tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News August 15, 2016 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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such as the death penalty and for those who are involved, the death penalty is very, very common. if you don't have the faith that they demand you have. the trump administration will establish a clear principle that will govern all decisions pertaining to immigration, and we will be tough. we will be even extreme. [applause] we should only admit into this country those who share our values and respect our people. in the cold war, we had an ideological screening test. the time is overdue to develop a new screening test for the threats we face today. i call it, extreme vetting.
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i call it, extreme, extreme vetting. our country has enough problems. we don't need more. and these are problems like we've never had before. [applause] in addition to screening out all members of the sympathizers of terrorist groups we must also screen out any of hostile altitudes toward our country or its principles or who believe that sharia law should supplant american law. [applause] those who do not believe in our constitution or who support bigotry and hatred will not be admitted for immigration into our country. [applause]
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only those who we expect to flourish in our country, and to embrace a tolerant american society, should be issued visas. [applause] to put these new procedures in place we will have to temporarily suspend immigration from some of the most dangerous and volatile regions of the world that have a history of exporting terrorism, not for us. not for us. [applause] trump, trump, trump, trump, trump. >> thank you. as soon as i take office, i will ask the state department and the department of homeland security to identify a list of regions where adequate screening cannot take place. there are many such regions.
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we will stop processing visas from those areas until such time as it is deemed safe to resume based on new circumstances or new procedures. the size of current immigration flows are simply too large to perform adequate screenings. [applause] we admit 100,000 permanent immigrants from the middle east every year. beyond that, we admit hundreds of thousands of temporary workers and visitors from the same regions. hundreds of thousands. if we don't control the numbers, we can't perform adequate screening. there's no way it can take place. [applause] by contrast, my opponent wants to increase -- which is
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unbelievable, no matter who you are, no matter where you come from, -- wants to increase the flow of refugees by 500% over what they are now. [booing] the united states committee on immigration estimates that hillary clinton's plan would mean roughly 620,000 refugees from all current refugee sending nations in her first term, sew it could get worse. this would be in addition to other refugee immigration. unbelievable numbers. the subcommittee estimated her plan women pose a lifetime cost of roughly $400 billion.
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>> we're clearly having trouble with the feed. i believe it's re-established now. we're doing our very best. we'll get back too donald trump the moment the feed is re-established. this is a new hour on fox news. donald trump is laying out a plan for fighting the islamic state and unlike most of the off the cuff speeches trump was sticking closely to the script. we're back with him now. we'll listen. >> -- they would ever, ever see. it is a catastrophe. we have enough problems in our country. we don't need more. lastly, we will need to restore common sense to our security procedures. another common feature of the
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past attacks that have occurred on our soil is that warning signs were totally ignored. the 9/11 high jackers had fraud all over their visa applications. almost every one of them, it said, practically in big bold letters, fraud, and nobody saw it. the russians warned us about the boston bombers. here on political asylum, and the attackers were even twice interviewed by the fbi. very sad. the female san bernardino shooter, on her statements, and everything that she said, she was here on a fiancee visa, which most people have never even heard of. from saudi arabia ask and she wanted to support very openly
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jihad online. these are the people we're taking in. and the neighbor saw suspicious behavior, bombs on the floor, and other things. but didn't warn authorities because they said they didn't want to be accused of racial profiling. now many are dead, and many more are gravely wounded. the shooter in orlando reportedly celebrated in his classroom after 9/11. he, too, was interviewed by the fbi. his father, a native of afghanistan, supported the oppressive taliban regime, and expressed anti-american views. very strongly. and by the way, was just seen signature behind hillary clinton
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with a big fat smile on his face, all the way through her speech. he obviously liked what she had to say. it's called weakness. weakness. it's called, stupidity. and we have had it. [applause] -- delivered a presentation to a room full of mental health experts -- he even proclaimed that we love death more than you love life. not good. these warning signs were ignored because political correctness has replaced common sense in our
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society. [applause] >> trump, trump, trump, trump, trump, trump, trump, trump, trump. >> thank you. that is why one of my first acts as president will be to establish a commission on radical islam, which will include reformist voices in the muslim community who will hope any work with us. we want to build bridges and erase divisions. the goal of the commission will be to identify and explain to the american public the core convictions and beliefs of radical islam to identify the warning signs of radicalization, and to expose the networks in our society that support radicalization. this commission will be used to
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develop new protocols for local police officers, federal investigators and immigration screeners, and while i'm at it, we should give hand to our great police officers and law enforcement officials. [applause] >> trump, trump, trump, trump, trump. >> thank you. we will also keep open guantanamo bay and place a renewed emphasis on human intelligence, drone strikes will remain part of our strategy, but we will also seek to capture high-value targets to gain needed information to dismantle their organizations.
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[applause] foreign combatants will be tried in military commissions. [applause] finally, we will pursue aggressive criminal or immigration charges against anyone who lends material support to terrorism. there will be consequences for those people. there will be very serious consequences. similar to the effort to take down the mafia, this will be the understood mission of every federal investigator and prosecutor in the country. [applause] to accomplish a goal you must state a mission. the support networks for radical islam in this country will be stripped out and removed one by
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one, viciously, if necessary. viciously if necessary. immigration offices will also have their powers restored. those -- ben taken away. those that are guests in our country that are preaching hate will be asked to return home immediately, and if they don't do it, we will return them home. [applause] to make america safe again, we must work together again. our victory in the cold war relied on a bipartisan and international consensus. that is what we must have to defeat radical islamic terrorism. [applause] but just like we couldn't defeat
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communism without acknowledging that communism exists, or explaining its horrible evils, we can't defeat radical islamic terrorism unless we do the exact same thing. we have to explain that it exists and explain the difficulties. we have to have a leader that can do that, and we don't have that now. [applause] but this also means that we have to promote the exceptional virtues our of our own way of life. we have an exceptional country, an exceptional way of life, but it's being tread on by sick, sick people. and expecting that, as newcomers come into our society, they will likewise have respect and do the same. pride in our institutions, our history, and our values, should be taught by parents and
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teachers and impressed upon all of those who come into our society and want to join our society. [applause] assimilation is not an act of hostility but an expression of come.com passion, her system is the best in the world and will produce the best outcomes for all who adopt it. [applause] >> u.s.a., u.s.a., u.s.a., u.s.a., u.s.a., u.s.a. >> thank you. this approach will not only make us safer but bring us closer together as a country.
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renewing the spirit of americannism will help heal the divisions in our country which are so many. we have a divider as president. we call him the great divider. the thing he does best. it will do so by emphasizing what we have in common, not what pulls us apart. this is my pledge to the american people. as your president, i will be your single greatest champion. [applause] i will fight to ensure that every american is treated equally, protected equally, and honored equally. [applause] we will reject bigotry and hatred and oppression in all of its many ugly forms, and seek a new future built on our common
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culture and values as one american people. only this way will we make america great again and safe again for everyone. thank you very much. god bless you. thank you. thank you. thank you. [applause] >> trump, trump, trump. >> thank you very much. >> donald trump speaking in youngstown, ohio, laying out his plan for fighting the islamic state and beyond. one of the biggest headlines, donald trump did a 180 on nato, promised he would work close live with the alliance to take out isis. you may remember trump once suggested the united states might not protect our nato allies if they didn't pay they're fair share. let's get the deal is. carl cameron is in youngstown this afternoon. carl, what else did you milwaukee of what trump is
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proposing this afternoon? >> reporter: well, the bit about working with nato, now that it has become an intelligence, gathering entity against isis and world terrorism,er is something trump has been talking about for some time. and likewise has been talking about his temporary, quote, complete ban on new muslim immigrants and visitors coming to the united states. that's been an evolving policy. and today he broke into a number of different pieces. one, he says there are a number of countries the vetting isn't trustworthy and newcomers to the u.s. from those countries won't happen because their vetting processes north secure and trustworthy. then he opened it to an entire live different discussion about the rest of the world and never mentioned religion per se. he said people will be allowed to come from countries that have what he called extreme, extreme vetting, and by that he described it as, denunciation of islammic radical terrorism and
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embracing american values, something trump says was applied during the cold war in watching for spies and now that would be the new replacement policy for what he used to refer to as the muslim ban. very tough stuff. a lot of criticism of hillary clinton to be expected, and this speech comes at a time for trump where he really needed to have a good day. the last self weeks since the republican convention have been particularly tough. the trump campaign today sent out via e-mail all over the country a questionnaire, asking what supporters think donald trump should do in this campaign. almost a toes set recognition there have been some rocky spots. organizationally they're known to be far behind the clinton campaign. also the case in terms of cash. and the polls show that hillary clinton has been surging since her convention, whereas mr. trump has been largely flat0. this was a teleprompter speech, advertised for quite some time, and meant to show donald trump
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can work from a script, woken deviate to cast controversies he has been suffering from. and it wasoñ+t],>8)ç widely andy reviewed here in the audience, though the criticism from the democrat is just beginning to hit our inboxes and will likely be fast and furious the rest of the afternoon. >> it's not to say the day has been perfect for the campaign. a report links trump's top aide to a prorussian group in ukraine >> reporter: mr. trump said wouldn't it by nice to work with russian and he got some ripples of applause here. of course anybody who remembers the cold war and the former soviet union recognizes russia has not been an ally in a lot of things nor in recent times with putin throwing barbs and trump still trying to go back and forth with whether or not that it ever met. paul manafort, political operative and consultant with
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worldwide clients for years, did some business in ukraine between 2007 and 2011, and during those years, he was employed by the pro-russian president, yanukovych. he was paid in the neighborhood of $12 million by theon ceviche political party in ukraine, not by a government, not by moscow or ukraine per se, and the clinton campaign is saying this is inappropriate there's something questionable about it. manafort has utterly denied anything and in a statement overnight point outs in "the new york times" front page today, it says that every government official they talked to said it doesn't appear he has done anything wrong. >> carl cameron, thank you. we'll get analysis next. donald trump's foreign policy speech. they've been hoping for a pivot. they've been hoping for a pivot for quite a long time. donald trump recently said there would be no pivot. he is who he is and will say what he believes.
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was today the pivot the establishment folks were looking for? david is our guest next. for lower back pain sufferers, the search for relief often leads to places like... this... this... or this. today, there's a new option. introducing drug-free aleve direct therapy. a tens device with high intensity power that uses technology once only available in doctors' offices. its wireless remote lets you control the intensity, and helps you get back to things like... this... this... or this. and back to being yourself.
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trump's positions on russia coming under scrutiny after a report that links trump's cam pawn macer to one of putin's buddies. "the new york times" says trump campaign chairman paul manafort stood to make millions and millions of dollars work fog a pro-russian president in ukraine. protesters forced that president from office two years ago, angry over his cozying up to putin. the victim victim reports the seek secret -- "the new york times" report shows the document showed close to $13 million in payments from ukraine's pro russian political party in response, paul manafort slammed the reporting and said, and i
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quote, i am a campaign professional. it is well known i do work in the united states and have done work overseas, campaigns as well. i have never received a single off the books cashing pavement, as falsely reported by in the "new york times." still, the story threatens to distract donald trump -- from donald trump's speech on foreign policy. david canton yeast is with us now. a senior reporter for u.s. newss & world reports." >> this as he said/she said thing right now. you have a deep dive that "the new york times" did. found ledgers but of payment but they couldn't confirm -- a payment. manafort has denied and it that's where we stand. frankly, it's a cloud over the campaign. think the big question is, has manafort accepted in the payments from pro-russian clients, pro-russian allies,
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government forces, since he has been in the official role as trump's campaign chief. with we have not gotten clarity. >> in the background of all this donald trump seems like critics has been companiesying up to vladimir putin, speaking highly of him and it's been a matter of contested at least by hillary clinton supporters. >> look. again, in this speech that trump just gave, he wants a closer relationship with russia, says we have a common interest with roush in defeating isis. this as a conviction that trump has been propelling. enough it's weaved into the story with manafort and manafort's ties go back decades. so this is two different relationships that now people are putting together and trying to add two and two together and see if they get four on where the trump campaign interests really lie. is this an ideological position
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or are they being influenced by outside forces and payments as "times" laid out today. >> regarding the speech we just heard, donald trump says, among other things, he will create a commission on radical islam as one of his first acts as president. what did you think of that? >> that been done. the most establishment thing that donald trump laid out. this was a moderating speech from what he has laid out before as far as the muslim ban. he is tweaking it to extreme vetting, an ideology test but not religious test. a lot of the other stuff in his speech, the commission, working closer with allies, joint task force to pursue terrorism, a lot of that stuff has been done and is being done. so i don't know -- that's not -- that isn't really anything new -- >> what was new out of that? >> i think the new part was the
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extreme vetting. asking people that are coming into the country ideological questioneds, questions about patriotism. already seen some democrats saying if you're a terrorist and part of isis, why wouldn't you just lie on the test to get in here? so there's going to be a lot of questions about what that would actually do to limit the inflow of isis or any type of terrorists coming into the country. >> the poll wes follow suggest he needs a big turn. did he -- especially in the swing states. he needs to figure out what to do in pennsylvania. needs help in ohio and florida. is this the kind of thing that hey needs? is this a step in that direction? >> it's hard to see how this turns independents and people in the middle and people still thinking about donald trump -- this to me was a speech to his base supporters. a base of supporters that think obama has been too weak, is an apologist and hasn't aggressively gone after isis and
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we are failing on all fronts. if you believe that you're probably already in donald trump's camp. as far as immigration policy goes, again, i think very appealing to his core base supporters. where that does -- what that does with the swing vote in columbus, ohio, or pittsburgh, pennsylvania, it's not sure it moves them because there wasn't a lot of meat on the bones. he is saying very, sir extreme. viciously remove people. i think until you get more details what that means it's not going to move many people not already in his camp. >> david, thank you. >> thank you. >> hillary clinton campaigning today in the state of pennsylvania, and she is getting a little help from the vice president, joe biden. you have seen the polls that suggest hillary clinton leading in the race for the white house and leading big in pennsylvania. critics say the poll does not tell the whole story. today, one app developer says he survey shows the truth another who is leading the race and it's
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headlines from the fox news deck. jfk airport in queens, new york, back to normal operations today after false reports of gunfire sent people 2014 the doors last night. video caught the frightening moments. >> everybody down. >> investigators are looking into why people reported gunshots in the first place. crews still searching for eight missing people after last week's explosion and fire at an apartment in maryland. among them, three-year-old. the blast outside washington, dc sent more than 30 people to hospitals. people said they smelled gas. crews recovered five victims so far. and michael phelps says he has swum his last race. he mailed the announcement official on "the today show the morning help told matt lauer the same thing four years ago. still she says he means it.
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come on in. vice president biden says donald trump doesn't care about the middle class and doesn't have a clue about it. he made the comment in scranton, pennsylvania. pennsylvania a crucial swing state. he was their first joint campaign appearance, as middle class. >> as some people called him, told voters in scranton, trump is, quote, totally unqualified to be president. >> he's trying to tell us he cares about the middle class. give me a break, and to repeat myself, such a bunch of malarkey. it makes no sense. none. none. none. none. >> hillary clinton tried to paint donald trump's economic proposals as a winfall for the rich and highlighted her own ties to scranton. noting her grandfather used to work there at company that made lace curtains. >> the scan -- scranton lace
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company all those years ago actually offered a profit-sharing plan and health benefits at the beginning of the 20th century. they understood something that a lot of folks have forgotten. >> clinton and biden attacked trump's foreign policy credentials ahead of his speech today. jennifer griffin is live in scranton. hello. >> reporter: hi. well you could have heard a pin drop at times. such a passionate speech from vice president joe biden. he went on about his own family roots here. it was the first time they appeared together on the campaign trail. they also knew that donald trump would be speaking in ohio, and they delivered a preemptive strike. here's what they said. >> he talked about sending ground troops. american ground troops. well, that is off the table as far as i am concerned. [applause]
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>> so, we'll wait and see what he says today. but sometimes he says he won't tell anyone what he'll do because he wants to keep his plan, quote, secret. and then it turns out the secret is he has no plan. >> yesterday, the head of hezbollah, a terrorist organization, iran's top terrorist surrogate, and a direct threat to our ally, israel, repeated trump's claim the entire muslim world and the -- around the world, that president obama founded isis. >> reporter: biden said if his son, bow -- beau were still alive he would have thrown him in front of his son if trump were commander in chief. emotional words. >> they call that a swing state
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but i'm not sure why. democrats have been winning it for decades and hillary clinton has, as donald trump might put it, huge lead there. >> reporter: i seem to have lost you, shepard. >> is that better? she does have somewhere around 10, 11-point lead there they call it's swing state because certainly both party tries to get numbers. the republicans have had a hard time since. the 1980s. of course, the vice president being from there is said to be a boost, at least in that scranton area. it's the suburbs of philadelphia that they say are most important for the republican candidate here, and if donald trump can do well in those suburbs it's widely believed he could have a shoot at pennsylvania. the latest poll i've seen shows hillary clinton leading 52-26% in those suburbs. he is getting crushed there he is hoping for a turn-around and hoping today begins it. hillary clinton is crushing him in the battle to win over millenial voters according to gnaw poll from "usa today."
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the survey shows select clinton beating trump 56% to 20% among voters under 35. 56 to 20. also shows clinton beating him bay bigger margin among millenials who supported bernie sanders. look at those numbers. the poll has him favoring hillary clinton 72 to 11%. it is just the latest in the series of recent polls showing the democratic nominee leading her republican rival by big numbers but the developer of a question and answer smartphone app says the surveys are all wrong etch tells "usa today" his app poses questions to an average 100,000 users a day and his data suggests trump will win in november. according to the newspaper, the app asked user, quote, new polls suggest trump is getting crushed by clinton. do they reflect how you're going to vote? "usa today" reports 60 parts of users said they'd vote for trump compared to 36% for clinton.
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the developer explains the differences by telling the newspaper, we're not a poll, we're a conversation. and 100% anonymous. people feel comfortable answering questions without fear of being bullied or being called a racist. he goes on, people can express themselves safely and get a pure answer. heidi is a senior political reporter for "usa today." if he is right everybody on earth is wrong. >> this would be unprecedented, that some kind of a social media tool would be more predictive than a poll. that said, shep, what he is speaking to in terms of the polling dissimilarities, has a name. it's called the social desirability component and a well known polling phenomenon that sometimes when people have what they consider more an anonymity in polls. they might be more honest.
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in my experience irdon't think that can account for the gaping difference you see between this one app prediction and the broader wealth of polls we have seen. >> i went back to the polls from the primary and compared what we were hearing in the days before they voted in primaries, and then what we were seeing in exit polling in primary's to see if there was any indication that donald trump had been outperforming the polls, and there's no evidence of that, that i can find in my reporting. >> no. there was some irregularities -- some polled that weren't as predictive, for example, in iowa, when it was much closer between hillary clinton and bernie sanders but for the post part the polls were accurate in the primary. we're dealing with modern technology, problems with cell phone usage, ate, but the polls are pretty uniform in terms of the major national respected polls that are not online and
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that are not just like click here type of polls where you don't even know if people are being double counted. >> i wonder, were you able to catch the donald trump speech today and if you thought that was the ever advertised and long desired pivot that the right had been wanting to -- the establishment wanted? >> i caught a little bit in your green room as i was being made up and it did strike me he had very -- more presidential sounding tone. didn't hear -- correct me if i'm wrong -- didn't hear any off the cuff remarks that stole the headlines from what was supposed to be the message of the day. the question, as it has been for months now, is does he read from a teleprompter one day and then takes -- makes a comment the following day that takes away or steps on that message? but he did say some of the things during the primary that it thought were very powerful in terms of speaking truth on the disaster hat was the iraq war, and the complicity of both
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parties and members of congress when hillary clinton was senator and voted for the intervention and keeping on message on her role in pushing for the intervention in libya as well which helped create a vacuum for isis. those are the things that the party, reince priebus, wanted him to stay on message about from the beginning. the question is, will he do it, stay on message, and is it too late? >> heidi, nice to see you. thank you. >> should donald trump lose his unorthodox campaign could cost republicans more than the white house. it could cost them control of the senate as well. so what do you do to stop that? that's next. picking up for kyle. here you go. you wouldn't put up with part of a pizza. um. something wrong? so when it comes to pain relievers, why put up with just part of a day? you want the whole thing? yes, yes! live whole. not part. aleve.
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down-ballot races and with the following poll numbers maybe g.o.p. senators facing a tough fight for re-election, trying to disstabs themselves from the republican presidential nominee. the polls show several key senate races are in play, including one for senator rubio seat in florida. the democrats need to pick up four spots to gain control of the senate. doug mckelway is in washington. >> reporter: rubio is at the center, trying to distance himself from the messaging of trump. cog any sent if trump loses key swing states by as muching a double digit margins his coattail chaos be very long and very damaging. >> suppose the candidate of the other party wins by ten percent? you're going down. if you're in a competitive race, you're going down. you're not going to be able to survive a 10% margin by the
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presidential candidate from the other party. so that's what republicans are worried about. >> even the senate majority leader acknowledged that g.o.p. control of the senate is, quote, very do is dicey. >> what we're looking for here is a candidate who settles down and follows the script and makes the elect about hillary clinton. >> reporter: adding to fears is trump's poor grassroots organization and reliance on social mideast ya at the expense of paid tv ads. still, the election is a long way off, 80 days and world events, some crisis somewhere, some political bombshell, can change the picture in a dramatic way and trump continues to pull in big, enthusiastic crowds. >> he is at the top of his bandwidth and she is at the bottom. >> reporter: hillary clinton ranks second to last in favorability of any presidential candidate in history. the bad news for trump? he ranks dead last in the same category. shep? >> thank you, sir.
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bleep. >> get my dog. get my dog. >> i can't get your dog. >> she's gone. >> that's [bleep]. >> oh! >> there's the dog. it was quite a scene. that was baton rouge, 80 miles northwest of new orleans. a state official says six people have died in the flooding. imagine weather service reports rivers are finally beginning to fall but that farther south they're expected to rise as the water moves towards the gulf of mexico. images here. a woman kisses her three-month-old baby. this is walker, louisiana, about an hour east of baton rouge. crews used a bolt to get them to safe ground. here's some national guard folks in there, the louisiana army national guard sent teams to help with the evacs. guard officials say they have deployed more than 1500 people throughout the state, nearly 200
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high water vehicles. streets and entire neighborhoods underwater. this is an aerial in hammond, louisiana, where is about an hour east of baton rouge and in nearby up to, a business own are and his friend tried to salvage anything they could from their store. some people there said the water in their homes came up to their waists. it has been a very rough ride there. the rains are slowing down but the rivers expected to rise downstream. it was a wave of fire that came through the city in another area of the country. that is how one person described what happened in lower lake, california, about 90 miles north of san francisco. a wildfire broke out saturday and tore through neighborhoods, destroying 200 homes. it reached main street, burning a post office, winery and other businesses. some 4,000 people had to leave that area. triple digit temperatures and strong winds make it really difficult for firefighters to control the flames.
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they've burped close to 3,000 acres. crews have the fire just five percent contained. this is one of the 11 wildfires burning now in california. one last story that hits close to home next in top of the hour headlines. stay with us. attend the elite boarding kennels, but i do know that nothing beats the freedom of living out here with propane, people can live where they want, and just as cozy as they want. whether it's a hot bath (no thank you), a warm bedroom, or a perfectly grilled steak. drop it, drop it, drop it proudly independent. proudly american. proudly propane
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university partnerships, and the lowest taxes in decades are creating a stronger economy and the right environment in new york state for business to thrive. let us help grtoday at business.ny.gov >> devastating news item from hi home place where friends and friends of friends in mourningment oxford, mississippi in shock after a small plane crash that left 11 children without parents. flags across the university town are at half staff after the crash happened yesterday morning. it handed when a twin engine plane was trying to land in an emergency in tuscaloosa, alabama. on forked three dentists, all with their wives. they were flying back from a dental seminar in central florida. the pilot reported mechanical problems with his piper p831 then crashed close to runaway.
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were there no survivors think ole miss chancellor calls it's heartbreaking loss. the doctor and his life leave behind three children, ages 10, 7, and 5. the youngest just started kindergarten. eight other kids lost parents in the same crash. deepest sympathies to them, their friends and family. on this day in 1877, thomas edison suggested using the word "hello" to answer the phone. bell proposed using "ahoy" and even though that didn't catch on bell kept greeting callers of with" ahoy." before edison recommended hello the word did not have the same meaning it does today. when it came to hanging up the phone, they suggested ending conversations with "that is all.
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". >> eye day, another record on the due and the s&p. never in the history of ever has the dow been that high. should news break out, we'll break in because breaking news changes everything. we cannot let this evil continue. >> trump's just laying out his plan to take down isis and put a stop to radical islam. but will his plan work? welcome everyone. trish regan. donald trump says he plans to take on isis on four fronts, through military action, shutting down access to social media, along with ideological and financial warfare. reaction from ambassador john bolton in just a moment. first, let's go to blake burman and washington with the details.
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