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tv   Americas Election HQ  FOX News  October 22, 2016 9:00am-11:01am PDT

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>> you argued eloquently and beautifully. the fact of the matter is, we're still waiting for donald trump. so sometime later today, i'm told about 8:00 p.m. i have no idea. thank you very much for watching. see you later. live pictures, gettysburg, pennsylvania, rudy giuliani there on the stage as we await donald trump trump laying out his first for first 100 days in office should the voters send him to the white house. >> hillary clinton targets swing states with her own vision for the country. and a new batch of embarrassing hacked e-mails, courtesy of wikileaks. >> an exclusive look at extensive isis tunnel near mosul shot by benjamin, as they inch closer to retaking iraq's second largest city.
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>> noon eastern right now. which makes donald trump about an hour late. we're hearing that he's still going to be a dfew minutes from now when he gets to gettysburg. i'm leland vittert. >> i'm elizabeth prann. as you said, we're waiting donald trump. from a city steeped in the symbolism of leadership and sacrifice, donald trump is expected to deliver a message he hopes will unite enough voters to send him to the white house. trump will speak in a building named after president eisenhower in get igburg, pennsylvania. it's not far from the place abraham lincoln honored thousands of civil war heroes who gave their last full measure of devotion to their country. peter doocy joins us live now. many are drawing the connection to abraham lincoln, and a message of unity.
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but what can we expect to hear from donald trump as he greets this crowd today? >> reporter: elizabeth, the trump campaign themselves are drawing the connection between the lincoln gettysburg address given at a time that the country needed to unite, and then obviously the country did unite afterwards, and what donald trump is trying to do here, which is going to be lay out the ten principles most important to him when he takes office, if he takes office. and then lay out -- attached to the principles, basically, a proposal for how he would make it happen, or how he would fix it. we're also told by the trump team that a major focus of today's speech is going to be the urgency that trump would try to tackle these things. not just in the first 100 days, just as soon as possible. there is no talk. basically they want to avoid pushing things off to have it look like he's trying to get reelected. which a lot of presidents do so
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they have something to talk about in four years. we're told that is not part of what the trump vision looks like. so we don't know for sure if there's going to be anything new, or if this is just going to be his familiar policies, kind of greatest hits presented in the order of importance. but we do think it's just a few minutes late, the first speaker, america's mayor, rudy giuliani just came out and apologized for the delay. he said it was bad weather. it may have been faster for them to drive 3 1/2 hours from new york city to gettysburg. a drive we did yesterday. but we think trump will be here any minute. and we'll turn around and watch the speak with you guys as he does. >> you talked a little bit about the campaign having urgency to get these things done. but i think you addressed this, at this moment we're not quite sure if he's going to really present anything that he hasn't already talked about. we haven't heard as much about, let's say, immigration as we did in the pri hears. are we going to be hearing more about that? do you have any indication on what he's going to hit first?
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>> we know that immigration is still a big thing he talks about at his rallies. it's not the only thing. we expect it to be a departure over what trump has been talking about a lot over the last few days in that the election is rigged against him. he's been talking about the people, the outlets, the agencies basically that he thinks are trying to help hillary clinton get elected instead of him. and we don't expect to hear any of that today. we think it's going to be more policy driven. what's interesting is there's a new reuters poll out showing that that message is really resonating with republican voters. this new reuters poll out last night showing half of republicans say they would not accept hillary clinton as president. and if she won -- the man himself right behind us. i'll step out of the way. donald trump. elizabeth? >> let's listen live.
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>> thank you. [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you very much. thank you, ladies and gentlemen. thank you. please sit down. thank you. >> we love you! >> thank you. it's my privilege to be here in gettysburg, hallowed ground where so many lives were given in service to freedom. amazing place. [ cheers and applause ] president lincoln served at a time of division like we've never seen before. it is my hope that we can look at his example, to heal the divisions we are living through right now.
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we are a very divided nation. i'm not a politician. and have never wanted to be a politician. believe me. [ cheers and applause ] but when i saw the trouble our country was in, i knew i couldn't stand by and watch any longer. our country has been so good to me. i love our country. and i felt i had to act. [ cheers and applause ] i've seen the system up close and personal for many years. i've been a major part of it. i know how the game works in washington, and on wall street. and i know how they've rigged the rules of the game against everyday americans. the rules are rigged. nearly one in four americans in
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their prime earning years isn't even working. one in five households have no one with a job. 45 million americans are on food stamps, and 47 million are living in poverty. we have failed our inner cities, and in so doing, have failed our african-american and hispanic communities. we've misguided military ventures overseas and wars that go on forever, that just cannot be won by the people that are doing it now. they don't know how to win the wars. at home, we have our great veterans dying while waiting for medical care. change has to come from outside our very broken system. our system is broken. the fact that washington and the
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washington establishment has tried so hard to stop our campaign is only more proof that our campaign represents the kind of change that only arrives once in a lifetime. [ cheers and applause ] the system is totally rigged and broken. first, the issue of voter fraud. according to pew, there are 24 million voter registrations in the united states that are either invalid or significantly inaccurate. and when i say that, there are such inaccuracies, it's unbelievable. 1.8 million dead people are registered to vote.
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and some of them are voting. i wonder how that happens. 2.8 million people are registered in more than one state. these are numbers, folks, these are numbers. 14% of noncitizens are registered to vote. the system is also rigged because hillary clinton should have been precluded from running for the presidency of the united states -- [ cheers and applause ] -- but the fbi and the justice department covered up her crimes, which included lying to the fbi and congress ons occasions, and included saying, i do not recall, to the fbi on 39 separate times.
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she recalls everything else, but 39 separate times she said, i do not recall. well, that's a lie also. [ applause ] then there is the deletion of at least 33,000 e-mails, after receiving a subpoena from the united states congress. that's after receiving the subpoena. as an example, it was announced this week that the highly respected four-star general james cartwright may be sentenced to up to five years in prison with a massive fine for lying on one occasion to the fbi. and he said he did that for national security reasons. highly respected man. a four-star general. this took place two days ago.
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how must he feel? a big part of the rigging of this election is the fact that hillary is being allowed to run despite having broken so many laws on so many different occasions. why is she allowed to run? the dishonest mainstream media is also part, and a major part of this corruption. [ cheers and applause ] they're corrupt. they lie and fabricate stories to make a candidate that is not their preferred choice look as bad, and even dangerous as possible. at my rallies, they never show or talk about the massive crowd size, and try to diminish all of our events. on the other hand, they don't show the small size of hillary's
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crowds. but in fact, talk about how many people are there. very small crowds. you know it, they know it, everybody knows it. over the last two days, three highly respected national polls said we're in first place. [ cheers and applause ] and one of those pollsters was the most accurate poll on the last two cycles. but the media refuses to even say it or put that word out. they refuse to talk about it. they're trying desperately to suppress my vote, and the voice of the american people. as an example of the power structure i'm fighting, at&t is buying time warner, and thus cnn, a deal we will not approve in my administration because
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it's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few. [ applause ] likewise, amazon, which through its ownership controls the "washington post," should be paying massive taxes, but it's not paying. and it's a very unfair playing field. and you see how that's happening and what it's doing to department stores all over the country. very, very unfair. and you're talking about billions and billions of dollars they should be paying those taxes. additionally, comcast purchase of nbc concentrates far too much power in one massive entity that is trying to tell the voters what to think and what to do. deals like this destroy democracy.
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and we'll look at breaking that deal up. and other deals like that. this should never, ever have been approved in the first place. they're trying to poison the mind of the american voter. every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign. total fabrication. [ applause ] the events never happened. never. all of these liars will be sued after the election is over. [ cheers and applause ] but a simple phone call placed to the biggest newspapers or television networks gets them wall-to-wall coverage with virtually no fact-checking whatsoever. here is why this is relevant to you.
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if they can fight somebody like me, who has unlimited resources to fight back, just look at what they can do to you, your jobs, your security, your education, your health care, the violation of religious liberty, the theft of your second amendment, the loss of your factories, your homes, and much more. look at what they've done to you with your jobs. it has just been learned on video that the violent protests at some of my rallies, like in chicago, where police and others were seriously hurt, you saw that, blood pouring down their face, were caused by paid -- paid -- dnc and clinton campaign operatives. now, we didn't know this. we didn't know this. this just came out two days ago on tape. we didn't know this.
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we were amazed at the level of violence. these were paid operatives. paid by the dnc, and probably the clinton campaign. this is a criminal act. policemen were badly hurt, and so were many others. and these people should be prosecuted. [ cheers and applause ] but because of the rigged system, they probably won't be. just like we found out about these paid violent protesters, it was probably the dnc and the clinton campaign that put forward these liars with their fabricated stories. but we'll find out about their involvement at a later date through litigation. and i look so forward to doing that. [ cheers and applause ] the rigging of the system is designed for one reason. to keep the corrupt
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establishment and special interests in power at your expense, and everybody's expense. i have no special interest but you, the american voter. [ cheers and applause ] i didn't have to do this, believe me. there's nothing easy about it. but i had to do it. i love our country, i love the people of our country, and i felt i had to do it. [ cheers and applause ] thank you. one thing we all know is that we will never solve our problems by relying on the same politicians who created these problems in the first place. hillary clinton is not running against me, she's running against change. and she's running against all of the american people and all of the american voters. [ cheers and applause ]
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we now find ourselves at that very special fork in the road. do we repeat the mistakes of the past or do we choose to believe that a great future yet unwritten still lies ahead for us, and for our wonderful beloved country. i think it does. i know it does. [ applause ] my economic plan will deliver at least 25 million jobs in one decade. now, our jobs have been taken away. they've gone to mexico. they've gone to so many other countries. it's a one-lane highway where they get the jobs, they get the factories, they get the money. and we get the drugs and we get the unemployment, and it's going to change. believe me, it's going to change. [ applause ]
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and that goes for all countries. when you look at china, when you look at every country, every trade deal we have is horrible. and we should be ashamed of what people, and the people that let those deals happen. they're defective, and they knew they were defective, and they were done for a reason, and believe me, they will be unwound so fast. and we will have trade. we will have great trade. and it will be free trade, but it will be fair trade and it will be real. my security plan -- [ applause ] so important. they've taken the jobs from us. my security plan will bring safety to our poorest communities. my ethics plan will end the corruption in our government. [ applause ] corruption is massive.
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we will drain will swamp in washington, d.c. [ cheers and applause ] and replace it with a new government of, by and for the people. believe me. [ cheers and applause ] that is why i have chosen gettysburg to unveil this contract. i'm asking the american people to rise above the noise and the clutter of our broken politics, and to embrace that great faith and optimism that has always been the central ingredient in the american character. and there's nothing better or stronger than the american character. [ cheers and applause ] i am asking the american people to dream big once again. what follows is my 100-day action plan to make america great again. it's a contract between donald
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j. trump and the american voter, and it begins with bringing honesty, accountability and change to washington, d.c. [ cheers and applause ] therefore, on the first day of my term of office, my administration will immediately pursue the following six measures to clean up the corruption and special interests collusion in washington. first, a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on all members of congress. [ cheers and applause ] second, a hiring freeze on all federal employees to reduce federal work force through attrition. exempting military public safety and public health. [ cheers and applause ] third, a requirement that for
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every new federal regulation, two existing regulations must be eliminated. regulations are killing our country and our jobs. fourth, a five-year ban on white house and congressional officials becoming lobbyists after they leave government service. [ cheers and applause ] fifth, a lifetime ban on white house officials lobbying on behalf of a foreign government. [ cheers and applause ] sixth, a complete ban on foreign lobbyists raising money for american elections. that's what's happening. [ applause ] on the same day i will begin taking, and really taking strongly seven actions to protect american workers. our american workers have been treated so badly by politicians
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that don't have their interests at heart. and we're going to change that. we're going to change that very, very fast. first, i will announce my intention to totally renegotiate nafta. one of the worst deals our country has ever made. [ applause ] signed by bill clinton. i'll withdraw from the deal under article 2205. second, i will announce our withdrawal from the transpacific partnership, a potential disaster for our country. [ applause ] third, i will direct my secretary of the treasury to deliver a china currency manipulator. what they have done to us by playing currency is very sad. and i don't blame them. they've been very smart. i blame our politicians for letting this take place. [ applause ]
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so easy to stop. fourth, i will direct the secretary of commerce and u.s. trade representative to identify all foreign trading abuses that unfairly impact american workers, and direct them to use every tool under american and international law to end those abuses immediately. [ applause ] fifth, very importantly, i will lift the restrictions on the production of $50 trillion worth of job-producing american energy reserves -- [ cheers and applause ] -- including shale, oil, natural gas and clean coal. and we will put our miners back to work. [ cheers and applause ] sixth, i will lift the
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obama-clinton road blocks that allow for this vital energy infrastructure projects to go forward. we have road blocks like you've never, ever seen. environmental blocks, structural blocks. we're going to allow the keystone pipeline and so many other things to move forward. [ cheers and applause ] tremendous numbers of jobs and good for our country. we're going to cancel billions in payments to the united nations climate change programs, and use the money to fix america's water and environmental infrastructure. we're paying billions and billions and billions of dollars, we're going to fix our own environment. [ cheers and applause ] additionally, on the first day, i will take the following five actions to restore security and
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constitutional rule of law. we have to do that. cancel every unconstitutional executive action, memorandum, and order issued by president obama. [ cheers and applause ] second, begin the process of selecting a replacement for justice scalia, whose wife, by the way, has a trump sign -- his wife is a phenomenal woman -- has a trump sign in her front yard. isn't that nice? [ cheers and applause ] i just found that out this morning. isn't that nice? he was great. from one of the 20 judges on my list, you know we're going to make great decisions from 20 outstanding judges on a list that we submitted. who will uphold and defense the constitution of the united states. [ applause ]
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third, we will cancel all federal funding of sanctuary cities. [ cheers and applause ] fourth, we will begin removing the more than 2 million criminal illegal immigrants from the country. these are our drug dealers, gang heads, gang members, killers, and cancel visas to foreign countries that won't take them back. [ cheers and applause ] and when hillary clinton was secretary of state, and they had someone who was bad, really bad, and they brought him back to the country and the country wouldn't take them, she said, well, bring him back. we don't want to force the country to take them. there won't be one such instanc.
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believe me. [ applause ] we're going to suspend immigration from terror-prone regions where vetting cannot safely occur. [ cheers and applause ] and if you look at syria, and the migration, we're taking in thousands and thousands of people into our country. we have no idea who they are, what their thought process is, where they come from, and hillary clinton wants to increase the number of those thousands and thousands currently pouring in by 550%. radical islamic terror is right around the corner. we have to be so tough, so smart, so vigilant. we can't allow that to happen. we have enough problems. [ applause ]
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all vetting of people coming into our country will be considered extreme vetting. we will be very careful. next, i will work with congress to introduce the following broader legislative measures and fight for their passage within the first 100 days of my administration. middle class tax relief and simplification act. an economic plan designed to grow the economy 4% per year, and create at least 25 million new jobs through massive tax reduction, and simplification and lifting the restrictions on american energy. [ applause ] we need that so badly. jobs. we need jobs. our jobs have left us. our good jobs have really left us. the largest tax reductions are for the middle class.
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who have been forgotten. [ applause ] the forgotten man and woman, they have been forgotten. the middle class with family of two children will get basically approximately a 35% tax cut. and that's what they can use. and that money will go back into the economy. [ applause ] the current number of brackets will be reduced from seven to three. and tax forms will likewise be greatly simplified. [ applause ] the business rate will be lowered from 35% to 15%. and the trillions of dollars of corporate money overseas can be brought back at a 10% rate. it's stuck. we can't bring it back. 2 1/2 to $5 trillion. companies can't get it back into the country. some companies are actually leaving, not only because taxes
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are so high, but because they can't get their money, and they are actually leaving to get their money. we are going to simplify that. we're going to have them bring the money back into our country and use the money and spend the money on building our country. [ cheers and applause ] and the offshoring act, to discourage companies from laying off workers to relocate in other countries and ship their products back to the united states tax-free. they leave the united states, like carrier, like ford, like so many others, they leave the united states. they fire all of their employees. they go to mexico or another country. they build a beautiful brand-new plant. they hire other people. they take their air conditioners, their cars, whatever they're making, they
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send it tax-free over what will be a very strong border, believe me. [ cheers and applause ] but they send it tax-free across the border, and what do we end up with? we have unemployment. tremendous losses. and we have none of the benefits. so we will establish tariffs that when they do that, there will be consequences. we'll work with them, we'll be nice, we'll be fair, but there has to be consequences. and when they know there are consequences, our companies will stop leaving the united states and going to other countries. [ applause ] the american infrastructure act, leverages publish/private partnerships through tax innocencives to spare $1 trillion in infrastructure investment over the next ten years. our infrastructure is in such trouble. we've doubled our national debt to $20 trillion under president obama.
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in less than eight years, $10 trillion has been added. think of it. and we haven't fixed anything. we haven't fixed anything. what have we done? our roads are broken, our bridges, our tunnels, our hospitals, our schools. and we have $20 trillion in debt. all-time high. that's true, our va hospitals are in bad shape and our va is in very, very bad shape, and we will fix that. we're going to work on fixing that. [ applause ] because our veterans have not been treated properly. we have illegal immigrants who are treated far better in many instances than our veterans, and we're not going to have that. school choice. an education opportunity act. redirects education dollars to give parents the right to send their children to public, private, charter, magnate,
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religious or home schools of their choice. [ cheers and applause ] and so importantly, we're going to end common core and bring education supervision to local communities. [ cheers and applause ] we do so badly on education. if you look at the lists and see sweden, norway, denmark, different countries at the top, you see us at the bottom. and yet by far, per pupil, more money than anybody, and it's not even close. we spend more money per pupil than anybody, not even close. we're at the bottom of the list. other countries spending far less per pupil are at the top of the list. so obviously our current system is not working. we will change it and we will make it good. [ applause ] it expands vocational and technical education, which we've totally forgotten about in this
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country. and make two and four-year colleges more affordable. have you ever gone to school and you've been with people who aren't good students, but they can fix an engine, or they can build a wall, or they can do things that you wouldn't even think about. because we can use some of the ones who build the wall. we're going to need them. we're going to need them. [ cheers and applause ] we're going to need them. but did you ever see that, how they're genius at fixing a car. they can do anything. but history, not so good. physics, not so good. we have to open vocational again. those are the people. these are great people. the repeal and replace obamacare act. [ cheers and applause ] fully repeal obamacare and
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replace it with health savings accounts. we can do that. the health savings account, it's one way, there are numerous ways, but this is one very good way. the ability to purchase health insurance across state lines, which we have to do, because that's competition. the politicians won't let go of it, because the insurance companies, they don't want competition. but we'll open it up, believe me, we'll get rid of that. i've been saying it for years. and let states manage medicaid funds. it will be so good. [ applause ] reforms will also include cutting the red tape at the fda. there are over 4,000 drugs awaiting approval. and we especially want to speed the approval of life-saving medications. [ applause ] and they're looking at drugs that are looking very good, and you have terminal patients that, it's over. these people, they're dying, they want to get the drug. they won't be living much longer. and we study it for years and
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years. at some point, they have to do what they have to do. they have to do it properly. but we have 4,000 different drugs and products waiting in line for approval. and we can't get them approved. we're going to speed up that process very significantly. affordable child care and elder care act allows americans to deduct child care and elder care from their taxes. incentivizes employers to provide on-site -- so important -- child care services. and you see that with a couple of companies, and it's such a great thing to see. and creates tax-free dependent care savings accounts for both young and elderly dependents with matching contributions for low-income families. so good. [ applause ] and illegal immigration act. [ cheers and applause ] funds the construction of a wall
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on the southern border -- don't worry about it, remember, i said mexico's paying for the wall -- with the full understanding that the country of mexico will be reimbursing the united states for the full cost of such a wall. okay? we're going to have the wall. mexico's going to pay for the wall. mexico's -- by the way, i met with the president of mexico, two and a half months ago, wonderful meeting, wonderful person. but i told him, this is a two-way highway, not a one-way highway. we have our people, we have to take care of our people, we have to protect our people. it's got to be a two-way street. otherwise, it's going to be a whole different deal. but it establishes a two-year mandatory minimum federal prison sentence, this is people coming in illegally, for illegally reentering the united states after a previous deportation. and a five-year mandatory
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minimum for illegally reentering for those with felony convictions, multiple misdemeanor convictions, or two or more prior deportations. so when somebody comes in, we send them out. they come back out, they go to prison for quite a while. they come back. they come back again, they go five years. because what's happening is they're coming back ten times. and i could go case after case. they come back. look at what happened in san francisco. five times he came back. on the fifth time he killed kate. five times. but so many others. one ten times came back, killed somebody after ten times. when they get deported, they stay out. otherwise, they have very serious prison terms. they will stay out. once you do that, they will stay out. right now, they have no consequence. they have no consequences. also, reforms on visa rules to
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enhance penalties for overstaying and to ensure open jobs are offered to american workers first. [ applause ] number eight, restoring community safety act. reduces surging crime, drugs and violence by creating a task force on violent crime, and increasing funding for programs that train and assist your local police, who are doing such a great job. believe me. [ applause ] increase the resources for federal law enforcement agencies, and federal prosecutors to dismantle criminal gangs and put violent offenders behind bars or out of our country and into the country where they came from. [ cheers and applause ] restoring national security act, which rebuilds our military, but limiting the defense sequester,
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and expanding military investment. now, at no time practically do we need a military like right now. we don't want to use it. but it's peace through strength. we need a strong military. our military is so terribly depleted. [ applause ] it also provides our great veterans with the ability to receive public va treatment or attend a private doctor of their choice. if they're waiting on line, and i have the plan up, and we've gotten, as you know, tremendous support from veterans, from law enforcement, from veterans, from the military, tremendous support. but if they're waiting on line, and you see 22 suicides a day, people don't even believe it, 22 a day, but if they're waiting on line for seven days, six days, nine days they can't get to see a doctor, and a simple
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procedure, or a simple prescription can solve their problem, and they become very sick, and they die. they die waiting on line. we're going to give them the power to go across the street to a local doctor, a private doctor, a public hospital, or private hospital, all looking to help, and all looking to do business. and we'll pay the bill. so much cheaper, but much more importantly, the veterans will finally be taken care of properly. because what they're going through now is unacceptable. [ applause ] also, we're going to protect our vital infrastructure from the new thing. it's called cyber attack. it establishes new screening procedures for immigration to ensure those who are admitted to our country support our people and our values. we want people that love our country, or can love our country, and people that will love our citizens.
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we want people that can love us. and there are ways through talent of determining that. and other countries do. but we don't. just come on in, folks. come on in. clean up corruption in washington. enacts tough new ethic reforms, to reduce the corrupt influence of special interests, and donors, on our politics. on november 8th, americans will be voting for this 100-day plan to restore prosperity to our country. secure our communities and honesty to our government. this is my pledge to you. and if we follow these steps, we will once more have a government of, by and for the people. and importantly, we will make america great again. [ cheers and applause ]
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believe me. thank you. thank you. thank you very much. thank you. >> all right. you have been listening live to donald trump. you can see him there in gettysburg, pennsylvania. it took him about 17 to 20 minutes before we really got into his contract that he is making with american voters. he spent about 15 minutes, he used the word rig about half a dozen times. he talked about voter fraud. talked about his rival hillary clinton's eligibility to run for president. and he brought up a number of issues, even his accusers. but then he got into his first hundred days in office action plan. and in is so much that he covered. i don't know if we can even cover it in an hour. >> if elected president, donald trump is going to be a very, very busy man during his first hundred days. you saw the image they were
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trying to evoke of, by, and for the people. you saw it at the beginning and end of this speech. i'm not sure anyone is going to say this is equivalent to the gettysburg address. but the trump people wanted to make the change, and where the civil war changed in gettysburg, and we want this to be where things changed in terms of our campaign. noteworthy, though, that he talked about wanting to bring back the time of lincoln, and look to his example. in november of 1863, president lincoln was going to face reelection. he knew that. he knew it was a divided country after the civil war. it was in the months after that that he talked about a need for an election and how he would accept the results of the election. he would stand down even as a wartime president which he knew meant losing the union. also, big question. some of our guests are going to get to coming up of what of the things that donald trump said of
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what he wanted to do in his first hundred days that he legally as president could do. >> i want to bring in michael bender of the "wall street journal." you talked about the historical reference of the speech. he mentioned it time and time again, him unifying the party. but at the michael, he talked about draining the swamp. he talked about a number of things as term limits for congress, hiring freeze, eliminating regulations. so the -- whether or not you like it, he does have to work with other people within the federal government. and it is a very large entity. so he's talking about unification, but at the same time is he alienating men and women who he has to work with? >> yeah, i think he's already done that. i think you're right, the point a little bit earlier of this speech is trump needs to reset his campaign. that's what he's trying to do here today. or that's what his folks are telling him that he needs to do. and rightfully so. he's so far behind in national
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polls. his path in battlegrounds was already narrow. it was already narrow for any republican, frankly. and it's constricting now for him. and if you look at when trump was most successful, it was that time, maybe a couple of weeks in early, mid-september when he was on the teleprompters, when he was more or less pressing his case, and right before the first debate when sort of the wheels started to come off a bit for him again. and what they're trying to do here is focus again on policy. but, you know, to suggest that he's going to do this like lincoln, i mean, the gettysburg address was, you know, was a two-minute speech that invoked a human equality that was guaranteed in the declaration of independence. trump spent that much time today talking about the women who have akised him of sexual misconduct and threatening to sue him. frankly, when you talk about the
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first hundred days in office, the only new thing i heard today was that he plans to sue his accusers within that first hundred days. all these other things have been laid out on his website, since the start of the primary. there was a little bit of reshuffling, you know, the wall has now dropped down among the list of priorities. it sounds like the wall -- building the wall is going to be a jobs program for him. but largely, this was a rehash of things that he's talked about in the past. but he's trying to reset this campaign, trying to take the focus off of the division within his own party, these accusations that he forces himself on women, without their consent, and trying to talk about policy. but he spent the first half of this thing airing out his grievances again. so it will be interesting to see how this -- >> we heard about 10 or 11 minutes of him airing his grievances and saying that he
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didn't like, before he got to his issues, bringing in jack for the columbus dispatch and dayton daily news. ohio right now is the true swing state. real clear politics average has clinton and trump essentially tied, within .4 of a percentage. he talked about trying to break up the time warner merger with at&t, and then he was on talking about comcast and how he didn't like that. are those the kinds of issues that are going to change the hearts and minds of the people in ohio? >> no. in ohio, you need to talk about jobs, jobs, jobs. the speech, if you remember, jack lemmon in the old film, the out-of-towners, standing in new york talking about the people who was mean to him over the last 24 hours, i thought that was what the speech was about. it was like advisers got
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together and said, we have to include this, this, and this, and in the end it didn't hold together. >> mike, jack. appreciate your analysis as we watch this. more presidential news as the race continues. and analysis when we come back. okay, so what's our latest data say? our customer is a 21-year-old female. heavily into basketball. wait. data just changed... now she's into disc sports. ah, no she's not. since when? since now. she's into tai chi. she found disc sports too stressful. hold on. let me ask you this... what's she gonna like six months from now? who do we have on aerial karate? steve. steve. steve. and alexis. uh, no. just steve. just steve. just steve. live business, powered by sap. when you run live, you run simple.
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bringing it back to campaign coverage, but first very important international developments. secretary ash carter is working to meet with -- benjamin hall is an in iraq with the latest on the fight. he did gain access to a network of tunnels that isis has been using. benjamin, can you tell us what you found. >> reporter: first of all, today has been slower than the past few days. as villages here get liberated, they still need to be cleared. isis fighters and snipers keep piping up even after these villages are clear. defense secretary ash carter paid a surprise visit to iraq to visit prime minister abadi. he was here to assess the mosul operation but to push for turkey to be able to play a bigger role
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here, something that was rejected. a burning sulfur plant was torched releasing large amounts of sulfur dioxide into the air. u.s. central command says u.s. troops at bases outside mosul have been putting on masks and suits to protect against the smoke. as you mentioned, we did have a chance to see some of these network of tunnels which have been causing so many problems for the troops. >> many people wondered how high sis was able to withstand and hide from the u.s.-led coalition air strikes. this is how. they dug deep under ground. these tunnels are a key element of isis military vat gee. they cover every town, every village isis held. for the last few weeks, if not months, isis has been living in z these tombs. they brought in electricity. you can see the food they've got down here and the water. it is incredibly hot. they will have been here for months.
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the kurdish peshmerger have cleared this tunnel but say not to touch anything because it may be booby-trapped. they dug straight down for 7.5 meet before cutting their way through the bedrock. it's those tunnels that are such a concern moving forward. the city of mosul is said to be covered in them completely. >> benjamin hall reporting live. thank you so much. in that picture from me irb it shows how dangerous. fallout from the debate coming up after the break.
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. change has to come from outside our very broken system. >> donald trump laying out what would be his first hundred days as president to a small gathering in gettysburg, pennsylvania, promising drastic changes to what he called washington status quo. fox news unearthed video of then secretary of state hillary clinton lecturing staffers on cyber security. is this the latest example of running afoul of the very practices she expects others to follow. remembering two americans who gave the ultimate sacrifice in iraq and afghanistan in the past few days.
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good saturday to you. already been a busy saturday so far with donald trump in gettysburg, pennsylvania, i'm leland vittert. >> i'm elizabeth prann. donald trump unveiling a plan for the first 100 days of his presidency, according to him, before a crowd of suppo supporters in gettysburg, pennsylvania. >> reporter: donald trump is all about the art of the deal. he's trying to get the american people to agree with him on the terms of a contract. he's calling it the 100-day action plan. at one point during his remarks this afternoon that just wrapped up, he told voters basically to vote for the plan, and it is very much aimed at blowing up the system in washington, d.c.
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that he says a lot is rigged to help the clinton machine and not regular folks. >> it's a contract between donald j. trump and the american voter. and it begins with bringing honesty, accountability and change to washington, d.c. >> reporter: trump at the very beginning ran through the things he wants to do on the first day in office, if he wins. impose term limits on members of congress. impose a hiring freeze in federal government except for military, public safety and public health employees. he says every time somebody proposes a new regulation they want to get through, they also have to tell him which two existing regulations they would get rid of. he says there should be a five-year ban on congressmen becoming lobbyists, also impose a lifetime ban on white house officials lobbying on behalf of foreign governments once they leave the white house. he would also on day one impose
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a ban of foreign lobbyists raising money for american elections. trump ran through some of his greatest hits from the campaign trail. he said he would build a wall and eventually get mexico to pay for it. he said he would suspend immigration from terror-prone regions tough to vet. he would cancel funding for sanctuary cities and protect american cyber infrastructure more effectively from attacks than it is right now. he also said, another 100 day item would be to start the process of replacing the late justice antonin scalia on the supreme court whose wife, he said today, has a trump sign on her front lawn. it was not just talk about what he would do in the first 100 day ts. he really laid in to hillary clinton off the top of his remarks and did something he has not done yet, in a policy speech like this one, he talked about the controversy surrounding these women, almost a dozen women who came forward with allegations of sexual misconduct over the last several weeks.
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he said that after the election, he plans to sue everybody that came forward with a bad story about him. that's something we have not heard, this into key an eye on. elizabeth? >> peter doocy reporting live, thank you so much. a fox news alert on the other side of this election, again this morning wikileaks posting more e-mails exposing the inner workings of the clinton campaign and giving more credence to accusations of pay-to-play politics. this as fox news unearthed a six-year-old video of then secretary of state clinton warning staffers to be careful with her cyber security. molly hen berg joins us with that. >> long before the nation knew about her personal e-mail system and server, then secretary of state hillary clinton warned state department employees to follow the rules when it came to
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e-mails and computers. here is a video from 2010 obtained by foxnews.com. >> as state department employees we have the responsibility . >> meanwhile, more wikileaks revelations. in this case what some of clinton's closest advisers think about catholics, including jennifer pom airy. in 2011 when she was at the center for american progress, she and others were e-mailing about why some conservative republicans were catholic. she wrote, quote, i imagine they think it is the most socially acceptable politically conservative religion. their rich friends would not understand if they became
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evangelical. pom airy says she does not, quote, recognize that e-mail. another wikileak documents describes a payment by the king of morocco to the clinton global initiative in exchange for the charity hoeflding its international meeting in morocco in 2018 l 15. the e-mail from huma abedin says this was hrc's idea. our office approached the moroccans and they 100% believe they are doing this at her request. the king has personally committed approximately $12 million both for the endowment and to support the meeting. she, meaning hillary clinton, created this mess and she knows it. clinton did not end up attending the event, although bill clinton and chelsea clinton did. leland? >> molly hen berg live. here is matt can't nettie from the washington free beacon, done great reporting on wikileaks and
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some of the things coming out of this. when you see these e-mails, it seems pretty clear that there is a quid pro quo of putting a couple million bucks to the clinton foundation and secretary of state hillary clinton is either go into show up or will at least say she shows up and maybe renege. >> give the money and you'll get a speech, right? what's fascinating to me, leland, about these e-mails, it kind of confirms a lot of things we already knew about hillary clinton. she's a very cautious, very calculating politician who is also very transactional. so whether it's giving a speech in return for a $12 million donation or maybe even favor trading, remember she cited lincoln in the second debate and that movie where he's trading favors in order to get the 13th amendment passed. this is who hillary clinton is. that type of personality and those traits would follow her into the white house if she wins. >> one thing that's interesting, though, is we're giving a real inside look at the clinton campaign itself.
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these e-mails, whoever stole them, be it the russians or somebody else, if you looked at almost any other campaign and really looked at sort of the under belly of the internal machinations, you'd see the same petty jealous si, the same antics, this person said this mean thing about me, that mean thing about them. the question is would you see that kind of favor trading in the transactional behavior, you vote for my bill, i vote for your bill. you do this for me, i show up at your event. >> over a decade in d.c., i do think you'd see it, probably not as explicit as in the huma abedin e-mail that molly quoted in herpes. this is typical of politics i think on both sides of the aisle. what the clintons do and what the hillary clinton team does, they're a little bit more up front about it and it's just much more obvious and gratuitous in some way when the clintons engage in it. >> they put a price tag on the
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lincoln bedroom. there was a price tag at the rose law firm that got deals done in arkansas. >> things we've known about the clintons for decades now. it would continue if she becomes president. >> you talk about the huma abedin e-mails and how blatant, if you will, they are. more from those e-mails in this latest wikileaks dump, continuing from what molly was talking about of the $12 million to the clinton global initiative for showing up in who rocco at a speech. in november 2014, huma abedin writing, no matter what happens, she, hillary clinton, will be hosting the cgi on may 5 through 7, 2015. her presence was a condition for the moroccans to proceed so there is no going back on this. this is after her time as secretary of state. does that change things? >> one of the things it reveals is that the political concerns
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from within the campaign about this speech because here is the country, the kingdom of morocco, cited by hillary's own state department for human rights violatio violations. the campaign was very much aware and is aware about hillary's messes. in these e-mails it's interesting to see them try to clean that up. there's the other great e-mail where one of her top aides says the one thing we know about hillary is she has suboptimal political instinct. so if the team knows that, it's actually in a way kind of heartening. >> very quickly. more e-mails to come. do we have any idea how many more wikileaks dumps there are? >> i think the only person who knows that is julian assange. >> tough to get ahold of since they cut his internet. >> when they do come out, we
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know you'll be bringing them to us. more news from the democratic team. hillary clinton and tim kaine are campaigning today in the very important state of pennsylvania. our rich edison joins us from pittsburgh where clinton and kaine will take the stage soon. are you seeing an increase in activities? is the clinton campaign stepping up things at all? >> reporter: yes. the clinton campaign left much of the campaigning over the past two weeks to surrogates. they cited hillary clinton's need to prepare for the debates. the debates are finished and she herself is doing a lot more campaigning personally. yesterday she was in cleveland, ohio, that's a state where recent polls show a tied race between the co-two candidates. there she left with a couple of activists from black lives matter and spoke to cuyahoga community college where she slammed donald trump for his
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refusal to unequivocally say he would support the results of this election. >> we know in our country the difference between leadership and dictatorship, right? the peaceful transition of power is one of the things that sets us apart. it's how we hold our country together no matter who is in charge? >> clinton and cluning mate tim kaine will campaign on both sides of pennsylvania. the first event here in pittsburgh. later this afternoon she heads to philadelphia. real clear politics average of polling shows clinton up several points, 47.8% to 41.6%. focusing on the battleground states, ohio, pennsylvania, tomorrow north carolina and monday new hampshire to try to close off a. >> democrats are talking about really sweeping the house and
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sena senate. is that a pos snblt. >> they are openly discussing it. they're saying hillary clinton white house, chuck schumer leading the senate and speaker pelosi again in the house of representatives. if you look at a number of these states states, pennsylvania you have senator pat toomey, the republican incumbent here. he's up about a couple of percentage points in polling in over katy mcginty. that is much better than donald trump is performing here. the test case for this and one that exemplifies it is ohio where senator rob portman, the republican incumbent, is up substantially over the former democratic governor there, ted strickland. that's essentially what democrats are trying to hope to reverse to ride this wave, as they say, through the election and try to get the house and senate that way. you still have a number of republican downballot candidates still performing much better
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than the republican candidate in a number of these states. >> perhaps voters will vote up and down the ticket. rich edson, thank you so much. whichever candidate wins, it will be a steep climb to win over the hearts of americans. both candidates have higher unfavorable ratings than favorable. just 47% of likely voters have a favorable opinion of clinton. as we know, she struggled to win key democratic voting blocs with the same numbers that president obama saw. what does that mean for clinton heading into the final stretch? thomas shaller is from the university of maryland in baltimore county. thank you for joining us. >> great to be here. >> if she does win, we've been spending the better half of an hour talking and listening about if donald trump wins. let's switch gears. if hillary clinton wins the election, how does she govern, how does that look like if she has such high unfavorability ratings? >> lawyers have what they call a theory of the case for trial.
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my theory of the case for this election is very fascinating. we have the two candidates with the highest negatives. both win their primaries. for one party, they never should party elect the least likely candidate in their field of choice. yet both parties did. i think part of that is going back to understanding how bush and obama won. our rising polarization began in the late '80s and early '90s. bush had a national catastrophe, the country was no more united after eight years than they were before. obama arrived to the election on the biggest economic crisis since the big depression. i think the country is done with this. there's no red america, no blue america. hillary clinton or donald trump, it doesn't matter which one. they'll come in with very difficult ability to read. the two camps are done with each other and it's a war of each against the other. >> so is she a product of the uniqueness of the election or is this unfavorable rating really
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because of her -- she spent 30 years in public service, there's been a lot of scandals connected with her. is it more her inherent character? >> one of the things she says on the campaign trail, people like me if i'm working. she's plus 20 during her four years of secretary of state. as soon as she starts running for office, now she's net negative 12 or 13 points. it's when she's running for office people don't like her. when she's working whether as first lady, senator or secretary of state, her approval ratings are very good. the problem is when people view her as a woman with ambition, that's when you see her numbers go down. i think that's an unfortunate thing. >> she has to get elected first. i read some of your opinions, you say there's been little coverage of women voters. i have a little bone to pick with that. do we need to be focusing on so much a woman voter profile just
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because we have a woman running for president. >> we have a woman run for president, but not as a major party nominee. like i said, this is the first time we've had a major party nominee. we've had two women run for vice president. we have down scale working white voters, half of whom are women. there haven't been a lot of stories out there asking women what does it mean to have a potential first female president. and i think part of the reason that people are a little less excited about the possibility of a first female president is because her husband was president. if you know your electoral history, as you probably do, elizabeth, this notion of winning in your own right. barbara mccull i can is the first to win in her own race, not following her husband or father into office. that took to 1986, almost 200 years after signing the constitution. hillary clinton is coming in in a way the pioneering women came in, on the heels of their husbands dying and retiring. that's unfortunate, unlike black
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americans who got to see barack obama who became the first black president. it would have been cleaner if sarah palin had won outright. this is history as we've seen it in the past. unfortunately a woman sometimes needs to have the husband pave the trail for her. >> you talked about the women voting. that's an interesting voting bloc. what voting bloc do you find most compelling that maybe you aren't seeing as much enthusiasm as maybe we did in 2008 and 2012. >> i think one o of the biggest questions going into 2017 is the obama coalition going to hold together, particularly african-americans? we saw record turnout from african-americans. will that hold for hillary clinton? i think that's an open question. will it hold beyond hillary clinton? i think this would have been true no matter who the democrats nominated. will latinos be there? they supported her over obama by a two-to-one ratio. can she keep together the
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latino, youth vote. is that obama coalition, and she clearly rain as an heir to the obama era, not her husband's era. can she keep that coalition together? we won't know until november 8th. >> professor, thank you so much. very interesting. it's about getting people to the polls. we can talk about enthusiasm and talk about rallies. it's whether they show up. >> bill clinton was considered the first black president according to toni morrison. we'll see if hillary clinton is viewed as the first black woman president. >> thank you so much. after the election, if donald trump wins, he told us what he would do in his first 100 days in office. our political panel on the what he wants to do is actually possible. >> we will drain the swamp in washington, d.c. and replace it with a new government of, by and
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for the people. believe me. that is why i have chosen gettysburg to unveil this. >> remembering two americans who paid the ultimate sacrifice this week to defend our freedom including an explosives expert and navy officer in iraq. a 40-year-old civilian contractor working in a munitions plant in afghanistan killed by hostile forces. >> mike died while performing a very critical u.s. army mission in afghanistan this week, one day his 40th birthday. (music playing) ♪ push it real good... (announcer vo) or you can take a joyride. bye bye, errands, we sing out loud here. siriusxm. road happy.
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attack called a distributed denial of service attacks. junk internet traffic overwhelming the servers until they shut down. frid friday's attack, guiding internet traffic and providing services to some of america's biggest companies. alarmingly, hackers in this case took control of tens of millions of everyday hous hold items connected to the internet, baby monitors, printers, smart tvs and redirected their data to overwhelm these websites. >> we've turned everything into
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a computer, smart phone, smart refrigerator, ip connected to the internet surveillance camera. these become an army of ants overwhelming these resources in a way they never anticipated. >> a hacktivist group said we didn't do this to attract federal agents, only to test power. this group has falsely taken credit for attacks before. nonetheless, yesterday's attack comes amid wikileak's presidential e-mail dumps and concerns over russian hackers influencing our election process. >> bryan llenas reporting live, thank you so much. the pentagon is identifying the sailor killed in roadside bomb attack in iraq this week. he is 34-year-old navy chief petty officer jason finnen, part of the american team assisting
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in the fight against isis. he is the fourth u.s. combat death in iraq since the fight began in august of 2014. he leaves behind a wife and a 7-year-old son. >> mike was a very dedicated, loyal and reliable employee. his goal was always to do more than 100%. >> it's unbelievable, hard to accept. >> in oklahoma friends are mourning the loss of michael so sauro who was killed one day after his 40th birthday. his remains are back in the united states, and he will be arriving in his hometown next week. friends say even though he is gone, they will carry on a beloved tradition spending every friday night chili's. they risked it all to make it to the border when tragedy
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struck. trapped in the wreckage and the details coming up. donald trump with a new war of words in the major battleground state of pennsylvania. >> hillary clinton is not running against me, she is running against change. and she's running against all of the american people and all of the american voters. (vo) combine the right things.
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today donald trump is revealing what his first 100 days in office will look like in historic gettysburg, pennsylvania. joining me to break it down for a fair and balanced debate, fox news contributor angela mcgloun and democratic strategist kevin chaifetz. angela, i want to start with
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you. i want to play a sound bite. there was about 15 minutes before we heard donald trump's 100-day plan. he sort of listed a number of grievances. he talked about voter fraud, about hillary clinton's eligibility and then he talked about his accusers. listen to this. >> every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign, total fabrication. the events never happened, never. all of these liars will be sued after the election is over. okay, angela. we heard this and we also heard about the dishonesty of media. before we even heard of a game plan. was it effective or did it take away of the importance of his plan as a president elect? >> donald trump suing whoever lied on them, doesn't put money
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back into the pockets of us. some people care, but some people don't. i think the plan that he laid out dealing with the tax policy, dealing with bringing jobs back, dealing with tax policy and trade policy, that's better than talking about suing people. >> kevin, there are a lot of undecided voters, perhaps even democrats watching us today. was he specific enough? was it effective and is there a feasible way to accomplish all these things he wants to do in 100 short days? >> i tell you, elizabeth, the mushy middle elects presidents. one of the problems we've had this whole campaign is he really hasn't reached out beyond his base. i think angela is right. the popular states they talked about, tax policy, school choice. people want to hear those kind of issues. but goodness, here is the thing. he steps on those kind of potentially encouraging messages by really getting back in the mud. i don't think the average voter, particularly the people he needs
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to win in order to get this election going in his favor, they don't want to hear about him suing these women. i thought he stepped on his message. >> angela, agree or disagree? >> here is the great power of his speech. you know the saying money is power? the more money the government takes from you, the more power the government has. donald trump wants to give that power back to the american people. you know better what to spend on yourself than big brother government. so i think, if he sticks to his tax plans, the jobs plan. we're the saudi arabia of coal. clean coal technology is wonderful. those things will help him. speaking about suing and being a victim and things being rigged, people are suffering out there, elizabeth. they're living from paycheck to paycheck. >> how does he prioritize it? we didn't hear him talk about immigration until he was almost done. what is most important to him and is he addressing what's most important to voters right now? >> actually he is not. he did at the end.
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it's just like he can't help himself. i think he's right about one thing. we saw in the democratic primary with bernie sanders, americans do want change, but they want someone to bring us all together. one of your guests earlier talked about winning the hearts and minds. you're not going to wind the hearts and minds focused on your personal stuff. >> kevin, i think that's why he did it from gettysburg. lincoln had a divided nation. we're divided today. united we stand, divided we fall. if donald trump stays on the a game and talks about policy, when i ran for congress, i did not answer to my opponent's accusations against me because the voters of mississippi did not care about that. he needs to stay on point. >> angela, he talked about unity, and you can answer, of course, kevin. but when he first started speaking, he said he wanted to drain the swamp, reduce the size of government in almost every facet. these are folks who he has to work with when he gets to
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office. >> listen, during campaigns people say things and a lot of feelings are hurt. but at the end of the day, we all are americans and we love america. if it's president trump or if it's president clinton, we've been through so much in this country, i believe that the congress will work with the next president. >> kevin, you can get the last word on that. >> well, he needs to convey that. you managed lincoln. this was no lincoln's gettysburg address. president lincoln didn't talk about the personal challenges or problems he had. he talked about a healing america. i think clinton needs to do more of that as well. >> kevin and angela, thank you so much. we appreciate you coming on. we're now learning a little more about how facebook does things internally, especially as it relates to donald trump's posts on the social media giant. it actually sprauned an internal debate at facebook. we're learning some employees push to remove the presidential
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nominee's comments last year about banning muslims from entering the united states calling them hate speech. no way said mark zuckerberg who decided censuring the candidate would be -- of course, we don't have to tell you fox news is your election headquarters. tomorrow on fox news sunday chris wallace will be interviewing trump campaign manager kellyanne conway and house democratic caucus chairman xavier becerra. on election day, tuesday, november 8th, we'll have all encompassing all day coverage right here on the fox news channel. >> so will the candidates be judged by their flaws or promises. a lot of promises from donald trump today. we're going to break down how one very important group of voters is really struggling now
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to reach a decision. >> ultimately when we get past this particular election, no matter who is president, democrat or republican, it will force some soul searching about how should christians think about politics. >> it's all talk. >> here we go again. >> really bad judgment. >> issues, not insults. >> she should be ashamed of herself. your car insurance policy is 22 pages long. did you read every word? no, only lawyers do that. so when you got rear-ended and needed a tow, your insurance company told you to look at page five on your policy.
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from one of the 20 judges on my list, you know we're going to
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make great decisions from 20 outstanding judges on a list that we submitted who will uphold and defend the constitution of the united stat states. >> donald trump an hour ago on what his first 100 days in office will look like, talking about the supreme court and appointing conservative judges, a clear nod to evangelical christians and religious conservatives. there's serious questions on whether they'll turn out to vote. john ward from yahoo news on this. as you talk to evangelicals around the country, are they listening to what donald trump is saying on the stump in the past six or eight months, or are they looking at donald trump going back 10, 15, 20 years in their decision of who to vote for? >> i think all of it. i think they've paid closer attention as he's been a candidate for president. if you talk about the 2005 tape that came out, i think you had a
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lot of evangelicals say that's in the past. but i think where yu see the breakdown is a little generational. older evangelicals are more willing to forgive because they're more inclined to support trump. younger evangelicals are less so. >> how important does character come into this versus view point. >> trump's viewpoint or the evangelical viewpoint? >> decision on trump's character versus a decision on their own viewpoint? >> i think character -- the older evangelicals who support trump have taken a lot of heat. in the '90s guys like ralph reid were saying we're going to get bill clinton out of the white house, we're going to get somebody with character back in the white house. they made a lot of comments about character. now they're supporting -- >> liberty university there are students protesting jerry falwell junior because he supports trump. >> they oppose trump for many
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reasons. some of them see him as just dangerous and unqualified for the presidency. that has nothing to do with his faith. others feel he discredits the faith for reasons beyond his character. >> more of a cerebral view of why they're not going to support him. >> i think that's right. >> rather than just republican versus democrat. one thing i want to point out. religious conservative voters, not necessarily evangelicals, is utah. take a look at the latest poll out of utah. evan mcmullin, a former cia officer now running for president. 31%, donald trump 27%, hillary clinton 24%. mcmullin has home-field advantage, from utah, also a mormon. at the same time, though, the last time an independent candidate won a state, we've got to go back to george wallace. >> yeah, and he won millions of votes. he had a pretty big impact
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there. mcmullin is a long shot. >> he's not going to be the president, but he certainly has a chance to make a point in utah. >> he sure does. there is a way in which evangelicals who oppose trump have said that the evangelical christian church in america is going to regret the mormon church is the one that stood up and opposed donald trump. >> to that point, evangelicals don't have to vote up against trump, they youft have to not show up to make a real difference in a number of states, a number of swing states. how worried is the republican operation as a whole, the rnc, about the down-ballot races as it relates to republicans saying i'm staying home. >> they worry about it. it's white suburban women in ohio. they're worried about the impact. i think there's a lot of people who, if they're opposing trump, they do see it as important to get out and vote. you're going to have some that don't vote and that hurts the republican ticket.
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we'll see how that works. i think a lot will vote mcmullin and still vote down-ballot. >> the documents are on yahoo? >> yes, evangelical exiles is our name for it. >> thanks for coming. >> thanks. breaking news developing on a media giants that may be about to be snapped up by an even bigger telecommunications company. stick with us.
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the "wall street journal" report is reporting at&t has reached an agreement in principle to buy time warner, what could be the biggest deal in the world this year. valued at more than $80 billion. terms could be announced as early as this afternoon. in agreed upon, the telecon company would control cable channels, hbo, cnn, warner studios and other media assets. at&t acquired directv just last engineer. it's not clear if this deal will be approved by government regulators. we'll keep you posted. with the start of football, athletes protesting during the national anthem, taking a knee, not standing up, became a national controversy.
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a singer's actions during an nba game is taking this to a whole new level. anita vogel following this from the west coast newsroom. >> fans who showed up to the miami heat game in miami last night probably weren't expecting a social protest to tip-off the game, but that's exactly what they got. ♪ whose broad stripes and bright stars ♪ >> den nausea lawrence, a part-time employee of the heat kneeled in protest. she works on the team's game night operations staff is also a social worker. she posted on her facebook page about what she called the value of fighting against injustice. her statement reads in part, quote, i didn't get paid to sing the national anthem, nor was this a moment of any sort of fame. black lives matter is a far larger than a hash tag it's a rallying cry. until our cry is rightfully
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heard, protests will still happen and demands will still be made. this is certainly not the first time we've seen this kind of protest. there have been many, starting with san francisco 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick who earlier this year sat down and took a knee during the anthem during preseason and regular season games. several other nfl players followed suit. he said his actions have to do with the oppression of people of color and on going issues of police brutality. he has many supporters but is also regularly booed by fans who say the time to protest is not during the country's national anthem. no real reaction from last night's audience. the management of the heat says they were unaware the performer would be protesting during the anthem. no word yet on this will affect her employment with the team in any way, but we'll certainly keep you posted on that. back to you. >> we shall see. anita vogel in los angeles. thank you. coming up, a look back at an
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earlier political era. 20 years ago when we had the last contract with america. anyone with type 2 diabetes knows how it feels to see your numbers go up, despite your best efforts. but what if you could turn things around? what if you could... love your numbers? discover once-daily invokana®. it's the #1 prescribed sglt2 inhibitor that works to lower a1c.
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if donald trump's new contract for america sounded familiar to you, there may be a reason for that. similar themes about ending corruption and cutting the size of government formed the bedrock of an earlier gop movement. but unlike today's wall-to-wall media coverage of donald trump's speech, republicans back in 1994
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had to buy an ad in tv guide magazine to guest past critics. >> one columnist called our contract an air ball. i recognize sadly that the washington press corps is too often the pre torian guard of the left but it tells you something. it tells you something about how out of touch they are with the american people, that every item in our contract is supported by 60% or more of the american people. >> bill clinton was in the second year of his presidency when newt gingrich delivered that speech. less than two months later, he would lead republicans to a stunning victory that ended the democrats' 50-year stronghold in the house of representatives, some of the themes we heard today in donald trump's speech.
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>> and began after that contract with america, one of the great times of american prosperity as well that we all remember. big guess on the donald trump contract. next hour we'll tackle that. that's all for us here in washington. down to the wire folks as we are now just 17 days until voters decide who will lead this nation as president. both campaigns are hitting the campaign trail especially in those critical battleground states. welcome to a brand new hour of inside election headquarters, i'm uma pemmaraju. donald trump taking a page from the history books 153 years ago, delivering a major speech in that historic city to showcase his vision in bringing the country together in one has been one o of the most polarizing elections in recent memory. trump is defining what he wants to do in the

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