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tv   Americas Election HQ  FOX News  June 25, 2016 3:00pm-4:01pm PDT

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new clinton secrets and scandals. this monday, 10:00 p.m. here on fox. hope you'll join us. thanks for being with us. hope you have a great weekend. hello. welcome to a brand new hour of america's election headquarters. i'm eric shawn. >> topping the news at this hour, donald trump making waves across the pond, talking brexit and its impact on the u.s. economy, seeing the slip in the european union. not america's problem. a terrible situation unfolding in west virginia. the governor asking for federal help after the state is hit by devastating flooding. dozens have been killed. we'll have the latest. another u.s. navy officer fired over an incident this year when ten u.s. sailors were captured by iran.
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we are going to discuss the growing fallout. first we start with the day after brexit. donald trump using the shocking vote as a way to help his presidential campaign. trump was in scotland for a second day continuing a british trip to his scottish golf courses. se heading home tonight. he is focusing on what he calls the similarities between the british vote to leave the eu and his supporters here in the u.s. saying people are sick and tired of the establishment. we're joined live from aberdeen, scotland where he interviewed mr. trump. >> reporter: eric. good evening. to show you how far north are in latitude it's 11:00 at night. the sun is just beginning to go down. donald trump winging his way back to new york city. hoping people in the united states will take note of what
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happened here in the last couple of days and in november have the opportunity to overturn the status quo. we talked about the brexit which he told me in the short term could potentially have a detrimental effect on things like currency de-valuation. stock markets around the world. he believes in the long run it will all work out very well. he also told me that he appreciates the fact that people here wanted to take their future into their own hands. listen to what he told me. >> i'm not even talking about it from an economic standpoint purely. they felt they were being mistreated. they felt their voice was not heard. and now their voice is heard. >> i also asked donald trump about the -- the new discipline his campaign seems to have taken on and demonstrated in the days since firing corey lewandowski. he spent almost the entire week without going off on a
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tangential leap into controversy and stepped on his own message as he's done in the past. he did quibble with me about whether or not he does step on his own message from time to time. listen to this. >> i think the press steps on my message. i say things that are fine, and the next day you wake up and you say they weren't so fine. the press will take almost anything i say and they step on my message. so i don't know if it's me or if it's whoever. but it doesn't make any difference. >> reporter: donald trump has got a lot of work to do when he gets back. that's why he took most of today off. he'll be back on the campaign trail next week heading to a number of battleground states, all leading up to the fourth of july weekend. eric, this will be one heck of an election based on what we've seen, flying back and forth between the campaigns over the last few days. donald trump is going to need every bit of energy that he has got after this scotland visit in order to fight the battle all the way through until november. >> it already is. you are in a beautiful spot,
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11:00 at night as you mentioned, john. thank you. >> mr. trump raising eyebrows on the seas after elaborating on comments about his proposal to ban muslims. he addressed that in john's interview, explaining the muslim ban would only apply to people coming from countries known to harbor terrorists. >> terrorist countries we'll be so tough. we'll either ban or people need a very good excuse to come in. if we don't do that we're fools. >> muslim and non-muslims? >> absolutely. i don't want terrorists in our country, john. >> mr. trump recently said all his policy proposals including the ban are he says merely suggestions open to negotiation. you know they've already caused plenty of controversy. hillary clinton taking a break from the campaign trail but senator bernie sanders keeping busy, holding a series of events designed to promote the goals of his self-proclaimed political revolution. bernie on "the late show" with
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stephen colbert explaining that's part of the reason he is not dropping out. >> are you going to drop out of the race? >> no. >> you're not. >> i'll tell you why. i'm very good at arithmetic. i wasn't much of a student but i am pretty good in arithmetic. i understand that secretary clinton has a lot more -- or we have 1900 delegates going to philadelphia, for the convention. that's pretty good. she has more, which is not so good for me. it's good for her. but 1900 delegates is actually quite a lot of people. >> what a thorn in her side he has turned out to be, my goodness. >> she can't wriggle it loose. bernie sanders is leveraging every last bit of influence that he can. he said he'll vote for clinton in november but he has not yet endorsed her. >> why have you not endorsed her
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yet? >> i haven't heard her say the things i think need to be said. >> he clarified that later in new york saying this is all about his putting his stamp on the party platform and more importantly on the party's legislative agenda. >> what we are trying to do, also, is to come up with the most progressive platform that the democrats ever had, and a platform is a piece of paper -- that's what it is. doesn't mean anything. but what we have got to do is demand and make certain -- this is where all of us have got to do that, that that platform becomes part of the democratic congress' agenda. not just words. >> wow. clinton continues to be dogged by questions over her email scandal and the so-called fbi primary. she had a pretty good week in her battle against donald trump with polls showing her lead increasing in the general election. but that was before the brexit vote. and donald trump's timely visit to scotland where he echoed the sentiments of the brexit supporters saying people want to see borders. clinton came out in support of
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the losing side and offered this somewhat tepid statement after the direct vote, quoting, we respect the choice the people of the united kingdom made. our first task has to be to make sure that the economic uncertainty created by the events does not hurt working families here in america. she is taking the day off from campaigning. she plans to meet with elizabeth warren in cincinnati in the must-win state of ohio this coming monday. we have a fox news alert now. authorities say a wildfire in central california has now burned 150 homes. that number may rise. look at the flames. they broke out on thursday and have now scorched nearly 60 square miles. officials say two people died trying to make it to safety. in utah crews have established a perimeter around a part of a fire threatening about 500 properties there. authorities are asking residents to leave voluntarily. the flames are only about 5%
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contained. melissa, the governor of virginia calling federal authorities there to declare a major disaster in his state in response to the devastating flooding we've seen this weekend. take a look at that. the rising waters blamed for at least 23 deaths so far. the national guard is right now working to rescue families, many of them stranded without power as darkness will fall. garrett is in west virginia with the latest. >> reporter: we actually just received word from the state. there is now another confirmed fatality here in west virginia as a result of these floodings, bringing the new total to 24. this afternoon president obama spoke with west virginia governor earl ray tomblin and extended his condolences for those killed in the floodings. he also said he signed off on the federal declaration of
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disaster in three of the hardest hit counties here in west virginia. the governor's office tells me that they expect to add an additional six to eight counties to that federal disaster declaration in the coming days and weeks ahead as well. even as the state works towards this recovery, though, search and rescue teams are still very much working, going door to door in these hard-hit counties, looking for folks who are still missing. what makes that so difficult, though, is a lot of these homes, they're not where they were before. some of them, like this one here where we are, just got moved back 10 or 15 feet. others alongside the river got completely washed away. you can see where this foundation is of these blocks. the home was picked up, moved ten or 15 feet this way, set down there. you can see this mud, this thick mud here on the ground. this is now everywhere. through here, throughout this town. it is on the ground. it is on the homes. it is in the businesses. cars that were parked along the
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street as well. this mud is inside them as well. a long cleanup project is ahead for folks here on the ground. that federal disaster declaration will certainly help. one thing we're also seeing, though, is an incredible outpouring of love and generosity here. you can see churches, local groups have been coming out here onto the ground offering food, clothes, medicine to folks here. a lot of folks, until today, that were here in this flooding area, they had not had a hot meal for three days. so this means the world to them as they are here and coming home to try to see what's left. eric. >> our hearts and prayers go out to the poor people there as they've suffered so much. garrett, thank you. fox news alert now, a deadly shooting in texas that left two dead and even more wounded. gunfire broke out around midnight at a dance studio in fort worth. the studio's owner saying it happened during an unsanctioned
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party at the facility. lauren blanchard is following the story from our new york city newsroom. what can you tell us? >> reporter: fort worth texas police say they're preparing to make arrests after an argument at an unauthorized party that turned into a gun fight killing two and injures five others. the owner of studio 74 in fort worth, a non-profit dance hall says about 60 people were inside. police say one man was shot as he tried to run out of the party and died just outside the front door. police say then an unknown number of armed people began shooting at each other outside and in the street killing another person and wounding five more. one witness, jason moore, was working at the party last night. he says he saw multiple people carrying guns, and when the shooting began, helped to get folks out a side door of the building. >> people did panic. and it happened very sudden, you know. it went -- it went from a night
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that was supposed to be actually really good to, a night of festivities to a night of disaster. we really didn't anticipate that at all. >> moore says he tried to help one of the victims who was shot in the chest by using a towel to stop the bleeding but moore says that man was one of the two who died. police are treating this as a homicide investigation. right now they're bringing in their gang unit because they believe gang members were involved and that arrests are imminent. melissa. >> lauren, thank you so much for that report. there is a new discovery on the planet of neptune, the first of its kind this century. it's called the black vortex. what is it? what does it mean? are there little people running around up there. could brexit end up being overturned? >> man oh man. the two presidential candidates,
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they're reacting to the vote with completely different reactions. coming up, we'll analyze if the british departure from the eu will have an impact on american voters in our country. >> the united states has real, real problems, and a brexit is not their problem. brexit is something but it's not their problem. ♪ ♪ you've wished upon it all year, and now it's finally here. the mercedes-benz summer event is back, with incredible offers on the mercedes-benz you've always longed for. but hurry, these shooting stars fly by fast. lease the gle350 for $579 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing.
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opponents of the british decision to leave the european union now scrambling to find a way to undo that vote. good luck. one british lawmaker is demanding that parliament overturn the result of the brexit referendum. in an online petition to hold the second vote has drawn more than two and a half million names. and according to british law it must now be considered for debate in parliament. that will fix it! benjamin hall has more. live from london in the heart of the chaos, benning jjamin. how is it going? >> reporter: the shock waves are being felt all over the world as the scale of what lies ahead is becoming evident now. today the pound crashed to the lowest point since 1985 and moody's downgraded it from neutral and stable. there has been a back lash of
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people on the streets who voted to stay in. they say the margin was lot large enough to warrant a victory. they've launched an online petition to have the referendum again. in berlin today top diplomats from the eu's six founding nations met for last-minute emergency talks. the eu president saying this would not be an amicable divorce. german chancellor angela merkel also spoke out. >> translator: great britain has to outline what kind of relationship it wants to have with the european union in the future. and then we, the 27 member states, will have to decide to what extent we can correspond to their vision and what our own interests are. >> reporter: if scotland there were protests. scotland voted over whwhelminglo stay in, but now a referendum is
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back on the table. there is such a long process on top of that, we have the article 50 and two years of negotiation. expect this to be the beginning of a very messy and very difficult split. >> sounds like chaos. be careful. don't get mixed up in it. >> reporter: trying. brexit now is a campaign issue here at home in the u.s. presidential election. both donald trump and hillary clinton quick to react to the stunning and surprising development in a way that matched their campaign messages and themes. mr. trump calling the results a positive sign for great britain and for his own campaign. >> long term i think -- i think they'll be happy. >> reporter: as a businessman does it bother you to see the turmoil we're seeing in the markets. >> there is always turmoil. they had to make their decision. they made their decision. a lot of people thought that would be the decision they'd make. >> there is a different type of reaction from mrs. clinton.
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she tweeted this time of uncertainty underscores the need for calm, steady, experienced leadership in the white house. her campaign slammed trump saying he engages in pathological self-congratulation and puts his business interests ahead of u.s. interests. how will this play out on voters in november? we're joined by the executive editor of the daily telegraph. how will it affect the campaign if at all? >> if it resonates, the vehicle will have to be a guy like donald trump. donald trump really should embrace brexit as an opportunity to explain to the american people what happened with our friends overseas over the atlantic. this, as you have noted, this sort of is a very obvious analogy for what is happening in the united states especially for donald trump, which is that you have all these americans, and likewise in brexit, all these people who are starting to think, hey, sovereignty means
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something to me. the fact that we're a country, it exists for a purpose, to serve the interests of the people who live in the country. and that it should have borders and people shouldn't just flow across them and jobs should be looked out for. in donald trump's case he has to be an educator on this, coming forward to his base saying this is why brexit is important and this is why i think i'm going to be president of the united states. >> we don't have an eu trying to regulate the tea kettle and all that sort of thing so what type of parallels does he draw to control over d.c., some of the same issues that affected people in britain. immigration, troubles of the middle class and what they've been going through. >> there are a tremendous amount of parallels on which to draw. immigration is clearly one of them. the fact that syrian refugees still continues to be a huge issue, especially in the wake of
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the orlando attack and to the extent of which it may infiltrate through the syrian problem. and now that the clinton foundation is starting to get a lot of scrutiny in the american press and i believe with donald trump, you'll start seeing the social that foreign influence and the extent to which it's influenced secretary clinton while she was secretary of state is something that's important. overseas we're looking at foreign influence in britain's affairs. here in the united states the question donald trump will probably pose is to what extent do we want for instance influence, money, for hillary clinton. >> jake sullivan saying it was a local reaction saying there is a, quote, profound difference between the vote and picking the president and commander in chief. one is a thing. you know, the eu, which does represent something. but here it's two candidates. does jake have a point when he
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says that, or do you think he's trying to spin it? >> i think the clinton campaign is desperately trying to spin this especially because she came out against this move. she was on the opposite side of it. and their claim that sort of this uncertainty demands somebody who will provide a lot more certainty, hillary clinton. it isn't necessarily going to fall in her direction. no matter what the economic ramifications of brexit are for the global economy. donald trump, i think, can spin this into a victory, which is, if the markets remain uncertain trump can say, look, you have got the establishment. you have the ruling class already. you have barack obama and hillary clinton. you need somebody different who can come in and change things and fix them and make them more stable. meanwhile, if things go well, if the economies recover globally, he can reflect on that and say, look, one country decided to take care of their own sovereignty and everything is fine. we can do so in the united states.
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>> by monday we'll see what happens to the markets. if they stabilize, you say that's good for trump? >> honestly i -- i think either way donald trump -- unless he shoots himself in the foot which he has the capacity to do occasionally, i think that there is a way for donald trump to successfully come out of this on either side of the coin. >> he has shot himself in the foot so many times he doesn't have any more toes. it doesn't matter because he's still running. vince. >> yes. >> nice to see you. the british vote may be historic but appears many britons, well, didn't really know what they were voting for. some eight hours after the polls closed in great britain, google reports that searches in the uk for the question "what happens if we leave the eu?" more than tripled. this was after the vote people were googling this. after the results were officially announced "what is the eu?" oh, no. that was the second top question britons were asking. what happens if we leave and
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what's the eu. this is what they're asking after the vote. >> not especially encouraging. >> no. wow. oops. oh well. i'm sure it will go back. they can fix it. no, wait. it was actually huge. >> yeah. i don't think they will. back here in our country, sad story. the coast guard suspending a search for a family -- they were sailing and disappeared in the gulf of mexico. two teens are still missing. coming up we'll have the latest on the investigation. and the presidential stakes kicking into high gear. who will the candidates choose to bolster their campaigns. two top strategists here to weigh in.
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it is the bottom of the hour now. time for the top of the news. authorities in florida taking over the investigation into the family that disappeared while sailing in the gulf of mexico. coast guard has now suspended the search. crews recovered two bodies identified as ace kimberly and his daughter rebecca. the two sons are still missing. the pentagon says the ban against transgender troops could be repealed in the next few weeks. current policy allows the military to discharge service members for being transgender. defense secretary ash carter made it more difficult to do that by moving the authority to a higher-level officers. a new storm on neptune. nasa's hubble telescope capturing this image. the spot you see is called the black vortex. the large black clouds that form
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when air pushes up through a vortex. the particular cloud is so large it would actually span the united states. the vice presidential sweepstakes is underway with less than a month until the republican convention in cleveland, followed immediately by the democratic convention. it is time to start floating names. for donald trump and hillary clinton's vice presidential picks, factors in a choice of running mate include qualifications. personal chemistry. as bizarre as this race has been, it should be exciting for the base to be focused on both candidates. let's bring in john thomas, republican strategist at thomas partners and strategies and jessica carlov with shone consulting. jessica, what do you think hillary clinton should be looking for in a running mate? we keep seeing her with elizabeth warren. i feel like that might be too much of the same, though.
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>> i agree with you. it's very exciting, obviously, to have a woman at the top of the ticket. having two women on the ticket when your biggest problem is with white male voters, i'm not sure that's the best move. i think elizabeth has been settling into nicely to the attack dog position where she can go after donald trump in a way a vice president can't or shouldn't. we'll see what the dynamic is on monday when we see them campaigning together. for clinton the overall chemistry is the most important. all the people who are being discussed, prominent figures in the party talking about tim kaine, sherrod brown from ohio, people she has known for a while. there is real spark between them. i think people, maybe rightfully so, think more than i do at least think hillary clinton can be quite wooden on the trail and somebody who knows her well and lights her up and makes her seem more exciting plus having real progressive ideas. >> who lights her up like that.
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>> julian castro and hillary clinton look great together. having a young hispanic figure is a wonderful thing. tim kaine has known her a very long time. she gets on very well with sherrod brown. i think those are all good options. i have heard al franken discussed recently. after this week we certainly know it's not going to be bernie sanders. >> no. if you listen to him, he is not even getting out of the race. >> unbelievable. >> john, i ask you the same thing. julian castro is interesting. h.u.d. secretary. 41 years old. cory booker is another name we hear a lot. >> yes. >> i think jessica made the point but cory booker may outshine her. he is one of the guys a lot of people are interested in. what do you think? >> i think jessica is right. what hillary clinton has to look at when she is looking at selection here is it's really more about optics than function. it's about whether or not she wants to drive home the first
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female president narrative, putting elizabeth warren at the top of the ticket. i agree with jessica. i don't think elizabeth brings a lot to the table. >> other than almost the same hair cut. >> she is much more progressive. >> i don't know. >> where julian castro brings it to the table is that hillary clinton has to get latinos to vote for her and turn out in major margins. she's counting on donald trump to do that for her but it wouldn't help reinforce it from a visual perspective to have a latino underneath her. >> jessica, who should donald trump pick? i know you don't want to be helpful to the republican side. >> don't worry. who i think he should pick he'll never get. he should station himself outside susana martinez' door and beg her to at lease consider having dinner with him. it was a major misstep when he was so offensive about her and her record a few weeks ago.
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her background, her parents are two reagan democrats. this is exactly the story that he wants to promote. he went and blew it. moving past that, i think he should try to get a woman on the ticket if he can. there is talk about joanie ernst. jan brewer is itching to get on there. she's been a vocal surrogate for him. i think he needs to focus on minority or female. and i don't think minority is going with him. >> i'm going to diskoragree wit jessica. i think the difference is hillary clinton, you're right, absolutely optics are important. i think with donald trump's selection it's more symbolic than optics. it's symbolic in the sense of he has to reassure the right as well as swing voters that he is going to take an even-keeled pick. this is his first executive pick. the people he surrounds himself with are even-keeled, have experience getting things done in government. that's why i think he should
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select john kasich or newt gingrich, both who have extensive experience in government. i don't know that susana martinez, though she is incredibly accomplished, she has never worked in washington. >> can you have two white guys? seems like a tough time -- >> when your only voters are really white people. i think -- i totally respect your opinion there. i think newt gingrich might be a great pick if he wants to sign on to do that. john kasich i don't think will go with that. he said he's not even sure if he'll support him at the convention. that's a complete pipe dream. >> though they are politicians. >> they are. >> say one thing and the next day it's totally different. thanks to both of you. appreciate it. one of the names being floated will be on fox news sunday, tomorrow. former house speaker newt gingrich sitting down with chris wallace. check your local listings for the time and channel in your area. >> should be interesting to get his insight. the navy is disciplining another one of its own after our
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sailors were briefly taken captive by iran in january. remember this photo? our guys with the hands over their heads? one woman too. two officers so far have been punished. retired navy captain chuck nash is here with his analysis. oing.. sara, will you marry... [phone rings again] what do you want, todd???? [crowd cheering] keep it going!!!! if you sit on your phone, you butt-dial people. it's what you do. todd! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. i know we just met like, two months ago... yes! [crowd cheering] [crowd cheering over phone]
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the turbocharged dream machine. the volkswagen golf gti. named one of car and driver's 10best, 10 years in a row. . breaking news right now in the fight against terror. islamic terror group al shabaab claiming responsibility for a deadly attack in somalia's capital city. gunmen rushing a hotel and killing at least 15 people. police saying it started with a suicide bombing outside the hotel's front gates. the gunmen then stormed the hotel throwing grenades and shooting civilians. the u.s. navy relieved another officer of duty following the january confrontation with iran when ten sailors were briefly taken captive by tehran's
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revolutionary guard in the persian gulf. the navy is expected to release a report next week about the incident. it's believed several other sailors could face disciplinary action as well. retired captain chuck nash joins us. nice to see you. you have extensive, deep, long-standing experience with the navy. you were on the chief of staff of the naval operations at the pentagon. so you know all about what went wrong here. what happened? >> well, we're going to have to wait. i don't know exactly what went wrong, eric. we're going to have to figure that out when the chief of naval operations releases the final report on the 30th. sources who have been talking about fox news said there was a severe breakdown in discipline and professionalism with the crews number one. number two, that was evidenced by they didn't even do a navigation brief, which is, before you move a ship or a boat in the united states navy, you pull as many people who are going to be on watch at that
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time and you run through all of the critical elements. time line, weather, hazards to navigation, everything that could possibly come into play and what's expected of everybody. evidently they didn't even do that basic step. the third thing is that, according to these sources, that they had become so complacent that in previous instances where the islamic revolutionary guard corps who were driving the other boats had pointed weapons at them at previous times on their deployment and they failed to react. they didn't know they were being capture until the same guys who pointed weapons at them jumped onto the boats and took over. this looks like a total breakdown in discipline. there are several reasons that could contribute to that. the two main reasons are supervisory error, and two of those senior officers have already been relieved of their duties. and, as you talked about in the lead-in, there are three other
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officers and four enlisted sailors who are facing disciplinary action. >> the commander, captain carl moses, greg meyer and others have been affected. who should they have done? what are the rules of engagement and the weapons are pointed at you? do you start shooting it out? what do you do. >> they had rules of engagement. the rules for direct operations are normally secret so we wouldn't know exactly what they've been told. but what happens is, over a period -- they were on the last month of their deployment, and so the things are kind of winding down. they dropped their guard. and they had been having some problems. they were running late to this rendezvous, a 300-mile transit down to bahrain from kuwait. they were running late because one of the a mechanical problem. did they get a part out of supply?
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no. they stripped the part off another boat to do that. i'm not making excuses for breakdown in discipline so don't get me wrong. but these people are task oriented, they are going to do the job as quickly and as best as they can. if they're not funded and equipped to do the job, they'll find themselves cutting corners and doing stupid things. that is when the senior leadership is supposed to manage a non-perfect situation and throw the flag whenever things have reached that person's inability to cope with that situation and to maintain operations and report that up the chain of command. evidently that was not done to the vice admiral. it was not done to his satisfaction so he relieved two of the senior -- the senior-most officers involved and more to come. >> do you think this will change the way we operate in the gulf? >> we should have been operating differently than this all along, and i am sure, when this
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squadron started out, they were operating that way. what happened is complacency kills. and they were at the end of a deployment, they dropped their guard, they didn't do the basics, and they're paying for it. >> yeah. the iranians have been playing cat and mouse with us for years with their little skiffs. >> the implications -- absolutely. the implications of not doing things correctly far surpass anything that happens in the civilian world. you don't want to start a shooting war in the persian gulf because you're just not doing the basics. no excuse for it. sorry about that. no excuses. >> captain chuck nash. thank you for your analysis today. >> you bet. >> of course. melissa. the uk's historic brexit decision leading to uncertainty for investors worldwide. coming up, what will it mean for the markets here at home on monday and for your 401(k)s?
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amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing
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shoshow me more like this.e.
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show me "previously watched." what's recommended for me. x1 makes it easy to find what you love. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. >> financial markets plunging after the historic vote that the united kingdom should part ways with the european union. it was bruttial y. the brexit
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vote shocked investors. how much will britain's decision affect us here at home and your 401 k. we'll have author of more money. that's what my kids say all of the time. what do you think will happen in the market on monday? i wonder over the weekend, people think our market is a safe hafen and buy into it. the u.s. is the best place to be. i wont be surprised a down on monday. asia markets are down sdputures are down and pene pone markets open. but the thing to keep in mind. we had a 600 point in the dow. stocks for the week only down one and half percent. s&p 500 is at 1237.
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that is for from the february low. we have a ton of uncertainty going forward. we don't know who will run the country. >> yes. >> you don't know what will happen with all of the trade deals. and so there is a lot of uncertainty for a long time. over all, is that a leading to a global contraction? >> it could lead to head winds in the uk and europe. i don't see the u.s. impacted. it will keep the fed on the sidelines longer in the terms of raising interest rates next. it doesn't look likely that a july hike would be on the table. it could be december of this year. a lot say forget the rate hike. >> this could have taken it off of the table.
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the there is stronger as a result of this. that is hard for companies that are are trying to sell things overseas and they are less competitive. and banks like j, p morgan have to reorganize. and there is a lot of head wind says ahead. it seems like a complicated factor in going forward. you look on on the bright side. there is a lot of problems to work out. >> brexit could take two years to complete. there is a lot of questions as to all of the trade deals. half of the uk exports go to the eu. and what countries are next to love the european union, right? france could hold a referendum if holland is out of office.
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americans should race over there and go on vacation. >> the pound is low against the dollar. it was 1.36. and that is a 15 percent discount since thursday. book the trip to the uk, now is the time to do it. i think currency will remain low and the uncertainty is too much to handle. >> other countries are looking at the exit and saying that the eu may fall apart and what does it mean for the u.s. interest in those countries? >> if we see is the european union dissolve that will spark uncertainty in the market. it will be interesting on the global central bank in port you goal. and janet yellen.
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and the bank of england are there. and they are overextending in the growth and now brexit to deal with with. and their hands are tied. interest rates are near 0. cut rates in negative territory in europe. >> it is it a mess. thank you for are sorting it out on. eric? >> thank you, melissa. we'll have the world's ugliest dog. ♪ i didn't want to do it. ♪ you made me love you. fight heartburn fast. with tums chewy delights. the mouthwatering soft chew that goes to work in seconds to conquer heartburn fast. tum tum tum tum. chewy delights. only from tums. youthat's why you drink ensure. sidelined.
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with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure. always be you. the possibility of a flare was almost always on my mind. thinking about what to avoid, where to go... and how to deal with my uc. to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira
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>> well, it's the worldy ugliest dog contest. and we have a winner for 2016. who won? the chinese crested chihuahua. >> she's beautiful. she's 17 years old and is blind and weighs four pounds and beat out 15 dogs in this year's contest. and the judge awarded points based on her appearance and personality and audience reaction. the dog won. it is the ugliest dog.
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>> she's blind in both eyes. >> beauty is in the eye of the beholder. i think she's lovely. >> i do, too. >> thank you. lauren is next with the fox report. >> brexit fears rattling the marketses and a new pene pone reality sinks in, donald trump said the news will not be bad for the u.s. this is the fox report. an entire continent on edge as fears rise that other nations may follow britain's lead and decide to leave the european union behin. it makes up the second largest economy. and a full fledged break up could impact trade. donald trump said the u.s. should not be concern

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