tv Happening Now FOX News August 11, 2016 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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ball. major announcement on battle battle. and even after dozens of states sanctioned it. it is all "happening now". we begin with a fox news alert from america's election headquarters. hillary clinton gets ready to deliver a big speech on the economy and donald trump makes several stops in a battleground state that analyst said he must win. i am jenna lee. >> i am jon scott. hillary clinton set to speak in detroit. she is expected to it outline her economic agenda. clinton is preparing to release the 2015 tax returns, in addition to the eight years of of records she made available and put pressure on donald trump
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who refused to release his return. and the republican nominee speaking to national association of home builder ares in florida, trump attacking clinton as a big spender and bringing back the low energy slam he used on jeb bush. >> think of it. she voted for tax increases, by the way proposing a big one today in her teleprompter speech. she's got -- [laughter] [applause] her speeches are so short and they tonight last long. ten minutes and let's get out of here. go back home and go to sleep. three days later, she gets up and does another one and goes back home and goes to sleep. oh, boy, is isis hoping for her.
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>> and senior police correspondent mike emmanuel standing by in michigan. and we'll have carl cameron in florida where trump holds a rally later today. >> reporter: it is it a busy one for trump. following the meeting with the builders and then pastors and rallies. and you saw him in the early statement in miami, that hillary clinton is the favorite of iowa sis and must be looking forward to her and sighed and today and last night trump was low key compared to his bam bastic rallies where he is waving and shouting. and he's tempered the tone if not the rhetoric. and he's saying for more than a year, the way president obama with drou forces from isis gave rise to isis. and he changed the wording now. and starting last night and
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again today, referring to the president and some extent as hillary clinton as the founders and heroes of isis. >> our government has unloeshed isis. i call president obama and hillary clinton the founder ares of isis. they are the founders in fact i think we'll give hillary clinton the you know, your sport team most valuable player. mv, award. isis will hand her the most valuable player award. her only competition is barak obama between the two of them. >> you heard trump, guffaw. and talking about the commander in chief and former secretary of state and opposition party and hillary clinton and donald trump are unpopular presidential candidates, it is not the kind of thing you say. that they are the founder ares
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of a terrorist oergdz and trump was concerned about that type of rhetoric turning off swing voters or independents or democrats who want security minded politics, he said no, i am not worried about it. if i don't win and i can go home and live a good life. the gop would like trump to moderate his tonight. he can stay tone and less volume would make some of the rhetoric a pore less caustic. as he made the joke, the crowd got it as opposed to the democrats saying he is a terrorist. >> the question of fire in the belly to win the presidency. and we mentioned, hillary clinton will give a speech on the the economy not far from
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where donald trump spoke on monday. clinton is trying to focus on the issues and the e-mails that suggest pay for play arrangementes between the clinton foundation and state department. >> that is a fair description and it appears that individuals that are dealing with the united states government and made massive connection cans to her and bill clinton's foundation. and it does appear they got benefits from that and i think that is unacceptable and i do believe be it is worthy of an investigation and as a matter of fact, i understood upon the fbi director that that issue was not closed. sessions is an open critic of hillary clinton. mike emmanuel is live in warren, michigan where the clinton campaign stopped for now.
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mike. >> we don't expect hillary clinton will make reference to the latest e-mail controversy regarding her time in the state department. it will serve dual purposes and reiterating her co proposals and benefitting donald trump's plan. last time we saw her on the stump in iowa waand talking about small businesses being the engine to drive the economy. she will talk about public college and universities fro for middle-class families and. clinton will likely portray trump's proposaals as being on taxes, a friends and family plan to help his wealthy friend and portray trump's as trickle down economics and unrealistic.
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and the real clear politics show that clinton has a six point lead over trump. 41.8 and 35.2 percent and his opposition to trade deals has caused concern for democrats and fears that he has an ability to connect with white working class voters. donald trump must win this particular county where warren, michigan is located. this is a show down in the rust belt. >> mike, thank you very much. >> larry's crystal ball shows that based on a forecasting model, the nom no could be headed for a narrow victory in the popular vote but clinton winning the electoral college. it shows the pennsylvania moving
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from lean democrat category to it the likely democratic category. we talk about it with larry. it doesn't happen that the candidate wins the popular and loses the electoral college. you have to go back to bush v gore and you are saying that is a possibility this year based on one model? >> yes, this is a model by professor allen. the crystal ball we publish all of the political science models and they are based on variables. i see what happens in the classroom. but long and short, jon, these models have worked for a long period of time and they have
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worked retrospectively. and here's the problem, we all know, it is an unusual match up. i think you can tell that by the number of books written about the trump/clinton race after it is over. even the author the of the model that projects a narrow trump victory doesn't believe his own model. we are seeing that in political science and outside of political science. >> you are saying you wouldn't be able to explain to us the regression co-ficiency. and it looks at the president's approval rating and how many terms a particular party had in office and weighs them and makes a prediction. donald trump should win, but there are cave ats are here? >> i salute you, jon.
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that is a grade of a in any political science. >> all i have to do is speak the words, i don't have to understand them. >> essentially it is biassed on the shape of the economy and that is the gross domestic product that is not very high right now and presidential popularity that is over 50. and as you mentioned there is a variable about whether the party in power has been in one term or two terms and obviously the more terms you accum out, harder to hold on to the white house. these are the factors involved and the simple model they are simple. and the voter takes in the average. and most people don't analyze the variables. and the long and short if you are for trump you will find
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information in the crystal ball to make you happy. and if you are for clinton, you will find information in the crystal ball that makes you happy. i it is rare i can do that. >> fox moved three states including pennsylvania to leaning democratic. they were toss up states and the others is new hampshire and virginia and the fox news decision team changed arizona and georgia to toss ups. there is a lot more blue on than used to be. and georgia is on the battleground stand map. that is not welcome for donald trump, larry. >> we agreed with the fox new teams decision. your decisions on the individual states. we think that is where they are moving and it is midaugust.
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there is plenty of times for changes and events we don't know to occur and affect the vote. the trump team has to be concerned any time as a red state as georgia and arizona and some of the others are moving democratic democratic, it is not democrat yet. >> and the election likely to be actively fought. and if not we'll save it for another day. larry,there we go. the yellow states are the ones that will determine the next president. larry, thank you very much. >> we'll be looking at that map a lot. >> and the color changes. >> indeed. >> new developments in a explosion that levelled part of an apartment complex. views are searching for people who are unaccounted for.
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what happened here? we are live in the scene. hillary clinton is expected to hit donald trump hard on his tax and economic plan and she went after him in the heart land and more on their duelling economic visions. >> it is called trickle down economics. cut tax for the wealthy and corporations. allergy relief. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance. flonase controls 6. and six is greater than one. flonase changes everything. ♪
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agenda. [applause] >> and every policy that has failed the city and so many others is a policy supported by hillary clinton. >> the senior columnist for the wall street journal. >> that feels like a lifetime ago. we are expecting to hear from hillary clinton at any moment. >> we'll see hillary is getting hit on taxes and going against donald trump is tough. hillary has done it and kind of differentiate his plan. it is for the reach and friends.
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>> and hillary's has a tax penalty for the rich. >> and for the average family out there, how will that impact their life? >> so, for hillary, the tax plan will not change. obama made the bush tax cuts permanent and they continued and that was an improvement for the average american family and trump, he will lower the tax brackets and for people in the midhundred thousand income they will see a tax increase under his plan. and it is an upper middle-class
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group. and the average american, and the only difference will be the trump plan from small business ownerses and if you are a hardware store or restaurant owner that would be a difference. >> and it so manies like both camps are falling in live with similar territories and it is it a criticism of the republican party their economics will favor the wealthy and the democrats are not changing much over the last eight years. are there any new ideas presented by any candidates? >> the biggest is trade. trump we all know is anti- trade. and hillary was pulled to the left by bernie sanders and her trade views have gotten tougher and that is a big change. >> and a big final question. one of the things trump said. i have hired tens of thousands
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of people and he said it to rubio and it wasect itch. is that trump's strength versus clinton's weakness? >> that was his strength all long and why the people have more confidence in him running the economy because he run a business and hired people. but there are polls where hillary is ahead on running the economy. >> it is interesting we are seeing a difference. we'll see the specifics and ken, thank you for that. and i believe we are seeing her, jon, already? >> we are still waiting for hillary clinton to make it to the podium there. and awaiting her remarks to the detroit economic club. and we are getting more economic news today, the nation's largest department store chain making a major announcement that impact
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>> a fox business alert. the dow is on pace to close at a record high with energy and retail stockses leading the way. it is up the biggest gain in a month. big name retailers like kohls and macy's received a better record. we learned that macy's is planning to close the doors of locations. they plan to shut down 100 stores next year.
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macy will focus on boosting on line investment. hillary clinton is in a factory in michigan, talking about the economy and jobs and also expected to attack donald trump's tax plan. that is coming up. >> two women who go jogging in broad daylight and mysteriously murdered days apart. they share similar details but different states. katrina went on her regular run in queens new york. 10:50 her body was found in a beach near a wooded area. and august 7th. vanessa from new york city goes for a run visiting her mother in the city of princeton, massachusetts. 4:00 that afternoon police searched for her. that night vanessa's body was
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found a half mile in a wooded area her body was partially burned. joining me now on the phone is former detective rod wheeler. rod, what we described to our viewers, you think there could be a connection? >> it is always possible. and one of the important elements that you want to look at here is the amount of area between princeton, massachusetts and queens, new york. that is a 200 mile stretch. the question is would somebody commit a crime in queens and then drive up to massachusetts or vice versa. there is a five day difference between the two murders and it is possible that somebody can to that. and the other element that mention is the fact that dna was found on the body of the woman who was found in queens.
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i am talking about den din that did not belong to her. and police were able to get a dna sample from someone else that had access to the cell phone and other personal items. but the problem is, that dna is not coming back from the database as a match. and they are asking people to come in and submit a sample of your dna. that's the only evidence they have. >> and the question is whether or not had they anyhow each other or in a social circle and we haven't found a connection or at least not reported yet. what profile are you looking at, rod when you are looking for who attacked the women. they had no enemies and when you are looking for a criminal that committed the acts, what profile are you looking for?
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>> that's an excellent question. you profile the victim, and don't profile the suspect. what do you moan. they are about the same age, right? both of them were out jogging in the middle of the afternoon. we are building a profile for the victim and start determining why is it that the suspect goes after this type of woman and victim if you will? we are looking for a individual who is attracted to these types of women. and the investigators are looking at other similar cases in other areas and notes inially related to this, but see anything that helps to connect the dots. >> they seem to be jogging in relatively safe areas in the middle of the day and bright sunshine and not like they took huge risk by going for a jog in the neighborhoods they were in. and any tip you have.
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how do i make sure i am safe. >> two things to do if you are a female or woman jogger. get a buddy, or take an animal with you. the most important thing, if you wear earphones or plug only have one in the ear and the other ear free. why? you want to hear if someone is coming up to you. and what we see more often than not people are attacked when they are not aware. the bad guy will drag you because he upons you are listening to music. and that is a simple piece of advice but good advice. and be aware of the suris roundings. >> simple and easy to apply and hopefully will make us safer. and we'll see if there is any developments. and we'll look forward to having you to talk more about it. >> thank you, jenna.
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>> a grim discovery after an explosion in an apartment complex in maryland. the blast left dozens injured and others are unaccounted for. >> reporter: this past hour, the county officials said the death toll could rise. there are 5 or 7 people unaccounted for and the crews are searching through the piles of debreechlt it was last night before midnight a massive explosion went off. folks could hear are it for more than a mile away. even before the firefighters arrived neighbors had ladders to help those on the top floor. some had to jump out of the
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windows. and others had to drop their children to the neighbors before. 34 injured and two bodies have been recovered from the debrie. you can see how it flattened parts of the building and the damage is so severe investigators can't get inside to find out what happened. >> as of now, our goal is to make the building safe. it is a collapse hazard and extremely dangerous condition. we are in the process of making it safe so that our operations can continue and the investigation can progress. >> reporter: it is too early to say what caused the explosion. we have learned that before the fire and explosion, several residents reported to smelling gas. that's what investigators will be looking into, jon. >> garrett, thank you. this just in, the obama
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administration rejecting petitions from two former governors to rename marijuana saying pot will remain a dangerous drug. >> 2 million americans smoke pot and thousands use it medically to it treat nausea. and if the federal government still considers marijuana addictive and dangerous as heroin and lsd. they had hope they would regout pot the same way as alcohol and tobacco. instead health and human services agency concluded that marijuana has a high potential for abuse. and no medical use in the u.s. and lackses acceptable level of safety for use and even under the medical supervision.
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>> the dea refused to recognize the harmlessness compared to other schedule one drugs. >> until the federal government removes marijuana from the controlled substance act, i don't care what they tell me to do. i am still hooking at ten years to life in federal prison. >> that's the rub. 20 states allow medical marijuana and others may join other states in approving to legal otherwise recreational marijuana and allowing dults to grow a limited number of plants but federally they can be arrested and prosecuted. supporters hope if enough states legalize pot the government will not have a choice. >> william, thank you very much.
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>> it was going to be a fox news extreme weather alert. but we'll have a news alert. hillary clinton is speak nothing warren, michigan unvoeling her economic plan. let's listen in. >> you can really feel the energy and that is kroifing the state's come back. and in detroit, we have new businesses opening and neighborhoods like midtown and eastern market are coming back. and the auto industry just had its best year ever. over in ann arbor high-tech firms. and next generation of engineers are trained up and here in futureammic. so well named, you are on the
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front lines of what i believe will be a true manufacturing renaissance in america. [applause]. and i just was given a short but exciting tour by mark and john who were telling me about how this company was started as and for most of its early history was an autosupply company. and then in 2000 as the market began to change and the autocompanies began to realign, they were faced with a choice. we all faces choices in life. this company could have just said hey, our business is not going to be what it was. we got to just fold up, let's
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just quit. but that's not what happened here. and what happened here is what can happen across america. you are in now what is largely an a erospace company. [applause] and because of the work force, and the work ethic, and the commitment of futureammic, you are seeing the future unfold. so i got to see what's happening here and to help build the sls rocket that is going to go to mars. [applause] i saw the two halves of an f35 nose cone waiting to be put
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together. i talked with some of the workers about the absolute perfection that is required to do this work. and what i believe with with all of my heart what is happening here can happen in so many places if we support advance manufacturing and if we are the kind of country that once again understands how important it is to build things. we are builders and we need to get back to building. [applause] so we are making progress. none of us can be satisfied until the economic revioletsization that we are seeing in some part ps of michigan reaches every community. but it is inspiring to the combination of old- fasced work and cutting edge innovation. and my opponent in the election
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was here in michigan about a week ago, and it was like he was in a different place. when he visited, detroit on monday, he talked of failure and poverty and crime. he's missing so much about what makes michigan great. [applause] and the same is true when it comes to our country. he describes america as an embarrassment and he said and i quote, we are becoming a third world country. look around you, my friends, go visit with the workers building rockets. that doesn't happen in third world countries. we have a lot of urj sxent important work to do and that's what i am going to talk about
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today. because of all of the people i have met throughout the campaign prove how wrong the negative and pessimistic vow this is. america's best days are are still ahead of us if we make up our minds if we go out and make that happen. just consider our assets. we have the most dynamic work force in the world bar none. and we have the most innovative businesses and the top colleges and universities and community colleges, training programs in the world and the best science and technology. and we have enormous capacity for clean air reduction. and there is nothing that america can't do if we do it together.
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and i know this. because this is how i was raised. and i don't think mr. trump understand upons any of it. he hasn't offered any credible solutions for the very real economic challenges we face. now, those challenges emerged lodge before the great recession and they have persisted in our recovery. there is to which inequality. and to little upward possibility and it is just too hard to get ahead today. but there are common sense thingses that your government could do that would give americans more opportunities to suck sowed. why don't we do it? because powerful special interest and the tendency to put ideology ahead of political progress have led to grid lock in congress and how can you not
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be frustrated and even angry when you see nothing getting done. and a lot of people feel, no one is on their side and no one has their back and that's not how it is supposed to be in america. if i am fortunate enough to be your president, i will have your back every single day that i serve. [applause] and my mission, in the white house will be to make our economy work for everyone, not just those at the top. this is personal for me. i am the product of the american middle-class and i was born in chicago and raised in a suburb, but my grandfather worked in scranton lace mill in scranton, pennsylvania for 50 years and because he worked hard, my dad
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was able to go to college and eventually start his own small business and then send me out in the world to follow my own dreams. no matter how far those dreams have taken me, i have always remembered i am the daughter of a small business owner and the grand daughter of a fact row worker and proud of both. [applause] so here's what i want. i want every american family to tell the same story. if you work hard and do your part, you should be able to give your children all of the opportunities they deserve. that is the basic bargain of america. whether we will renew that bargain on better terms for the 21 uponst century depends in large measure on the outcome of this election.
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so here are four questions that i hope the american people will ask of both candidates. and that the answers should help make your choice in november crystal clear. first. which candidate has a real plan to create good paying jobs? who will restore fairness to our economy and insure that those at the top pay their fair share of taxes? third, who will really go to bat for working families? and fourth who can bring people together to deliver the results that will make a difference in your lives? [applause] now, i hope that after giving a fair hearing to bothed sides,
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you will join the millions of people across our country supporting this campaign. not just democrats, but a growing number of republicans and independents as well. now when it comes to creating jobs, i would argue it is not even close. even conservative experts say trump's agenda will pull our economy back in to recession. and according to an independent analysis by a former economic advisor to senator john mccain, if you add up all of trump's idea to cutting taxes for the wealthy and cooperations to starting a trade war with china and deploying hard working immigrants, the result would be the loss of 3.4 million jobs. by contrast, the same analyst
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found that with our plan, the economy would create more than 10 million new so let me tell you how we would do that. i believe every american willing to work hard should be able to find a job that provides dignity, pride, and decent pay that can support a family. so starting on day one, we will work with both parties to pass the biggest investment in new, good-paying jobs since world war ii. [ cheers and applause ] we will put americans to work building and modernizing our roads, our bridges, our tunnels, our railways, our ports, our airports. [ applause ] we are way overdue for this, my
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friends. we are living off the investments that were made by our parents and grandparents' generation. we will also help cities like detroit and flint connect underserved neighborhoods to opportunity expanding affordable housing. and we will repair schools and failing water systems as well. [ cheers and applause ] you know, i happen to think we should be ambitious. while we're at it, let's connect every household in america to broadband by the year 2020. [ cheers and applause ] it's astonishing to me how many places in america, not way, way, far away from cities, but in cities and near cities, that don't have access to broadband.
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and that disadvantages kids who are asked to do homework using the internet. 5 million of them live in homes without access to the internet. sot an achievement gap. it starts right there. and let's build a cleaner, more resilient power grid with enough renewable energy to power every home in our country as well. [ cheers and applause ] some country is going to be the clean energy super power of the 21st century and create millions of jobs and businesses. it's probably going to be either china, germany, or america. i want it to be us. we invent the technology, we should make it and use it and export it. which will help to grow our economy.
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and here's something that you don't always hear enough of from democrats. a big part of our plan will be unleashing the power of the private sector to create more jobs at higher pay. and that's means for us creating an infrastructure bank to get private funds often the sidelines and complement our private investments. $25 billion in government seed funding could unlock more than $250 billion and really get our country moving on our infrastructure plans. and we're going to invest $10 billion in what we're calling make it in america partnerships to support american manufacturing and recommit to scientific research that can create entire new industries. [ applause ]
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when mark and john were giving me the tour, and i was talking to some of the workers along the way and asking them where some of the precision machinery comes from that's being used here, what i hear from all over the country, germany, japan, italy. i want to bring that precision manufacturing back to the united states. there is no reason we can't begin to make those machines ourselves and supply the rest of the world instead of buying from somewhere else. let's also expand incentives like the new market tax credits that can bring businesses, governments, and communities together to create good jobs in places that have been left out and left behind. from neglected neighborhoods in detroit and flint to logging country, coal country, native american communities, from rural areas ravaged by addiction to
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lost jobs, to industrial regions hollowed out when factories closed. as president i will also make a major push to empower small businesses and entrepreneurs, which -- [ cheers and applause ] with new national initiatives to cut red tape at every level and expand access to credit, especially through community banks and credit unions. i will propose a new plan to dramatically sip reply fimpmpls small businesses. right now, small businesses like my dad had, a really small business, spend 20 times more per employee to prepare their taxes compared to larger companies. it should be as easy as
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precincting out a bank statement. let's free entrepreneurs to do what they do best. innovate, grow, and hire. as mark said, this company started because of a drive down a road and thinking about it, talking about it, seeing one of the oldsmobiles, in america, if you dream it, you can build it, and we're going to get back to doing that. [ cheers and applause ] now, donald trump has a different view. he's made a career out of stiffing small businesses from atlantic city to las vegas. there are companies that were left hanging because he refused to pay their bills. a lot of those companies scraped together what they could to pay
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their employees. and many of them put their businesses at risk, and some of them ended up taking bankruptcy. it wasn't because trump couldn't pay them. it was because he wouldn't pay them. and that's why i take it personally. my dad ran a printing plant. he had two really long tables. he printed fabric for draperies. he would lay out the fabric and then he would take a silkscreen and he would go down the table. he would put the silkscreen down, he would pour the paint in, take a squeegee, go all the way down, start at the other end. he worked hard. when he finished, he would load that fabric up, put it in his car, and take it to the business that had ordered it. maybe a restaurant or a hotel or some office.
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he expected to be paid when he showed up. he did the work. he paid for the supplies and the labor that he often hired to help him on big jobs. he expected to be paid. i can't imagine what would have happened to my father and his business if he had gotten a contract from trump. and showing up and submitting his bill, and been told, we're not going to pay. and if you don't like it, sue us. my father could have never sued a big organization like that. i just don't understand it. i've met all kinds of workers, patien painters, plumbers. i've met small businesses that provided pianos, installed glass or marble, all of whom were denied payment. and after going back time and again, being told, well, maybe we'll pay you 30 cents on the
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dollar or 50 cents on the dollar. that's not how we do business in america. so we've got to create more good jobs that are going to help more people. for example, our modern service economy is empowering consumers with more choices and greater flexibility. but we do have to empower the workers in our service sector too. the people taking care of our children and our parents, they deserve a good wage and good benefits, and a secure retirement. [ cheers and applause ] and it's crucial that every american have access to the education and skills they need to get the jobs of the future. so we will fight to make college tuition free for the middle class and debt-free for everyone. [ cheers and applause ] we will also liberate millions
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of people who already have student debt by making it easier to refinance and repay what you owe as a portion of your income so you don't have to pay more than you can afford. [ cheers and applause ] it is just not right that donald trump can ignore his debts but students and families can't refinance their debt. and here's something else that i really want to emphasize. i don't think anybody in america is talking about this enough. and that is a four-year degree should not be the only path to a good job in america. [ cheers and applause ] you should be able to learn a skill, practice a trade, make a good living doing it. so many americans have the talent and the will to succeed. whether they're kids right
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