tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News June 24, 2016 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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8:00 p.m. in london where frustrated and angry britons have spoken by the millions, and executed a stunning takedown of the establishment. all in power. political, economic and otherwise, warned of british exit from the european union would wreak havoc on the markets, dealing a crushing blow to the economy, and wrecking trade deals while failing to solve even the most basic immigration concerns, yet it happened, and now there is chaos. the prime minister announced he is resigning. the markets have plummeted around the world. u.s. stocks destroyed. a live look at the do you following the brexit.
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the dow jones industrial average of the biggest stocks in the world, down 559 points, more than three percent. some time lapse video to show you the first hour of the trading. now we're awe 3 .1%. nasdaq down 200 points, the 500, the broader measure of the economy, off around 70 points or 3.2%. lon do's down more than 3%, japan's nikkei dropped. the british pound is plummeting. the brexit referendum drew more than 30 million britons to the polls yesterday. more thanmore than 70% of voter. the measure passed with 52% of the vote. that will leave 27 members of the european union, an alliance
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that began more than half a century ago to try to help prevent a third world war. david cameron announced he will be signing help led the cam fine stay or remain and took a huge political gamble when he called for the referendum three years ago. the prime minister says he'll be out by october. >> i will do everything i can as prime minister to steady the ship over the coming weeks and months. but i do not think it would be right for me to try to be the captain that steers our country to it next destination this is not a decision i have taken lightly, but i do believe it's in the to national interest to have a period of stability and then the new leadership required. >> stability in the future. one of the biggest supporters is the uk independence party leader, he says prime minister cameroon did the honorable thing by stepping down and says june 23rd will go down in history as uk's independence
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day. >> it's a victory for ordinary people. decent people. 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 the threats, everything day were told, had the gets to stand -- the guts to do the right thing. >> he says the vote shows the i is doom. and he says other members may follow britain's lead. president obama spoke with prime minister cameron today. the president said, he called the british leader an outstanding friend and partner on the world stage. >> for ordinary people, decent people -- >> the ongoing changes and challenges raised by globalization, but while the uk's relationship with the i eu will change, one thing that will not change is the relationship between our two nations.
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>> donald trump happens to be in scotland for the re-opening of one of his golf courses and says he supports brexit, even says president obama may have caused it by speaking out against the referendum during a visit to the united kingdom in april. there is no real evidence of that. >> i was actually very surprised that president obama would come over and be so bold as to tell the people over here what to do. and i think that a lot of people don't like him. and a lot of people voted -- i think if he had not said it, think your result might have been different. >> what now for great britain. >> can it remain united? two-thirds of voters in scotland voted to remain in the european union. scotland's leader today said it is highly likely the country will hold another referendum on leaving the united kingdom. brexit will be complicated and very time consuming. once the process begins, which it hasn't, finalizing the divorce will take up to two years. what happens to the economies of
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the region and the world and to trade and immigration is completely unknown. nothing like this has ever happened. we have extensive team fox coverage ahead, including what is next for the uk and the european union. the latest reaction from lawmakers on capitol hill and how this could affect our economy in the united states. first, general -- benjamin hall. >> reporter: it's been support shock over here. overnight it feels they have just suddenly left and the country is reeling from the decision. it was late last night in the north of england, the first signs the government was really in trouble. it went downhill from there and did lead to david cameron's sudden resignation. >> there will be no initial change in the way our people can travel in the way our goods can move or the way our services can be sold. we must now prepare for a negotiation with the european union.
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>> reporter: cameron said he would stay in power through october and the party conference but someone else has to take the hell and guide in the uk and that remain piston see who -- remains to be seen. >> what is the thinking who might replace prime minister cameron? >> reporter: has to be someone from the leave camp. there are two main options, michael, and boris johnson, the former mayor of london. he spoke directly to the people today. >> today, i think all of us politicians should thank the british people because in a we they have been doing our job for us. they hire to us deal with the hard questions. and this year, we gave them one of the biggest and toughest questions of all. >> reporter: but the biggest is what lies ahead. it's dealing with this messy divorce from europe. it's renegotiating new trade deals and writing new laws in
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almost every sector. not while trying to make sure the markets remain calm and europe doesn't fall apart. people looking to see how the uk survives, howl they do, and will they follow suit. we just don't know right now. >> ben hall, our man in london. let get context. what this means for the markets and our retirement funds and the big pure of the economy. john busse, the associate editor of "wall street journal." don't believe people saw this coming and i wonder if you have a sense what it means. >> how much more of this are we going to see? you heard the independence party leader say, this is anti-big business, this is anti-established politics. words we have been hearing that same kind of rhetoric here in the u.s. presidential campaign from both the left and the right. not just donald trump but bernie sanders. you're hearing the same thing in political structures all over the world.
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in other countries in europe, particularly, the rise of right-wing antiimmigration parties in austria, poland, other places, increasingly in places like france. so this is a kind of period of alienation, of people feeling that politicians have not delivered for them. they're worriedded about their jobs, automation, globalization, has put those at risk. they're not seeing the benefits of existing political structure, and maybe fair or not, they are voicing their concern about it and you're seeing in britain the first real concrete impact globally. >> largely, though not exclusively, largely this was about immigration. for so many people across great britain, and the ironic thing is that this doesn't solve any immigration issues they see at all. >> not in the near term. this will take a long time. this is a vote to disentangle
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from the eu. there are regulations and laws that britain has signed on to, the way it conducts business in britain, is in concert with the way that other europeans do, as a result of this agreement over the last 50 years. so, now all that needs to be rewritten, not even the actual notice to the eu could take place for many, many months. britain has to notify the eu that there's two years of negotiation on how town tangle -- >> that period in the middle where there are no rules for -- what happens for the next two years, three years? >> what cameron just said is correct. they operate as if they are part of the european union until that is dissolved. >> that sounds awkward. >> free movement across borders, beings relationship is the same. the immigration issue does not stop and it's not just immigration for the middle east and europe. it's immigration of eastern europeans into the labor market in britain that has caused this kind of feeling of nationalism, to rise.
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and that's what you're seeing expressed here. >> is this the beginning -- our stock markets, the dawes is down three percent, the send down four percent. the nasdaq down 0 four percent, is this a beginning, quick reaction and recovery? >> we don't know. and part of this we have to remember is that the market has had an incredible runup and can then over the last several weeks there was another runup of the market, and so a three percent movement is probably not that massive of an issue. the question is, the one you're asking, which is is this the beginning of an erosion? there's going to be up certain any britain over the next two years. does that lead to an economic slowdown in britain? further economic slowdown in europe? possible recession there, pitching the united states into either a further slowdown or recession, and the market erodes even further. that is the big concern and that's the big uncertainty right now. >> bigger picture and as the markets close, john will be back with us later in the hour.
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thank you. the former british prime minister said this is a mistake. so says tony blair today. the house speaker of the united states, paul ryan, says despite what we're seeing on wall street he is not wilder about the markets. we'll take you to d.c. about that and have continuing coverage throughout the hour. 50 minuted until the final bell and a gloomy one on the corner of wall and broad. the dow jones industrial average getting pummeled on the session with no end in sight. we have not reached 600-points. we're at session lows at the moment and there is no sign of a late buy-in. the downward movement continues. real is touching a ray.
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to leave that union. markets around the globe have been nuts. this happens to be some students in south korea. a heck of a day to visit the stock exchange there. big numbers on the board. this is japan. this guy handing out special editions of a newspaper announce thing brexit results. the stock market there had its worse day in five years. and finally, this is brussels where they're working on the flags in front of the eu headquarters. one flag for each of the 28 members. one of those flags will be coming down. lawmakers on capitol hill reacting to the decision to leave the eu. the house speaker apology ryan saying the brexit vote will not affect the special relationship between the united states and the united kingdom and the u.s. markets will stabilize. president obama also said that relationship will not change. the president spoke out against brexit during a trip to the uk in april but today the white house said the can and the
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european union will still be partners of the united states. blake, the president just talked about brexit vote. >> reporter: he is out there in california earlier, the president just left there from a speech in california. mentioned brexit. at the very beginning awe off the top he said he spoke with the british prime minister, david cameron and the chancellor of germany, angela merkel. calls cameron a good friend and a partner. as you maybed the president was in that region just a couple months ago and gave at the time what amounted to a warning to the voters there of the uk, saying that if they were to vote to leave the european union, that they would go to the quote, as he put it, back of the queue related to trade deals and from that point on it could take some five to ten years to work out. well, speaking earlier today in california, the president did not repeat that position. listen here. >> based on our conversation i'm confident that the uk is committed to an orderly transition out of the eu. we agreed that our economic and
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financial themes will -- teams will remain in close couldn't october as. >> top administration officials from all over speaking out. vice-president joe biden was in ireland today. he said, quote, we have hoped for a different outcome but they fully respect the decision they have made, speaking of the uk voters. on the financial side. the treasury secretary, jack lew who had given warnings what a leave vote might mean, said today he is, quote, continuing to consult closely with leaders in the eu, the uk, and all around the globe. >> politically what are republicans say. >> house speaker paul ryan said the uk is an indispensable ally and tried to use this brexit vote to say that america needs to lead. he reiterated that phrase a couple times during a news conference today. one of the main issues to shake out here going forward is trade deals and the chairman of the house ways and means committee,
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kevin brady, said they should start getting a jump on that immediately. brady writing in a statement, and i'm quoting: in this time of uncertainty we should now begin to discuss a modern, new trade agreement with the uk that continues but expands the level of trade between our two nations. trade deals. one of the big questions here going forward. >> no doubt. no clarity on what is ahead. thank you. isis supporters calling for new attacks in europe after the brexit vote. the intelligence and the analysis coming up as we continue to watch the dow jones industrial average in the last 45 minutes of the trading day ends, downward pressure continues, off more than 3.5%. the dow down 637 points and counting. crowd sounds ]
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>> isis and al qaeda supporters are celebrating brexit on social media, calling for a tax in germany and belgium to, quote, paralyze europe. our chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge with a look at this from washington. >> two groups that monitor terror groups on social media say the message went out from established isis and al qaeda accounts on telegram, an encrypted messaging service, urging followers to strike in europe and capitalize on the uncertainty after the vote. exert say isis tries to capitalize of every major news event. there's been a steady stream of isis chatter. the group sent out a kill list with 4,000 names and while we can't speak to authenticity of the list does appear to pull names and numbers from publicly available databases. this happened to be on business leader. the uk's foreign office, the
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equivalent of our state depth, issued a warning that the threat level is high and eye says trained operatives want to hit british targets in response to this increased military pressure in iraq and syria. >> on top of this can we're hearing from the cal quite magazine a call for followers to follow the example of the gunman in orlando. >> a special edition of the al qaeda online magazine called "inspire" and has he shooter organization mar mateen on the front cover. the most active and capable al qaeda affiliate and issued this new three-beige guide and we're not here to promote details but it does follow a pattern where the group seeks to capitalize on lone wolf attacks and to call for more. you recall in the 9-1-1 calls mateen pledged solidarity with the boston marathon bombers who used these online guides from "inspire" to bill the pressure cooker bombs and explosive devices and mateen gave a
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shoutout to a florida man who bill a suicide bomber for ail quite in syria. analysts are emphasizing theirs is nothing in the magazine that suggests al qaeda knew in advance offeror lan dough but direct it it but comes at the same time that we're saying isis call for attacks against in europe. >> catherine herridge in washington. business leaders warning staffers to brace now, brace investors for all kinds of turmoil, and a brexit impact. lillian has details on what has been going on. it's moving so fast it's hard to keep up with. >> florida has 14,000 employees in the uk and the company says they might expect some job losses over there. scotch makers are worried about production. 90% of scotch gets shipped overseas. the owner of british airways is worried about profits and analysts say tha trickle down to ticket buyers. >> airline stocks are taking a hit.
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>> airbus crowe says it's a lose, lose for you were. dom know is fine saying people still want pizza. >> mostly american interests, walmart, the same thing today. walmart was the only of the do you 30 in the green but that has now slipped slightly into the red. it's other discount store in the united states and offer as dividend of 2.3%. hard to get that anywhere else. donald trump calling for the uk's move fantastic. hillary clinton says it shows a need for a calm, steady leader in the white house. "fox news sunday" host chris wallace shows us on brexit and this weekend, fox news reporting special on deadly medical mistakes. the man bill hemmer anchors, dangerous doctor. on sunday, 9:00 p.m. eastern and midnight here on fox news channel. continuing to. would the dow. 35 minutes remaining the trading day and the dow off more than 600 points on the session.
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a fox report now. more headlines from the fox news deck. flooding in west virginia has killed 14 people since the storms hit yesterday. the brand flu word from the governor of west virginia. his spokesman says it could be the worst flooding that state as seep in a century. crews are trying to save hundreds stranded in a shopping mall outside charleston. emergency workers in california describing, quote, firefight of epic proportions as crews take on fast-moving wildfire that has destroyed dozens of homes, happening 150 miles north of los angeles. hundreds have had to pack up and leave their homes. >> and north korea is now a nuclear threat to be reckoned with after test launching two missiles this week. that is the quote from a top official there, who blamed the united states for causing what he called this issue. state media released images
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continuing to watch the big board. half hour in the trading day. off 625 points after the uk voted to leave eeuropean union. the numbers have held stead governor 15 or 20 minutes. donald trump happens to be in scotland for at the re-opening of one of his golf resorts. trump called brexit results fantastic. said it shows the britons are taking control over their own politics, border and economy. donald trump compared the decision to his own campaign, tweeting, just arrived in scotland, place is going wild over the vote. they took their country back just like we will take back america. no games. scotland voted for the uk to remain in the european union. the people of scotland did not want to leave. by a resounding margin. hillary clinton had pushed for the uk to stay in the european t
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respects the choice of the votes and says the results underscores the need for us to pull together to solve our challenges as a country, not tear each other down. john roberts with the news, live turn berry scotland. >> good evening to you. a political terms donald trump was getting an earful from republican leaders about going to scotland on a business trip at a time when they thought he had urgent campaign business to attend to back in the united states, but as often has happened with donald trump, he suddenly found himself in the right place at exactly the right time and on the right side of the issue, and recent days he said the uk should and would leave the eu primarily over unchecked immigration, could bode will for him back home. >> 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
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country. that they don't know who they are and where they come from. they have no idea. >> reporter: but also showed a sharp contrast between hillary clinton and donald trump and barack obama who issued sharp warnings to the british they should stay in the eu. >> she was misread everything and i was surprised the was so bold -- the only reason she did it is because obama wanted it. if he said leave, she would have said leave. she does whatever he wants her to do. >> reporter: obama warned folks in the uk they could go to the back of the line on trade deals and other issues like that if they were to leave the european union. donald trump said today britain will always be ahead of the line because the united states will have and will continue to have a very special relationship with the united states.
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>> john roberts following donald trump from scotland. the british volters' decision to leave the european union will not change the uk's role in nato. that's what the head of nato said. before the vote he said a fragmented europe would create uncertainty a military commander says the pet could weaken nato when the need to stand touch russia. lea gabrielle has more. >> the shead of the u.s. army in europe said that solidarity between nato and the eu is important in countering russia, speaking to the bbc about a pock uk exit he said if the eu becomes unraveled there can't happen but be a knock-on effect for alliance also and said russian aggression in uk and syria threaten europe, including the tens of thousands thousandse fleeing to europe because the russian use of weapons in syria. >> we remain very confident that the alliance, that the core interests of the alliance will
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continue to be served, that great britain next uk, will be a continue -- continue to be a strong ally within the alliance and nato will continue to perform its very important function. >> britain is a lead nation in 2017 for nato leading a task force defend baltic states and poland. >> you spoke with a former nato commander on this, right? >> that's right. retired admiral james says this is a good day for vladimir putin and bad day for us because we lost an integrated europe as a security partner. one key concern has to do with the possibility that scotland may not decide to leave the uk. he says that the uk maintains its nuclear deterrence in the form of back ba his stick missile sub marines operating out of other best in scotland. >> the likelihood, the certainty is they would close that base to so that would give the brits no
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where to operate nuclear submarines balls you need a capable infrastructure to do so the. >> that is britain's only nuclear subbase. the admiral says the vote will diminish arability to work together to create new defense systems and technologies. >> let's bring in "fox news sunday" chris wallace. what's your read on this politically? >> in terms of this country, it's very interesting because -- look at basically what happened. you had a populist grassroots rebellion against the political and financial establishment over issues like trade and immigration and globalization, and that sure sounds a lot like the platform of donald trump. so i'm sure he is going to take this, come back to the states and say, britain caught on, we have to do the same. >> i'm reading a lot of editorial matter on that today, chris. it's been coming down the assembly line all afternoon and the suggestion is this same
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sentiment that caused what just happened in the united kingdom mire roars and reflects what is happening in the united states. they're making a tie between the two. is it fair to do that? your assessment? >> well, look. certainly trump is going to say that. whether or not what happens in britain is going to happen here, obviously they're different countries with different situations. we're not exactly saying because of canada, elected a liberal in trudeau, that we're necessarily going to have a liberal president here. but it certainly is an indication that with globalization, with international trade, there are winners and losers, and the same kind of anger and frustration and dislocation that led a majority of the voters in england and surprising all the pundits, upsetting all the polls, to vote to leave the eu. it certainly something that is
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out there. we have seen it already in trump winning the republican nomination. whether it carries him to presidency we have to wait. >> now questions whether unity can remain in more than one quarter, scotland, which had already had a fairly historic vote on removing itself that will come up begin be because the scottish supported staying or remain, as they call it. same with other european capitols. whether the european union will remain with -- left with 27 now. you wonder where this is going to take us and how due you ride the. >> you're exactly right and we'll look at it from the american perspective but this will have a dramatic impact around the world and especially europe there are other countries with right-wing movements, france, the netherlands, going to say, we -- britain wanted out from this european union so do we, as you point out, scotland very much wants to stay in the european union.
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there had been a move for independence. they now vote to split off from britain, from england? what about northern ireland? they want to stay in the european union, so this could shotter -- shatter or create new splits in the european union and create splits in what we used to call great britain. >> on the political matters here at home, donald trump in scotland today and was able to say, told you so. i said this would happen. this should happen. and went ton say, even that he believed president obama may have caused it. do you have a sense for house this plays? >> i don't think it's going to have much impact. look, president obama did go over to britain a few months ago and talked about the fact that britain would lose some clout if it were just a country standing on its own and not part of the european union and using a british expression, he said that means you'll go to the back of the queue in terms of big trade agreements with the u.s.
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a lot of people didn't like it but do i think that's what determined -- do i think that people in britain decided their economic future bailed on that? no. die think it's going to have impact here in this country? a lot of bigger reasons and the fact that there'd been a net increase of 330,000 immigrants into britain in 2015 played a lot bigger factor than some remark by barack obama. >> huge takeup of the establishment. that seems to be a pattern or a series of ocurrents around the world. you wonder how we'll look back on david cameron's decision three years ago to hold this referendum the flirts place -- first place, largely seen as a short-term boost for himself in the polls and enough will he be the one that put europe in jeopardy? >> well, that's an interesting question, and part of that was the politics against this independent movement, the ukip
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run by nigel farrage who you had a clip of the top of the show. so a lot of inner politics, internal politics in britain that led him to make this move, and at the time it seemed like it was going to be an easy win for him, but there are lot -- look, with globalization you have -- and international trade, you have a lot of winners and losers, and look at what happened. what to the vote was in he engl. places that irthriving, like london, which has become an international financial market, they like being part of euishish. made them a financial capital but in the older industrial cities, like a number of cities here in the united states, and the rust belt, that have fade, they feel like they're losers and that this international system or -- they have in britain, the european union, has worked to their disadvantage. so there are different parts of the country affected differently by trade and globalization and have very different views how we
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should go forward. >> a lot of our understanding of this will come together over the days and weeks and months ahead, and hopefully by sunday we'll have some of that. look forward to your program when you'll have more on the move and what it means for politics at home, on your local fox station. chris will talk with hillary clinton's campaign manager, also the former house speaker, newt gingrich and a donald trump supporter, this sunday on "fox news sunday," check your local listings. >> more than on the other countries which could follow the brits out of the eeuropean union. is that a real possibility new? details ahead. [phone buzzing] some things are simply impossible to ignore. the strikingly designed lexus nx turbo and hybrid. the suv that dares to go beyond utility. this is the pursuit of perfection. i want my blood sugar i to stay in control.ck. so i asked about tresiba®.
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historic vote to leave the european union. we could see a domino effect. that's according to the reuters news agency. political parties in denmark, sweden, france, italy, and the netherlands, have already called for votes on similar measures. next week the european union set to hold a immediating to decide what to do after the brexit vote. anallies say somish leaders may be looking to push britain in order to scare off copycats. trace gallagher has more. >> look to the swedes because they're so close. it's like a scan navan britain and every in the politics the swedes and the brits are 90% together and the sweets nook 100 plows thousand refugees refugeeo there's an immigrant problem the and the conservative movement is gaining steam in sweden. you look at den mark and other countries with an immigration problem, the conservative movement is gaining momentum. the danes are worried the immigrants will come in and overrun their very small welfare state.
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france is interesting because 61% of the french people have a negative view of the eu. they just don't like it. then you have french lawmakers pushing for brexit, or frexit, who knows but the bottom line is the economy in france is down and the unemployment is up so the odds are they'll say. and greece are not worried about getting voted out. they're worried about getting kicked out because they're debt burden is so hon. >> and now president in erdogan in turkey wanting in and saying the reason they're not in is islamophobia. are we getting anything specific. >> we didn't mention hungary. hungry has 37 possessor the population anti-eu but the president there is against the eu, saying europe is strong on only itch itself can give answers to situations like immigration to strangen it. the eu failed to give answer,
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and the angela merkel says we take note of the birch peek's decision with regret. no doubt this is a blow to europe and the european unification process. italy razz prime minister, we must change it to make it more human, speaking about the eu, and more just. but europe is our home, it's our future, and finally, the belgium prime minister saying we need to keep a cool head and see what new way of cooperation will be possible. so a lot of people talking about cooperation. a lot of countries angry that are saying we may very well be next, and you're worried about countries making demands from the eu they may not be able to fulfill. >> looks like it's going to be messy. thank you. >> to brexit vote is having an impact on everything, even football. european football. in spain, for example, there's a limit on how many noneu players teams can have. so some of the ports best players could get the boot once britain's get takes effect. more on the fallout in the
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it has been an historic fallout from the brexit vote and impact in the united states could be significant. a live look at the dow. it was down what 500 points on the open and then we were down about 650, maybe 15 minutes ago. it appears traders and investors are seeing some bargains in there and they are buying as we head toward the closing bell. so there's that. let's get back to john busse of "the wall street journal"
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newspaper. china and russia. what -- they're kind of important. what does this do there. >> hugely important and they're on different sides of this. vladimir putin is looking at this and popping the cork off the champagne. he sees the european union not just for a trade can bloc but for a security bloc. an aloons of nations with heft economically and has ban problem for him, imposing sanctions against russia. when you have a collective doing that it's much, much harder for russia to navigate around it. these are pretty stiff sanctions at that time the eu imposed on russia for its moving into the ukraine and seizing crimea. this is a big moment for vladimir putin because he sees the bloc weakening, and sees britain decidings to leave, other nations supreming up they
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might leave as well. so -- speaking up they might leave as well. so a positive development for putin. china on the other hand looks at britain as a platform. this is a financing for its businesses, a place to do business more broadly into europe, lots of banking there, to facilitate its trade throughout that region. the rule of law, very solid. it doesn't want to see this fractioning of a market where now it has its investments springing out of the platform of britain. has to what now for britain to negotiate treaties with all the other countries and saying, this is not what we bargained for. >> oil down. four or five percent. gold up about the same amount. that's sort of to pattern. if you're a small investor or you have a 401(k) you're worried about, what are you supposed to do? >> oil down because maybe there's going to be a slowdown in the global economy, gold up because of just the uncertainty.
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vanguard is already sending out e-mails to people, saying, look, this is a time to value diversification, trying to keep people from taking their moyer out the market. the best advice at the end of the day. the one bet you'd make is do you see the global economy five, ten years from now? better off than it is now and growing, even slowly, probably so. but in the near term, it's very hard to respond to a 5 been point move -- 500-point move. as an video don't have the knowledge to do so, and probably the vanguard advice is the wise advice, stay the course. be british, stay calm, stay the course. >> two things they did not just do. >> not just exactly right. >> who is this new britain. good evening britain, it's close to 9:00 over there, might need an ambien tonight. we'll be right back. after a long day,
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on this day in 1983, the first american woman to go to outer space returned to earth. nasa chose sally ride out of thousands of other candidates to become one of the first women in the space program. she joined a crew of four other astronauts for a historic space shuttle mission. she called the launch both exhilarating and terrifying. sally ride's job was to work the shuttle's row bolt -- robotic arm which she helped design and she got home after shattering the galactic ceiling 33 yours ago today. should news brake out, we'll break in because breaking news changes everything and seems like it's all breaking. the dow is off 605 points on the day, the s&p down three percent. the nasdaq down four percent. it is a very big business day, and nobody better to handle it than the team from "your world"
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with neil cavuto. maria bartiromo is sitting in today. news and analysis continues in a moment. >> cheers in london, fierce on wall street. dow plunging 600-point as as britain declares independence. bolting from the european union, roiling markets across the world and we're all over it. dagon, and ben gentleman man hall, and trader if a goetz to break, and dr. ben carson on if we reached a political breaking point. now daggan. >> invesrs
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