this following a global selloff in stocks. this is "outnumbered", i'm sandra smith and here today host up after the belt melissa francis, legal analyst emily williams, commentator, actress and
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author stacy dashes here as well. today's hashtag one lucky guy, fox news legal analyst peter johnson singer and he is outnumbered.great to have you on a big day. we've been covering this all morning and want to get straight to it. global markets plunging after the unprecedented decision that united kingdom will partly with the european union. celebrations going on as pro-áuntran18á lawmakers hailed the decision, one even declaring june 23 the uk's independence day but the result shocking investors. many expected british voters to choose to remain part of the 28 nation block britain joined more than 40 years ago. instead, the majority chose to heed the call of pro-áuntran18á campaigners to liberate the nation from what many see as an oppressive bureaucracy in brussels,
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enabling mass migration into the cup country. the 52 to 48 percent split leading to an announcement from prime minister david cameron that he will resign. he said he will leave office by october.charlie gastineau is life for us on the ground in london. what is the latest coming from there? >> well, i would say this sandra. this has been an amazing 24 hours. when i was standing here 24 hours ago, i would tell you the establishment media, the establishment political people, the establishment celebrities were all against brexit, meaning british exit. the bookies are saying that brexit would lose big time by an 8220 margin and i admit i said i don't know how you beat that as much as i want the brexit to win because i don't believe any free people offshore their sovereignty to a bunch of eggheads in brussels but over the last 24 hours, look where we are now. it looks like we were remaining until the final
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hours and there was a flip and around 3:00 it came out, brexit wins. britain is exiting the eu. it's an amazing thing and i can underscore this more because i'm a guy. i come here , i jot on the treadmill, i watch bbc. i've never seen so much propaganda for an issue by and popular then i saw here. the bbc was an endless reel of pro-remain agitprop. it was unrelenting until yesterday when apparently there's a british law where you can't take sides and show opinions about a vote before a couple hours before the vote goes down. so i just couldn't believe what i was seeing and waking up this morning, i couldn't believe what i was hearing. it really is amazing. markets are trading off but everybody in the market, as you know yesterday the dow was up tremendously, the power was out. all the markets that would respond positively for remain vote for up so it was based in that if there was a surprise which this is a
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surprise, the markets would go down. the dow has gone down, the pound is down, i will say this. i think at some point the us markets are going to we double from this, were going to go back to worrying about interest rates and the obama economy and whether the presidential candidates want to trade or whatever. whatever monetary policies are for the us britain, i don't think is a big enough trader to really affect the overall market but globally, and for britain, it's still a big thing. it will be a big thing until they sort this out, what is the next move? is there a trade war? do they adopt factor policies of taxcutting which i think would be great, that would be positive for british stocks and the pound. where do they go from here? it will be bigger overseas for the pound. back to you.
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>> charlie, what are you hearing on the ground there? the future of the leadership in the country, david cameron announcing he will be resigning, stepping out in october. mohammed out. just in an exclusive interview with foxbusiness and he said i don't think he's going to last until then. what are you hearing about that? >> that's a good point. the vote wasn't heavily in favor of leave so remember, this is a heavily divided population here, okay? it was 52 to 48 it wasn't in that but not quite a blowout so there's a lot of opinions that we've heard around. a lot of stuff is going to go on over my shoulder in parliament. so there's a lot of stuff to be hashed out. i think the tories will be crazy to blow him out right now. i think this country needs stability. all the stuff i hear is that he's going to last is two months, there is going to be some transition, there's going to have to be a transitional leader to take his place and boris johnson,
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former mayor of london was one of the leaders behind the brexit movement so that's where we are right now. a lot ofuncertainty, i think he left because i don't think , it's uncertain and it's bad to at least have a guy in there for two months and i would have some of the guests around it. i think he stays for his time to make that transition and whether it boris johnson or someone else, we will see what happens. >> what you think about the pylon effect? your hearing this morning that is raising their hands that they want to vote on this. is this the beginning of the end the eu? >> that would be interesting to see. it could be. everybody was always looking for that point, we thought maybe what was going on with greece last year was that sort of thing that might have tipped the eu because it's always been sort of a mile wide and an inch deep sort of coalition. you always thought there was one crisis away from tipping over and maybe this is it. there's a lot of countries out there talking about exiting now. read the papers, that is in
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the air right now.france in particular. if that does happen, if the eu does break up it would be interesting to see how this plays out. it becomes less of a british story about whether britain is going to have a recession because they lost their trading partners or there's a new trade deal that might be less advantageous to it and more of a european issue, then that becomes a much bigger story. i still think for the us, for you your stock investors in the us, these are not things you should be worried about. you should be worried about us growth which is lousy and the feds which keep pumping the markets. it seems like to me with this coming, janetyellin is never going to raise interest rates again . >> charlie, thank you. life for us on the ground in london with reactions to the big exit. peter, i want to get to you first.
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we are trying to figure out what does this mean for the united states? what does this mean at home? today, it means big losses in the stock market. we are seeing not historic but close to historic numbers in the stock market and some of the naysayers are saying if this was 2008 and the sky is falling in and like that so the question i think we should discuss his do the markets come back after one day blip and how do we go forward in terms of our sovereignty, our sovereignty, we are not coupled with european union or with mexico or with canada or any of our neighbors so it's a little bit different area what will the long-term effects be for the united kingdom? if the capital of the financial services industry, 75 percent of their economy. the banking industry is huge.
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the insurance industry is huge. the insurer most of europe and the european union from the united kingdom. how will they be able to do their deals? it may look like it's interesting proposition today although maybe less so when they see the markets close as you said. eight or 10 percent in the united kingdom and elsewhere. heather: so what we are seeing in the stock market here, it pales in comparison . european markets down as much as 10 percent so there is really fear and those marketplaces, the jobs, the banking system. >> the first thing that happened when everybody woke up this morning or stayed up all night watching was they said wow, i really had this trade wrong. i was betting this the wrong way. they are trying to correct. it's phenomenal that we are down to .6 percent. while it is a downward move it was nothing like the route that so many people predicted and i actually think we may come back a little more before the end of the day and then everybody has the weekend to decide how they want to play. this is actually a muted response in the us.
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>> i saw some of the big publications online doing a brexit 101 because people are trying to figure out what does this mean? what is this telling us about what is happening around the globe? >> absolutely. the uk is supposed to be a representative democracy like many of us but here's the challenge. what happens if we don't like the representation? what happens if we don't like the way they are doing things? this was a brave move on the part of the citizens of the uk. we don't know what the long-term fallout will be and neither do they but it says a lot about when the people of the uk said we are willing to take that chance, take that risk and empower ourselves to be part of the way we will be governed moving forward, were going to take back our power and want to be represented in a particular way. >> we talk about the political fallout in a minute but stacy, you say this is sending a clear message . >> this is extraordinary evidence that socialism just does not work. it doesn't work. and i think this is perfect.
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this is perfect for us and if anyone is thinking of voting forhillary clinton , they need to look at this and think again . >> the generation linked with that is islamic fascism and it's an important point to understand that the rise of nationalist sentiment through the european union is directly, directly linked to the rise of islamic fascism and extremism in the middle east which can then again be directly linked to the political issue we are really talking about, what did america do in the past to stop it and are we now bearing the fruits of what people want as a global economy and in a global economy, how do you protect your own folks at home? >> much more on that and the political fallout coming up because pope and hillary are tweeting away right now. we're going to have it coming up and brexit also expected to have an impact on the presidential election. the parallels that many are
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now drawing between its anti-elite, anti-immigration message and the rise of donald trump.what he has to say about that and what it could mean or hillary clinton. >> it's happening in the united states, it's happening by the fact that i've done so well in the polls. look at the recent polling and you look at the swing states and you see how i'm doing and i haven't even started my campaign yet, essentially. than tylenol 8 hour. what will you do with your aleve hours? for over 100 yearsaking like kraft has,al cheese you learn a lot about people's tastes. honey, what do you want for dinner tonight? oh whatever you're making. triple cheddar stuffed sliders. sold! think fixing your windshield is a big hassle? not with safelite. this family needed their windshield replaced, but they're daughters heart was set on going to the zoo. so we said if you need safelite to come to the zoo we'll come to the zoo!
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stunning break with the european union, political watchers seeing a link between the antiestablishment, anti-immigration message that led to the brexit and the rise of donald trump in the us. the gop candidate himself echoing that sentiment in scotland today. >> i really do see a parallel between what's happening in the united states and what's happening here. people want to see borders. they don't necessarily want people pouring into their country that they don't know who they are and where they come from, they have no idea and i think not only did they win but it on by a much bigger margin than people thought it would have. >> any, it's interesting. it's a lot of the same sentiment. i don't know if you knew in written, they were about to take away peoples posters and hairdryers and electric kettles, telling them they use the much energy overregulation.
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it's like here in new york where they had too much sugar in their soda and people are sick of it and it's the same sentiment, is it not? >> the parallels were stark and double trouble he had to wake up this morning incredibly thrilled but this is a perfect fit to the narrative that he's running on very successfully in that republican primary. absolutely. this is about empowering the people and for hillary clinton and she's also been tweeting a lot about it, he's got to figure out a way to do something that's going to be very hard and divorced herself from the status quo because what happened in britain, what many people want to happen in the us is for the people to be empowered, to longer no longer need that middleman or middle woman to do it for them. >> it's about economic inequality. it's about what trump talks about, bad trade deals.
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helping america and hurting america, saying i haven't had a raise in 15 years. my health insurance is going up, my cost of benefits is going up, my expenses are going up and i'm being left behind. i thought i was going to be in a better position than my father and grandfather in this country and i'm behind so it's not only anti-immigration, it's economic inequality driving the lack of quality of life in these united states. >> this is huge for donald trump. >> she said our path is to makesure the economic uncertainty created by these events does not hurt working families . or nonworking families by the way. whenever somebody says that it makes me so mad because i said are there just families laying around on the ground? working families, isn't that everybody? >> that's it to that seven or eight people got in the room and they went to harvard and yale and said what should we say that's going to reflect the liberal consciousness and also be confusing so that everybody thinks it means one thing or another. she misses the point.
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she misses the point that tropism as gone worldwide and so the european union was brought together after world war ii essentially because of intense nationalism that cause problems in europe and saying we need to be integrated. now the world is saying we don't need to be as integrated as we want to be because the global economy is bad and our leaders are protecting us. >> nigel ross, let's listen to that. >> 17 million people voted for brexit. it's a victory for ordinary people, decent people. it's a victory against the big merchant banks, against the big businesses and against big politics and i'm proud of everybody to have the courage in the face of all thethreats to have the guts to stand up and do the right thing . >> what do you think? >> i think it's putting the power back in the hands of the people which is what they want and as far as
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immigration, islamic fascist are systematically taking over your and people are tired of it. finally, they're going to do something about it and that's because of trump. he's the one talking about immigration and making that a priority and that's a big win for him.>> and kind of like big politics being too big and far away. i joke about the teakettle and hairdryer but why are some bureaucrats in brussels that i didn't vote for telling me how hot my key can be, how hot my hairdryer can be, whether or not i can make my toast. world has gone insane, it's the same sentiment. >> people don't want to be micromanaged. many of us believe there is a responsible way to govern, that's one thing but this micromanaging, this talk about what to eat, what do we do all the time is scary for people especially when the leaders group themselves ineffective. you talk about what is supposed to be the benefit of being part of the eu, many people can no longer recognize silos benefit.
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>> you can see donald trump this morning when he stepped to that microphone in scotland, he knew this played into his hands and opening up to questions, he keeps saying more and taking more questions and using this to his advantage. >> the uk, american revolution. >> ahead of the brexit boat, british prime minister david cameron had warned leaving the eu would be a big win for isis. is he right or was he just fear mongering? more potential trouble for hillary clinton, the state department confirming she failed to joan turn over a key email but how much of the latest revelation will hurt the former secretary of state? you don't let anything keep you sidelined. that's why you drink ensure.
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>> i think it is a false warning. i think in the interests of the european union countries and united kingdom, no longer, two years from now, not going to be there, is to stand together on the issue, but between the united states and european union, they failed miserably together, so it seems how much
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worse it could get because there is one failure after the next. and european union has not been particularly strong in terms of their response on this issue. >> i was going to say. it is really compelling argument on its face. collectively we're stronger. we saw unfortunately, paris, france, in the eu. we saw devastating terror attacks happened there. we certainly know there are no guaranties being protected membership in the eu. failing argument on its face. >> doesn't make any sense because the eu is political economic and nato is military, right? and the americans bought and paid for their position in nato. we pay 75% of their position in nato. i want to know what they have done that they can't do now to defeat daesh? they have done nothing. >> good point. melissa: it is interesting that david cameron out there made all kind of threats, oh, my goodness, we'll immediately cut
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taxes and raise taxes. someone said, you will punish voters who go the other way? said markets would tank. people decided to do it anyway. they said you know what? all of that, the devil i don't know, is better than this devil i know. why am i being bossed by brussels. these restrictions are ridiculous. i don't care what you threaten me with. unknown is better. >> that so so powerful, melissa. that is searing indictment of the current leadership, that the people of britain were willing to take the risk even with threats above their head and do it anyway. that says a lot. >> margaret thatcher is smiling down from heaven right now. she is so happy. sandra: to go back to your point, melissa. they would stage emergency budget. they would raise taxes and cut spending in response to the expected damage that the economy would see from all this. he was challenged on this isis claim by the way. he said i think terrorists want to do us harm want the west to be divided.
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>> i'm sure they want the west to be divided, there are consequences. short-term consequences devastating and negative and bad. people are getting hurt there and here today as a result of it. what are long-term consequences. what is future of united kingdom going forward. do they have a stronger future, five, 10, 15 years from now when they assert their own sovereignty, when they get stronger. how does america respond. president says we'll turn our back on you. you will go to the back of the line. will we do that to one of our greatest allies? sandra: you're at front of the queue. melissa: if i'm president you will be front of queue. what an indictment much obama by the way. he went there and lectured them. we were live there on the couch, sat there, i don't want to do this. first question from reporter was, why do you think it is any business of yours? they were pretty rude to him. where do you get off coming over here telling us what we should do? says if president obama endorses
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you will lose. sandra: distracts from the question we asked on this couch every single day, are we doing enough to address and to fight isis? no. >> no. we've seen it on both sides of the country from san bernanadino to orlando. and we're seeing the negative consequences of losing in the middle east against islamic terrorists. we're seeing it time and time again. we're seeing massive political and economic shift in europe as a result of these losses. that is framing and forming our next 20, 30 years, around the world. >> say this as somebody who voted for the president. i'm a part of the 60% that is incredibly dissatisfied with his handling of isis. i would call it my greatest dissatisfaction and dispointment of the presidency. there is time to measure, de-escalating containing approach. this is not at that time. these are not toes circumstances.
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i would really love to see from the president or next administration, more aggression even if that means revisiting rules of engagement. there is time to show we're not playing and we need to take it seriously. sandra: melissa, all the times we heard best way to fight isis here at home, strengthen our economy. best thing for our national security is to have a strong, robust economy. melissa: yeah, we certainly haven't seen that we're in the middle of worst recovery in the history of recoveries. we haven't seen a strong economy at all. i don't know if they think this will make things worse. this creates uncertainty. a lot of deals have to be done. >> short term. melissa: maybe as they renegotiate a lot of deals they will be better. >> they will be better deals and trump will make those better deals. we know that for sure and also build a better military that will defeat this evil that exists on this that's right has to be just destroyed. melissa: wiped out. >> wiped out, destroyed and wiped out. >> those are great points.
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>> by any means necessary. >> by any means necessary. we have the clinton foundation, they're interested in the global economis interested in linking folks up with each other. is global economy good for americans and people of the united kingdom or good for the big fat titans? >> i will say this, peter. my mother taught me this you have to get your own house in order before you are assistance of other people. i believe strongly in that. sandra: great point. one of hillary clinton's biggest vulnerabilities focus of a new website. donald trump taking aim at her trustworthiness with lyingcrookedhillary.com. posting the benghazi terror attack as its first video by the way. is this good strategy for trump? we'll discuss. this family needed their windshield replaced but they're daughters heart was set on going to the zoo. so guess what, i met them at the zoo. service that fits your schedule. that's another safelite advantage. ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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that she failed to turn over a key email involving problems caused by use of her private email server will secretary of state. it was included in messages her aid, him ma abedin turned over from her inbox in 2010. after realizing emails were being blocked by the state department spam filter, she said, let's get separate address or device, i don't want any risk of personal being accessible. campaign spokesman bryan fallon downplayeded message. secretary clinton had emails huma did not have. and huma had emails secretary clinton did not have. right. secretary clinton reported to record at least 75 pete meetings with political donors, loyalists and clinton foundation contributors during her time as secretary of state. my goodness, that is a lot. come to you first. bear with me here. >> i'm asking for your help.
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>> let's make a distinction between thing that are illegal and things improper. >> yes. >> we know state department i.g. report said there were things deemed illegal, violations of the federal records act coming from this clinton email attachment. >> regulations stemming from those acts. >> that is one pocket. this is this today, clearly sworn oath she turned in all the emails. we know that is not true now. so at least improper, not trustworthy. but do you think it is does, it undermines the serious nature when she does stuff really a violation of the records act and stuff does this fuel the much to do about nothing argument that hillary and her spokespeople keep up when we talk about it in its totality? >> they like to fuel that with that none sense call statement, huma got some hillary didn't get and huma got some hillary didn't get. they were using secret blackberries and servers and secret email systems.
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obviously stuff was destroyed. 30,000 emails were destroyed. >> right. >> so it is this jigsaw puzzles, crossword, find one she sent over here we didn't get. part of the same deception. >> that does make it much worse, melissa? her trustworthy numbers are in the tank, this type of stuff comes out every week, another development she left off or didn't say? melissa: i think everybody out there knows she is not trustworthy and basically she is a liar. eastern the people who love her. they feel like this is the price of having her in office is that she's a liar. i don't think that's new. what is really interesting she continues to compound things total little illegal where she completely broke the law. how can you be the chief law enforcement officer of the nation if you're constantly breaking the law what is most interesting there, keep personal personal. with we payment like that at work. you shouldn't have personal in your email.
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i don't care that much. i'm not trading favors for money. i'm not as concerned about keeping things separate. she was selling america for a profit for herself, for hundreds of millions of dollars, doing things that were bad for americans, for that much money for herself. that is what she is hiding. >> i thought that was -- we can not, you know, tuck that under away. 75 unrecorded meetings with donors and lobbyists. what are the american people to think of that? sandra: when you look at strategy on part of republicans especially in election year, they're not championing this. they're not looking what is coming out of the email scandal and making it play in their favor. my legal question for you, peter, is you look at the questioning happening here and pagliano is the latest under oath. pleading the fifth and not so how can republicans expect to get anywhere with this investigation when everybody close to hillary clinton keeps saying i'm not answering that?
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>> the clock is ticking. the guy taking the fifth amendment part of a deal to turn state's evidence for the federal government. and then the witnesses pile on with one lawyer so they share information with each other. sandra: objecting hundreds of times to questions being asked. >> she and her lawyer should be in the nba. they are running the clock more than ever seen in american politics at all. so one after another, we get a deceptive message. this is the latest one. what is personal mean? does personal mean a meeting with a donor? she is saying i want to keep personal emails by my meetings with donors to clinton foundati. >> owners not aboveboard, people that are dictators and torture people? donors who do things that are nefarious? that is what she wanted to hide. that is what she wants to hide. >> peter and i are lawyers. we understand the fifth
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amendment and all of these kind of escape reports you take when you don't want to be held accountable. for non-lawyers, lay people, what does that read to you, people take the fifth amendment. >> are that she is a criminal. she is a very, very calculated criminal. how could you want a criminal to run your country? there are so many smoking guns, peter. why have they not indicted her? why not? because the president doesn't want her indicted. >> that is what donald trump is asking on his website. >> why are they not indicting her? because the president doesn't want them to indict her. >> absolutely. meantime donald trump is going after hillary clinton's trustworthiness just as you're talking about, stacy. problem doing her in the polls from the very beginning of the campaign. the presumptive republican nominee letting voters keep issue fresh in their minds 24/7 by launching a new website. here is what it is called: lying "crooked hillary" dot-com.
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>> is that one word? >> what trump camp former secretary of state 10 legendary lies, they will use videos, graphics and detailed statements maybe even songs to make its point. here is clip from the first video focusing on benghazi terror attack. >> have you always totaled the truth? >> i always tried to. ♪ >> we've seen rage and violence directed at american embassies over an awful internet video. >> okay, does this make the point, is that compelling? >> how do you try to tell the truth? how do you try to tell the truth? either you tell the truth or you don't tell the truth. there is no trying. >> good point. melissa: it will be very interesting to watch this. this is what republicans sitting back, they have known forever. they have been like this since beginning of time. they turned politics into personal profit. taken it to a art form level.
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it is amazing but no one can make it stick in a way that compels voters. they're saying is donald trump finally be the one that throws this at them and it really sticks. starting with this website. will be interesting to watch. i don't know. >> you made a really good point earlier. you talked about this is not news to anyone hillary clinton is not trustworthy even among her own base or own party. the question is, i see the general election very much a boxing match, where every punch you have to immediately throw a counterpunch. you can't let anybody put you on the ropes. you lost at that point. what will she do in response. she will not paint herself trustworthy. she knows it. she will counter with making people afraid of donald trump. sandra: i hear on the couch all the time political pundits what a horrible politician she is, yet she has all this going on and evidence that she is this attack was because of a video and the at same time emails revealed she told her daughter it was al qaeda? >> she is a great politician. she is only second to her us and
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president obama. she has been very effective politician. we can't diminish that. but is he going somewhere with this? let me ask one lucky guy question. i was raised by my mother and father, my mother would say you can't say that about a woman as a man. so how do women react? whether they're republican, democrat, independent, what, is there one kind of reaction that, i mean, those are hard, harsh things to say. they might be accurate but how do people react to that. melissa: i don't think women are nearly as fragile as people are afraid we are. >> good. melissa: i think we vote for -- i don't care how she is on women's issues. or he is. i care about the economy and national security. putting up with their lies and everything that has been done and illegal is the price of clinton competency for people who feel like way they operate is competency. if we see the economy go further
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south d market go further south, that is when people don't want to put up with them anymore. we'll see if the "brexit" pulls us down further? that could work against the clintons. >> the thing worries me about her, we have quid pro quo with we don't know who. she could put our country if she becomes the president in grave danger. we don't know what she promised to people she got mon e money from. >> peter, how will her demeanor with first attacks. thinking first debate, what the energy will be like. i'm a woman from the south. i respect again gentility and femininity. she has permission and certainly mr. trump, remember in '08, barack obama got a lot of slack treating her in earlier debates.
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trump will not be burdened by those expectations. >> that is a great point. a great point. hollywood putting a chill on free speech. many conservatives in tinseltown are afraid to support donald trump. stacey dash weighs in next. she knows a lot about this and written a book about it too. ♪ thanks for the ride around norfolk! and i just wanted to say, geico is proud to have served the military for over 75 years! roger that. captain's waiting to give you a tour of the wisconsin now. could've parked a little bit closer... it's gonna be dark by the time i get there. geico®. proudly serving the military for over 75 years.
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sandra: this is a fox news alert. we're watching dow in midday trading. we're seeing u.s. stocks falling back where they opened the session. this is the low of the day, off 530 points, at 17,480. this of course after the uk just voted to leave the eu. this throws a lot of economic uncertainty out into the world, not just here at home. that continues to weigh not just on u.s. stocks but stocks around the globe. banking stocks continue to lead the way down in the u.s. stock market. we'll keep watching it for you. is stocks continue to plunge. >> a real-life political drama
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in tinseltown. imagine. according to a new report many hollywood conservatives, me being one, are not shelling out for donald trump for fear backlash as trump supporters. head of a hollywood relations firm telling the rap, quote, if you're climbing studio ladder or haven't become a big star yet, you will probably not going to be hesitant to support trump. these people are afraid because their bosses likely are very likely hillary clinton supporters. i say, so what. get a backbone, stand up for yourself. if you're a conservative, stand up. i've had enough. i mean i personally know this. i have written a book about it. there goes my social life, from clueless to conservative. you know, it's funny and then it isn't. they claim -- melissa: i love the title. i'm laughing at title only. it is clever. >> thank you.
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you know, this liberal tolerant society but they're not. melissa: sandra: closet conservatives approach you in hollywood approach you? >> thank you so much. thank you for your bravery. i want to say to them, why aren't you being brave. why aren't you speaking up. melissa: what is like to be outspoken conservative? >> it has been hard. i've had my agents drop me. it is difficult. but that is okay. i don't care, no one is going to scare me into submission. i ask everyone else, have a backbone. get some guts. stand up for yourself. >> what turned you from clueless to conservative? >> we used the title because i was in the movie "clueless." >> i know the movie. i know the movie really well. >> i've never been clueless. >> but you were clueless in politics? >> no. sandra: come on peter. >> evolution of her career.
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melissa: stacy, how many people in hollywood are conservatives vote conservative? >> thousands. melissa: that really counts. maybe you wouldn't contribute because you would be on a list. you are alone in the ballot box. i laugh with number, especially i still know a lot of liberals in hollywood. when i talk to them, i think, i bet you don't even bother to go and vote on the big day. >> right. melissa: i had bet you are too busy to actually go to a polling place and sit there to punch that ticket. >> but conservatives are voting. >> i have a question, stacy. donald trump is not your typical conservative in a lot of ways, first of which he is full-fledged celebrity. do you have any prediction or idea, liberal hollywood marriages are longstanding right, i would think if anybody could crack the barrier it would be donald trump. >> that's right. >> around be able to get into the pockets. do you think there opportunity. >> yes. i think they're wrong. i think people will vote for donald trump because of that. he is anti-establishment. and he is the way into the
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republican party through the backdoor. >> what will these folks say to you? what these hardcore liberals in hollywood, what do they say to you? >> they say there is not enough to go around. republicans are racists, home phobe big and there is not enough to go around -- homophobic. you can't go on television the american dream can be achieved by everyone. you can't say that. that is not true. >> that is wrong. >> that is the wrong thing to say. which is absurd. sandra: break in with a fox news alert here. you saw a green box on your tv there. looking at dow, i'm sour dow jones industrial average off right now 523 points. u.s. stock market taking a hit in the wake of this vote in the uk to leave the european union. there is a lot of uncertainty over what this means for the economy there, what it means for the economy here at home. and that uncertainty leading to a selloff, not just here, but globally. what does this mean for trade deals? what does it mean for the
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upcoming united states election? and by the way, prime minister david cameron in the wake of this vote has announced that he will be stepping down in october. we'll have more on "outnumbered" on the other side. a big hassle? not with safelite. this family needed their windshield replaced but they're daughters heart was set on going to the zoo. so guess what, i met them at the zoo. service that fits your schedule. that's another safelite advantage. ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ i'm terhe is.at golf. but i'd like to keep being terrible at golf for as long as i can. new patented ensure enlive has hmb plus 20 grams of protein to help rebuild muscle. for the strength and energy to do what you love. new ensure enlive. always be you. this is your daughter. and she just got this. ooh boy. but, you've got hum. so you can set this. and if she drives like this, you can tell her to drive more like this. because you'll get this. you can even set boundaries for so if she should be here, but instead goes here, here, or here.
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with clinically proven results. in clinical trials, acne got better for people using aczone gel in just 12 weeks. aczone gel may cause the serious side effect of methemoglobinemia, which decreases oxygen in your blood. stop taking aczone gel and get medical help right away if your lips, mouth, or nails turn grey or blue. talk to your doctor if you have g6pd deficiency. using benzoyl peroxide with aczone gel may cause skin or facial hair to temporarily turn yellow or orange where applied. common side effects of aczone gel include dryness and itching of treated skin. now, i have less acne to think about because i use aczone gel. you could pay as little as $15 for aczone gel. learn more at aczone.com aczone. prescription treatment. proven results. sandra: all right, quick look at the dow right now off 531 points. u.s. stocks selling off to the lows of the session. continued concerns what this means. the uk voting overnight to exit the european union.
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economic uncertainty leading to a global selloff. i want to thank peter johnson, jr., for joining us. great to have you. stacey dash, eboni, melissa. great day for news. back on tv monday. >> eastern. "happening now" starts right now. "happening now" starts right now. we begin with a fox news alert. a pennsylvania police officer is shot on the job. now the hunt is on for the gunman. >> that officer rushed to a hospital with wounds to his face, his chest and also his leg. we're covering all the news. it's happening now. are you going to vote for hillary clinton in november? >> yes. yeah. i think the issue right here is i'm going to do everything i can to defeat donald trump. >> bernie sanders says he is now on board to back the presumptive democratic presidential nominee, but will his millions of supporters follow his lead? the last thing i would do is tell
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