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tv   Justice With Judge Jeanine  FOX News  October 1, 2016 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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hello, welcome to "justice." thanks for being with us. now to my open. the presidential election in 38 days now comes down to the battle of political correction versus truth. where one candidate chooses political correctionness. the other brave enough to state the obvious. one says things not politically correct. not run through the prism of the contemporary political lens. the other says things that are oh so perfectly politically
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correct. considered words carefully. filtered them. and then flat-out lies to our faces. all the why anarchy on our streets. riots against the one line of defense that separates us from chaos. kids shot on playgrounds with little notice and virtually the same number of people killed in one city, chicago, than died in the iraq war. now global terrorism enters the homeland. one candidate sees the turmoil. the other says everything is great and life is beautiful and prefers to talk about name calling and the bias we have. >> i think implicit bias is a problem for everyone, not just police. i think unfortunately too many of us in our great country jump to conclusions about each other.
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we need all of us to answer hard questions about, you know, why am i feeling this way. >> isn't that nice. it's not so implicit, hillary, when you call tens of millions of americans who kidisagree wit you every name in the book. you call us deplorable and you tell us we are not america. who then is america, hillary right? the people you're bringing in from other parts of the world? no, you're worried about donald trump's name calling 20 years ago. you ask yourself, folk, what's that got to do with anything. compare that to a secretary of state who lies to us over and over, plays fast and loose with our nation's highest secrets, drones and satellite locations for which others, not so powerful and connected, are prosecuted.
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what's more offensive, words or actions? a woman who ensures no one find s out what's going on in our state tomorro state department, who along with her kabul is wheeling and dealing. when caught, evidence is destroyed with hammers and bleach. a woman who runs a state department like a private piggy bank mixing $6 billion during her tenure. you tell me what's worse. name calling or lying to family of fallen soldiers, turning around, calling those very same parents liars. like your husband, hill i are, impeached for lying, perjury and obstruction of justice, you do it with arrogance and righteous indignation. and although he may be in politics, and while i am not a fan of things he said 20 years ago about a woman under a contractual obligation to
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maintain her appearance, your history with women is all about destroying them. whether you represented a pedophile who raped a 12-year-old girl into a coma for five days, her reproductive organs destroyed, you not only laughed but you trashed an innocent sixth grader, a victim, saying with no factual basis she sought out men like her rapest and she was mentally unstable. you're offended by donald trump's words but when presented by the atrocities by a group called boko haram you refuse to take action and label them terrorists? a group that's killed 2,000 people? and now straps explosives to little girls? might your relationship with your friend, gilbert shalgaray, a convicted nigerian land developer, who gave tens of millions to you and your foundation and global initiative be the reason?
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the way you, hillary, and your progressives fight terrorism is with a hash tag. bring back our girls. you don't support women, you destroy them. whether it's all the women who a cused your husband of serial marital infidelities, sexual harassment or, yes, rape, instead of protecting that 12-year-old, protecting a college intern, protecting a woman who claimed to be raped, your job, ruin them, destroy any woman who gets in the way of your ambition. none of it the predator's fault. the war room created to assault the right wing, the crazy women desperate for attention, who wanted publicity like gennifer flowerses who you said you'd like to crucify. you called her trailer trash. and monica lewinsky. you called her a narcicisstic loony tune. until we found your husband's semen on her dress. and juanita broderick who says
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you threatened her. and i don't know what you said about paula jones but you and your husband had to pay her $850,000 for your husband's sexual misdeeds. and you call them all bimbos. she's gaming you, folks. she takes money from countries who stone women for adultery to death. they kill them. they throw gays out of buildings. they kill them. this is a woman who's corrupted the state department, the department of justice and, now, i am ashamed to admit it, the honored tradition of the federal bureau of investigation. what's important, folks, are not words, what's important are actions. what's important is how one candidate has chose be to lie about issues that involve theve. of the greatest nation on earth. one candidate who has chosen to lie about how she conducts the business of the united states of
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america, our business, the people's business. the governance of our nation. and now that you know what she is capable of, what's more important to you, political correctness or the truth? and that's my open. tell me what you think on my facebook page or twitter. #judgejeanine. and sanata knows a thing or two about how donald trump treats women. she worked for him and knows him well. she's a former vice president for trump international and now joins me live. sanata, thanks so much for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> all right, now, you worked for the trump organization and you had a rather high-level position there. what did you do? >> i was vice president of marketing for the different trump international projects. >> and as vice president, you had occasion to meet with
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donald, talk with donald? >> of course, also with his children who were very involved in most of these projects. >> okay, and how did he treat you? i mean, is what you're hearing, you know, this person who is trashing we ining women, who is know, calling them names, is that what mr. trump is like during business? >> mr. trump treated me with utmost respect. i will tell you having been there for four years, i have never witnessed any inappropriate remarks towards any woman. he was very, very professional. he was tough. he demanded the best performance. he wanted results. he never allowed anyone to slack off. but he wanted to make sure whatever your job is, you had to get it done. >> did he ever comment about your appearance or the appearance of other women? how often would you say you met with him? >> i met with him very frequently, obviously, it was in
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a professional setting, but i had never witnessed any remarks in regard his to physical appearance in regards to women. >> what do you make of all of these comments you're hearing now? what do you make of it? >> well, it's the election time. so i'm sure many people really exaggerate what's really going on. i was not at the company when these supposed remarks happened with former miss universe. >> yes, that was 20 years ago. >> i was dodging sniper bullets in sarajevo. >> you too? i think hillary clinton said she was dodging bullets -- oh, it was tulips, i'm sorry. i don't mean to make light of it, but when you said that, i just made that connection. in sarajevo, and you came to this country? >> i came right after the war ended actually in january of 1996. secretary clinton mentioned she was there in i think may of '96
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so after the war had ended so there were no sniper shots. >> not on the tarmac. we know that for sure now. but as you hear this stuff about donald trump, how does it make you feel? >> i think it's very disturbing. because i can tell you, having been there for four years, i saw him in a professional capacity. he was always very professional. i think the key is really that people want him to be politically correct. to be diplomatic, to be sensitive to different issues. what they don't understand is political correctionness offends him. so he says what he things. thinks. at the end of the day, he cuts to the bottom line right away. he demands the best of all people. he keeps people accountable. >> how long did you work for him? >> four years. >> okay, and you were in real estate developing and marketing. i mean, are you still doing something similar? have you met -- have you worked
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in other places? how would you compare other workplaces to the trump organization? >> that's actually a brilliant question. after i had worked there, i ended up working with louis sunshine who is very well known in real estate development and marketing arenas and she was way tougher than he was. so as a woman she was tougher when it came to performance and also demeanor because i must admit when you are in the real estate development world in new york, which is dog eat dog world, you have to be the best. it's fiercely competitive. so now that i'm with douglas ellerman in florida and i work with ultrahigh-worth clients, i will tell you, i learned everything, what i know, here in new york, and it's tough. >> all right, sanata asden, thank you for being with us. with when now, a democratic strategist and principal of the dewy square group, mary ann
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marsh, hi, mary ann. >> hi, judge, how are you? >> well, it's been an interesting week, hasn't it? >> it has. it feels like a year actually. >> it does feel like a year. all right. the numbers have changed. hillary is now ahead of trump by a couple of points, but you've always said from the beginning it's going to be a nail biter at the end. without getting, you know, too far into this, i mean, donald stepped into it. she opened the trap. and he went for it. >> he did. i think the shift you've seen in the polls since the debate shows you when there have been shifts in this election, it's been driven by events, not much else. when they both won the nomination, they both went up in the polls. the conventions, they both got a bounce out of it. she got a bigger one, came back to earth. now we've seen the first real shift in the polls since then. the only events we know left in the campaign are the debates. unless some unforeseen something happens. so that's what's really been driving it. you expect then after an event someone gets a bump and it can
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come back down. i think she still has a stubborn 2 to 3 point lead despite the events. >> given what you're describing, which is volatility of this race, it may very well be that the race -- depending on how close it is to election time, will depend not so much on hillary, not so much on donald but some other event that people interpret as benefiting as one or the other. >> it would have to be a significant event, the kind of events we hope don't happen. the known events are debates. what i think we're seeing now is as we speak donald trump's in pennsylvania and i just checked and he's talking about jobs, trade and ttp. a much better place for him to be. better than talking about the things he spent the last week talking about. that's what he needs. that was the best part of his debate. not that i'm giving him advice but maybe tonight he realizes in pennsylvania that's when he needs to be talking about not this other stuff. >> you know, don't you think,
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mary ann, as someone who supports women, she's the one who brought up name calling 20 years ago. doesn't that opt door i mean, literally, invite donald in to go after what happened? you heard my open. all the things she's called these women. she's asking for it, is she not? >> i think in a political context you look at history. hillary clinton was trying to protect her marriage and she was trying to deal with a private matter in the most public stage. >> okay, well, one or two maybe, mary anne, stop it, a lot women have had husbands who shecheat >> hold on, once she knew the truth, that stopped and you never heard it again. look at the political impla i kas. what happened after that? hillary clinton ratings went up with voters. she went on to the senate twice. if donald trump wants to revisit that. they shaut tthought the fact sho
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live her life in public -- >> all right, hold on, you say once she knew the truth, how many women did he have to be involved with before she could figure out what the truth was? how smart is she? >> i don't think hillary clinton would have gone on the "today" show and said what she said if she knew the truth -- >> that would make her a liar -- >> she found out the truth, it was look at her actions after that. it was very evident. that once she knew the truth -- >> why, she didn't leave him, she's still with him. i mean, i don't have a problem with that. that's her choice. i get that. >> that's her choice. >> i get it. i don't have a problem with it. here's the thing. she stands on a stage years later and complains about donald trump calling a woman who's under a contractual obligation to keep her appearance the same, you know, she calls him out on it. i'm not a fan of that, mary anne, i don't like that stuff. you know, my whole life, i've fought for a level playing field
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for women. when victims. okay, but she opened the door. that's what i think. >> all i'm telling you -- last point, politically, how women are going to view miss universe comment is she's the most beautiful woman in the world and yet she can be criticized for her looks what does that mean to the rest of us. >> well, it means if they didn't read the contract -- >> -- if hillary clinton -- >> mary anne marsh -- >> they don't see it that way. >> you may be right. thanks for being with us. next, he knows more about how to elect a republican president than almost anyone alive. veteran campaign man charlie black is standing by to talk about the debates and where the race stands now. plus this. >> do you want to know who i'm going to vote for? >> yes, who you gonna vote for? >> i'm not gonna tell you. >> street justice heads out in search of debate advice for donald trump and hillary clinton as the country looks ahead to the big rematch. justice rolls on.
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narrator: it wasn't that long ago. years of devastating cutbacks to our schools. 30,000 teachers laid off. class sizes increased. art and music programs cut. we can't ever go back. ryan ruelas: so vote yes on proposition 55. reagan duncan: prop 55 prevents 4 billion in new cuts to our schools. letty muñoz-gonzalez: simply by maintaining the current tax rate on the wealthiest californians. ryan ruelas: no new education cuts, and no new taxes. reagan duncan: vote yes on 55. sarah morgan: to help our children thrive. a live look at donald trump holding a rally in the battleground state of pennsylvania. so what does he need to focus on now to secure a win?
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let's ask my next guest, former senior adviser to president reagan and h.w. bush, chairman of prime policy group, charlie black. all right, charlie, if you were running this campaign and you were doing debate prep with donald trump, what would you tell him? >> well, good evening, your honor, congratulations on that opening statement. i grant you summary judgment after hearing all that. >> thank you. >> you know, the debate prep should be fairly simple. he has big issues that appeal to the american people. jobs, trade, immigration. if he would stick to those things and not allow himself to be distracted off on these side issues and little piddling things he would win. he had a good first 20 minutes of that debate when he talked about jobs and trade. i think he'll do a lot better this week.
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>> would be of it is things i've learned, as a judge and a prosecutor, i was accustomed to answering a question or making people answer, yes, no, yes, no. and the pivot for someone not used to politics is a hard thing to do. where donald made the mistake, maybe not so much prosecuting her, it's kind of showing the public that he's thin skinned. that he can't focus on the real issue, but instead is focusing on things that are oh so insignificant. >> i agree, someone could have come away with the impression that he's thin skinned from that debate. look, he knows how to focus on the big things and the things that matter. she had no message in that debate. it was a bunch of canned talking points. including the below the belt attacks on donald. she kept coming back to them. she made no emotional connection
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with the audience or with the swing voters out in the country. he did in the beginning. he's got to stick to his main points. i think he will. >> okay, so now let's talk about michigan and some of those other states where, you know, she doesn't have a great record with, you know, coal miners in virginia -- and yet she's beating him, now, in these important swing states. >> well, you know, the important thing to remember is that a week ago, before the debate, he was slightly ahead in one of these target states. i even saw a poll that showed him even in virginia. >> yep. >> michigan's a little bit a tough state. if he were to carry the rest of the midwest, he's got a good chance to carry wisconsin. he'll carry ohio, indiana, west virginia. the coal states. but, you know, he had a bad week. so he went from slightly ahead to slightly down in some of these swing states. we have five more weeks to go and i'm confident this will go back and forth and he's got a
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very good chance to win this. >> okay, in this week, when the vice presidential debate, now trump and hillary are going to be back burner. what would you suggest that donald trump do this week? >> well, he should go out and have his rallies and deliver his message on the big issues over and over. he can still do it on the day of the vice presidential debate. with all due respect to those two candidates, that's a snoozer. it will have a small audience and there will be no news coming from it unless somebody makes a mistake. >> fine', with some of these, as the campaign goes on it seems he now has a commercial with his daughter ivanka and the kids who are really i believe his strongest connection to the american people will continue to be out there. why do you think hillary clinton's daughter is not out there the way donald's children are? >> well, i don't know.
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they may choose to use her in ads. let me tell you a remarkable thing. hillary campaign and her supporters have done over $100 million worth of television ads since the democratic convention. until this past wednesday, donald trump had done zero. none. and he still went up in the polls during the period. as long as he sticks to his big issues and the promise to make the country great again. >> charlie black, thank you. street justice is still ahead. as i ask americans what trump and clinton need to do in the next debate. and next, my all-star panel is standing by. we're going to talk debates, polls and now the all important women vote. marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! sì? polo! marco...! polo! scusa? ma io sono marco polo, ma... marco...! playing "marco polo"
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good evening.
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i'm jackie ibanez. an enormous hurricane in the caribbean. hurricane matthew is now a category 4 storm. packing winds of up to 150 miles per hour. it was a category 5 earlier, making it the largest hurricane we've seen since 2007. it's on the course to impact parts of jamaica, haiti and cuba at the moment. how it will affect the u.s. is still up in the air but there's a chance it could brush along florida's eastern coast. the ntsb says there's no sign of signal trouble at a new jersey train station where a commuter train crashed this week. earlier today, investigators recovered the train's black box. authorities still don't know what clues it might contain, but typically that device would record speeds and breaking information. one woman was killed from the crash. more than 100 others injured. i'm jackie ibanez. now back to justice with judge jeanine. so, we're just five weeks out from one of the most
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critical elections of our time. and the polls are still extremely tight. so let's get right to it all with the advance of this week and a look ahead at what's to come with my political panel. c pac chairman and republican strategist matt strap. and radio host, former aid to charles schumer, chris hun. she's ahead now, is that a surprise, chris? that's a yes or no question. >> no, it's no surprise. >> is it a surprise, matt? >> no, it's not a surprise. >> okay, now, given that she's ahead, and that the debate was not donald trump's bet moment, can he win in the next debate? i'll ask you, matt. >> yes. >> how? >> a couple reasons. a couple reasons why. look at the fox poll, judge. 62% or so of the respondents said hillary clinton won. if you look at the four-way
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race, it's essentially tied within the margin of error. the fact is, is this. donald trump is not expected to be some amazing presenter at a debate. that's not why americans are flocking to him. they're flocking to him because he think he'll cut through the crap and tell people what we need to do to fix our country. and they know sometimes when he does that, he can be off message and offensive and strident. his bar to his success is much different from hers. >> okay, so chris, right now, in a two-way race, she is it looks like five points ahead accord to the latest poll. >> right. that's about a six-point swing. i agree with matt, you know, he can win in the next debate. he can come back. he can change it. but he can't do what he did in this last debate. he can't be drawn in to these petty arguments about his own personal wealth and personal issues. he's got to stick to the issues that matter. she's also got to be right on message. got to do exactly what she did
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in the last debate. >> what is her message other than she hates us deplorables. when she brought up this 20 year old miss universe thing, i mean, you know, isn't she the one that said when they go low, we go high? it sounds like she went low. >> well, you know, look, if he hadn't kept bringing it up, nobody would be talking about it again. >> bring what up? he wasn't bringing that up. she had the woman in the wings. she had this woman waiting in the wings. >> it was a great comeback on debate night but it would have been gone the next day, had he not brought it up on "fox & friends" an end went on a twitter tirade this week. i don't know why kellyanne conway hasn't confiscated his blackberry. >> wouldn't you do the same thing? >> my wife does it to me sometimes. sometimes you just have to stop. >> that's why i can't get you, matt. your wife -- >> here's the thing, the guy doesn't sleep. he doesn't sleep. he works all the time. he's right, at least he'll be up
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for that 3:00 call. >> no, that's -- >> all right, how's -- let's talk about some of the all-important states. can he win without florida? no. >> no, he has to win florida. he has to win ohio. and virginia's a little tougher state for him, judge, because for so much of virginia's economy around the washington area is, guess what, government. he's taken on those insiders. tim kaine's a pretty lackluster candidate and won't have much effect there. he's probably going to have to win another state like a pennsylvania or a michigan or maine. >> i'm looking at the polls today from pennsylvania and it shows clinton, 45, trump, 38. that ain't so good. >> that's going to tighten. >> no, it's not so good. look, pennsylvania has been this white elephant for the republican party for the last 12 -- last 6 elections. it's probably not going to happen.
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florida, he's got two big problems in florida. first, an influx of new puerto rican voters who live on the i-5 corridor still upset about things that happened in puerto rico. second, the story about him spending money in cuba that emerged this week is going to probably play -- >> that was dismissed even by them. go ahead, matt. >> i am married to a cuban-american. my father-in-law spent six years as a political prisoner in castro's jail. hillary clinton is the architect of the obama policy to appease the castros. they want to open up full relations with them. she has no firm ground to stand on if she's going to attack donald trump and he said the story was false -- >> matt, i'm not saying they're going to vote for her but if they don't come out and vote for him and this story might dissuade them from doing that, there's no way he can win florida. >> now that you say that, only 39% of those polled say that enthusiasm motivates them.
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most of them are people going out to vote against the other candidate. >> yes, this is one of those elections where, you know, people are motivated against the -- the person they're voting against. and that's unfortunate. >> go ahead, matt. >> i think if you look at all the polls i've looked at, donald trump always has an enthusiasm gap to the positive over hillary clinton. the fact is, you talk to democrats, chris isn't going to say it on this show, but the base of the party thinks she's too taken over by corporate interests -- >> ya think? she's been there for 30 years. >> oh, matt, matt -- >> chris, go ahead. >> matt, if you want to talk about the base of the party and maybe, you know, the mainstream of the party on the gop, they've got their problems on both sides here. on the republican side. with donald trump. >> at least the republicans aren't with the establishment, that's the difference. thank you, good-bye.
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>> thank you, judge. >> street justice is still ahead. next, a closer look at some of the latest polls with lee carter, our expert pollster. she's standing by. remember when you said men are superior drivers? yeah... yeah, then how'd i get this... ...allstate safe driving bonus check? ...only allstate sends you a bonus check for every six months you're accident free. silence. it's good to be in, good hands. i'm jamie foxx for verizon. in the nation's largest independent study by rootmetrics, again, verizon is the number one network. hi, i'm jamie foxx for sprint. and i'm jamie foxx for t-mobile. (both) and we're just as good. really? only verizon was ranked number one nationally in data, reliability, text and call and speed.
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the high school diploma has just added to the confidence and now i feel unstoppable. narrator: find free adult education classes near you at finishyourdiploma.org. one presidential debate, two to go. and the stakes could not be higher. here to talk about all latest polls and what the candidates need to do to win over those battleground states, political pollster and president at meslenski, lee joins me now. i asked the question of the panel, does donald trump have to win this state and what about hillary?
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what is the truth about swing states? >> i think this is a year where conventional wisdom does not apply and i think it depends on how things shake out. honestly, think we need to look at florida. if donald trump starts to lose florida, he's in trouble. pennsylvania's likely to go to hillary clinton. that means donald trump has to get ohio. the rest of it can go any way. >> ohio right now, clinton's got 45, he's got 42.5. so they're pretty close in ohio. and in florida, you know, there's about another three-point separation. >> we'll seen a big flip in a week. in one week. we've seen complete change in numbers. and the week before, we saw a change again. this is a race of moments. everything is subject to change. people's opinions are changing constantly. everybody's reacting to everything they're seeing in the moment for that moment. so who knows what's going to happen this week. >> okay, well, let's assume that nothing happens this week. other than vice presidential debate. which doesn't really promise to be very exciting, does it?
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>> i can't imagine, no. they don't make much news, either of them. >> well, you know, i'll tell you, for the first time, though, i have to tell you, lee, we have one candidate who's 70, the other one's 69. i mean, this is when you really do think about a vice president in the event, god forbid, shoul >> absolutely. they are very, very important. they have both been a little bit underground, really, all eyes have been on the candidates. >> well, they can come on "justice" any time, i'd love to chat with them. let's talk about this enthusiasm thing. 39% aren't enthusiastic for their candidate. >> i think there's a few things. one, i think that's why we're seeing so much volatility. if you only have 39% support, a lot of people are fluid, they're subject to change. the other thing that's really important is when you're not really excited about your candidate, voter turnout can be low. that's going to really -- that can have a huge impact on the race on election day. >> what we're looking at is
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enthusiasm. 39%. more than half are voting because they don't want the other person to win. you know what i think is interesting, there's a poll that came out that two-thirds who think she won the last debate are voting for her. only two-thirds. so the people who think she won still don't want to vote for her. >> i think it's really interesting because she did an excellent debate, right, but how many minds did she change? we've known this woman for 30 years. we've seen this woman for 30 years. she might have made her supporters a little enthusiastic. she might have switched a couple people's minds. you would expect when she had a night like she had, that was the performance of her career, she didn't have a bigger bump. not only that, her opponent, i'm sorry, but he did not have a good night. that was not the best donald trump we could have seen. >> all right, in 15 seconds, what would you tell donald trump right now? >> what i would tell him is number one, don't take the bait. number two, you have to practice your resting expression. do not let her get under your skin.
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you are there to talk about your message. to get people to talk about you. talk about immigration. talk about national security. that's why people love you. that's what people are there to hear about. they're not there to hear you respond to hillary clinton's attacks. those are insignificant. >> all right, resting expression, that means -- that's it? >> exactly, that's right. >> all right, lee carter, thank you so much for being with us. all right, and street justice is still ahead. plus, judicial watch's tom fitin gives his take on james comey's testimony this week. houston: mission allergy escape. for those who've gone to extremes to escape their unrelenting nasal allergy symptoms... houston: news alert... new from the makers of claritin, clarispray. ♪
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fireworks open the hill as house judiciary committee members grilled fbi director james comey on the clinton e-mail investigation. judicial watch's tom fintin joins me now. jim comey is looking worse and worse every time he appears before congress and by the time jordan, john jordan got done with him and trey gowdy and i mean you kind of had to -- not that i feel sorry for him by any stretch of the imagination. you have to think the guy's been
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outlawyered and his biases are showing. am i wrong? >> yes, i think he was playing defense counsel for the clinton cam on the e-mail matter and that's why the republicans way this investigation and his explaining away the destruction of e-mails after congress suspected them and who cares whether cheryl mills, clinton's top aide, was the target of an investigation and allowed to sit in on her interview, mrs. clinton's interview. who cares if she was given immunity to turn over a laptop. and who cares if all of that information on a laptop couldn't be used against her? who cares about any of that? >> but those are crimes. those are felonies. and, you know, a local prosecutor could charge based upon the evidence that we've seen in these released e-mails that come out friday, in these friday afternoon dumps. i mean, it is -- it is really disappointing and in my open, i talked about, you know, i hate to say it, but i think the fbi has shamed as a result of this politicization of the fbi. but i want to -- >> well, there's -- just
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quickly, they're either the keystone cops or they're political. they're not the keystone cops. >> they're not the keystone cops. you give out immunity to five people and you don't prosecute anybody and then you give out immunity to people at both ends of the conversation where after that conversation, evidence is destroyed, it's disgusting. all right, tom, you have got a lot of information out through judicial watch. and there was a federal judge who ordered that hillary clinton answer written interrogatories before the election. so you're the one who serve the written interrogatories or served them. >> her lawyers wrote them. they were due september 29th, but her counsel communicated with our lawyers and said they needed two more weeks. >> of course they needed two more weeks. they're trying to get it past the election. >> so they argued october 13th, and they have to be submitted or sworn to by mrs. clinton, so they're answers under oath.
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and they're about the freedom of information act, they're about the destruction of records and how the system worked, who set it up, how it ran, and what was she thinking when she was doing all of this government business on a separate server and not telling anyone about it and not saving and protecting the records, as the allow requires. >> you know, the document dumps that the fbi has been releasing on these friday afternoons, are you able to get any unredacted versions, or is everything redacted for you, as well? is a federal judge requiring more from them? >> we're seeing what everyone else is seeing. the fbi, by the way, was usinger judicial watch documents we had got ton question witnesses. that's how bad it is. we'll be getting a friday dump next week of the fbi e-mails that they recovered off of the clinton system, that she had tried to delete or otherwise kept from the government next friday. so we'll get new clinton e-mails from the fbi next friday, or through the state department. so these friday dumps are going to be coming through the
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election and, you know, it used to work, that you could keep bad things secret by dumping them on friday. well, thanks to shows like this, it ain't working that well anymore. >> tom, thanks so much for being with us tonight. >> thank you, judge. >> and we'll be right back with "street justice." it's endless shrimp at red lobster. with another new flavor you never saw coming... grilled, glazed korean bbq shrimp. and try as much as you want of flavors like new parmesan peppercorn shrimp. just come in before it ends.
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you waited for it all night and it's finally time for your
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dose of my street justice. this week, i asked people what they want to hear from the candidates in the next presidential debate. take a look. what would you tell them for the next debate? what would you tell hillary and what would you tell trump? >> be prepared and tell us exactly what you're going to do. >> did you hear this in the last debate? >> no, with i did not. >> did you watch the debate? oh, yes, you did. don't tell me you didn't watch the debate. i know you did. >> i'm canadian. >> she's canadian! what do you think of what's going on in this country with this election? >> you have a tough decision to make. >> yeah? >> you know, i'm looking at both your candidates and -- >> you think trudeau is such a walk in the park? >> i think he's a little more sophisticated than a couple of candidates that you have. >> are you worried about the open borders, united states citizens coming into canada? >> i felt that it was a very one-sided battle. i thought that trump did not display professionalism. >> so what does trump need to do
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in the next debate? >> i think he should quit, honestly, at this point. >> that doesn't make sense! and you know he's not going to do that. what would you tell him for the next debate? what would you recommend? >> he had a lot of opportunities to attack her on so many different levels. simply, she's the most corrupt individual that's ever ran for president. >> what's she going to do for the next debate? >> she's going to be on her heels and she's going to be coming out with her typical response of, it's, you know, a conservative conspiracy. >> yeah, the old right-wing conspiracy. hey, i got some millennials! what are you going to tell trump for the next debate? >> he always speaks in generalizations andic he has to have a more meticulous plan moving forward before just, you know, saying, hey, i'm going to do this. >> absolutely. >> this is the plan, but what is the actual plan? >> i'm pretty sure during the debate on monday, at least 15 or 20 times, he said, we got to bring the jobs back, we're going to bring 'em back, but every single time he would be asked, how are you going to bring them back, he would just say, we're
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going to bring them back, don't worry. so he's making promises with no plans to execute on those promises. >> hillary's been there for 30 years and made a lot of promises and jobs have gone to hell in a hand basket. >> i'm in the new york state democratic party. >> what would you recommend in the next debate for him and for her? >> i just assume that donald trump will do better in the next debate, because he's going to have to prepare. that was the criticism of him this time. >> i'm not even going to ask him who he's going to vote for. do you want to know when i'm going to vote for? >> yeah. >> i'm not going to tell you. did you watch the debate? don't want to talk about the debate? i'm walking backwards. boy, some people just don't have a sense of humor. >> friend me on facebook, follow me on twitter and on instagram at judge_janine. thanks for watching and tune in tomorrow night for a special sunday edition of justice at 9:00 p.m. eastern time. greg gutfeld is next. see you tomorrow night.
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hi, i'm lou dobbs in for greg gutfeld. here's what's coming up. 38 days to go and one of these candidates has just received a stunning rebuke of the "star trek" cast. you know, as they say, as "star trek" depose, so goes the nation. the most underreported story of the week. violent crime rose in 2015. seems kind of important leading up to an election, don't you think? and what do naked katy perry and not-naked katie johnson have in common? beats me. i think i left my pants in the

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