tv The Kelly File FOX News October 28, 2016 1:00am-2:01am PDT
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not even two of hillary clinton's top campaign officials realized how big the e-mail scandal was when it first broke. all coming from e-mails you were never supposed to see. this is "special report." good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. from its launch, the clinton campaign has been obsessed with secrecy. now with internal conversations from hacked e-mails put out by wikileaks for the world to see, we're learning that as suspected, that secrecy led to hillary clinton's use of a private e-mail server in the first place. today, e-mails revealed just how
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in the dark her top aides were kept when word about the private server hit the news. ed henry has details in our top story. >> reporter: even the top two officials in hillary clinton's campaign were kept in the dark on the full extent of her e-mail scandal by either the candidate herself or others in the inner circle. as the story broke, campaign chairman john podesta wrote to mook. mook responded, nope, we brought up the existence of e-mails in research this summer. we're told everything was taken care of. that came as "the new york times" posted its first story late on march 2, 2015, about clinton's use of a personal e-mail account as secretary of state. a dramatic sign the potential next commander in chief shares critical information with only a couple of trusted advisers, like abedin and mills. another new e-mail shows while
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mills was chief of staff at the state department, she was extensively discussing clinton foundation business and other matters with podesta on her account and warned if a note was sent to her state.gov account, as a reminder, government e-mail is maintained as federal records. the political damage was too much for a liberal activist who wrote podesta on the e-mail scandal, like whole thing is bleeping insane. despite that, other e-mails exposed clinton's campaign aiding plotting a strategy to use a tv ad to tie the e-mail flap to benghazi, to confuse voters into thinking the scandal was just a republican conspiracy ahead of her appearance before chairman gowdy. >> kevin mccarthy saying the committee investigating benghazi and clinton's e-mails was created to destroy her candidacy. >> everybody thought hillary clinton was unbeatable. we put together a benghazi
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special committee. >> reporter: a clinton aide writing, if the objective is to connect e-mails, benghazi and conflate the two, i'm not sure we know whether we can credibly do that. we'll get a read from focus groups. also spilling out, damaging e-mails from former clinton intimate doug band, laying out how bill clinton lined his pockets. a 2011 memo revealing the plan, quote, yielded more than $30 million for him personally, with $66 million to be paid out later. another mook e-mail said he was aligning with the white house to hire a top aide at the dnc when they claimed to neutral, a sign the deck was stacked against bernie sanders. tonight we take a look at the man who rebuilt a former president's brand after the monica lewinsky scandal and impeachment and how that job led to millions of dollars for the clintons. from intertwined relationships through the clinton foundation,
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we have the story of bill clinton's body man, doug band. >> reporter: doug band is at the center of charitable giving and for profit activities of the clinton foundation for what he calls bill clinton inc. >> he was the architect that fu foundation, so his wife could charge. >> reporter: band was an aide who used that connection to become a partner in a consulting firm, rememberi representing so companies in the world. if they wanted access to the clintons, band had the key. >> he didn't have much money to his name. it was he and doug band together that sort of teamed that was off on their own in the early years after the white house. doug band really kind of built him into this global brand. >> reporter: band's price for access has become a political hot potato in the campaign home stretch.
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>> mr. band called the arrangement unorthodox. the rest of us call it outright corrupt. >> reporter: even chelsea took note. after an audit raised red flags. in november of 2011, she e-mailed, my father was told they have examples of doug pushing for and receiving free memberships and of multiple examples of teneo hustling business at cgi. her complaints sparked a feud between her and band. he wrote three week later, this is the third time this week she has gone to daddy to change a decision or interject herself in the process. >> he was resentful of her asserting that role. he saw her as what he has called a quote spoiled brat. >> reporter: two weeks after that, cheryl mills fired off an e-mail to band outlining changes to the business model. a month later, after receivie i an e-mail, band confided, as
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they say the apple doesn't fall far. a kiss on the cheek while she's sticking a knife in the back and front. doug band did not respond to our inquiry for an interview. teneo said it didn't receive any financial benefit from this. the clinton campaign said it's not confirming the authenticity of e-mails hacked by the russian government to influence this election. >> not denying that authenticity either. thank you. donald trump is once again raising the possibility of voting fraud. he says there are already problems during early voting in texas. take a look at that in a moment. it comes as trump continues to target a handful of states with big electoral vote counts. carl cameron is with the trump campaign tonight in ohio where the nominee will hold a rally in the next hour. ♪ pride in every american heart ♪ >> reporter: in ohio with 12 days left, donald trump hailed polls showing a toss-up race.
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>> early voting is under way. get out and vote. we don't want to give this away. >> reporter: the latest state polls show a tossup in red georgia. trump at 44% to clinton's 43%. in iowa, it's an actual tie at 44%. in north carolina, clinton edges trump 47% to 43%. in virginia, clinton tops trump 50% to 38%. trump continues to cast doubt on polls and the process, calling the polls rigged and pouncing on reports of votie ining irregulis in texas. if trump loses, joe walsh tweeted, i'm voting for trump. on november 9 if he loses, i'm grabbing my musket. you in? such threats are common and began to surface at events several weeks ago. >> if hillary clinton gets in, i myself, i'm ready for a revolution. we can't have her in. >> you don't -- >> i'm just saying it.
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i'm like trump. >> reporter: trump who has not agreed to accept the outcome of the election appeared with his wife and refused to say if he would work with clinton if she wins. >> i want to make that decision at a later time. i'm not saying i'm not or i am. hopefully, i won't have to make that decision. i believe we will win. >> reporter: 88% of clinton supporters say they will accept a trump victory. 10% won't. 56% of trump backers say they will accept a clinton victory. 34% say, no way. his wife said part of her work with children as first lady would be helping them understand appropriate communications online. ironic given some of her husband's saltier posts. >> we need to teach them how to use it, what is right to say, what is not right to say. because it's very bad out there. children get result. >> reporter: trump complaint that the media's bias is resonating with voters. 87% of trump supporters say the
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media is biased. a third of clinton supporters say the media is biased. overall, more than half, 56% say he's not getting a fair shake. >> carl cameron with the trump campaign in ohio. thank you. let's go now into those claims of voter irregularities in texas. tonight eric shawn has the latest on what we know. >> reporter: is it voter fraud or the voter's fault. voters in three texas counties claim their votes were switched on voting machines, saying the choice of donald trump went to hillary clinton instead. that prompted trump to tweet -- >> i checked closely. turn the thing and look at it. make sure the people i voted for were highlighted. >> reporter: in a facebook post, a woman wrote --
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election officials believe it was inadvertent on her part and she says her correct vote was cast. i fishl officials blamed a software problem and that has been resolved. the county clerk said -- in every recent presidential election, some voters using touch screen machines have claimed their votes were changed. we reported on this last week. can a touch screen switch a vote? >> people say that they can. i have never seen it do it. >> reporter: election officials urge voters to double-check their votes. others blame outdated voting machine technology for the mixups. >> you are talking about
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machines that were purchased at least ten years ago. when you think about that, that's long before we had iphones or ipads. the technology, touch screen technology was not nearly as advanced as it is today. >> reporter: texas governor greg abbott said the largest voter fraud investigation in the state's history is in terrent county. thousands of absentee ballots were found with improper signatures. they are investigating. >> we have a team here, you and your team looking into serious allegations, if there are any around the country, about voter fraud. there are rumors on the internet about voting machines somehow connected to george sorros in 16 states. what's the truth on this? >> this one is not true. the company is smartmatic. it says george does not own it. the machines are not being used in the election next month. the only link is the company's chairman, mark brown.
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he is a member of sorros' open society foundation. he was once u.s. secretary-general's chief of staff. >> the liberal billionaire supporting hillary clinton. thank you. in our issues that matter segment tonight, immigration. it came in at number nine on our list of most important topics this election season. that's by polls. some people were surprised by that positioning. immigration, of course, is a particularly strong issue in texas. the two presidential nominees could not be much further apart. >> they are bringing drugs. they are bringing crime. they are rapists. >> i am in favor of comprehensive immigration reform. >> reporter: two very different opinions. >> we have some bad hombres here. we're going to get them out. >> reporter: one contentious topic. >> i don't want to rip families apart. i don't want to be sending
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parents away from children. >> reporter: how to tackle the issue of immigration? for frank, like so many americans -- >> it's a little scary. >> reporter: this is not about rhetoric. it's personal. >> you want a drug dealer coming through your backyard every week? >> reporter: frank is a vegetable farmer in texas. his land butts up against the rio grande river. in this part of texas, water is all that separates mexico from the united states. >> the border is border. people coming across, thousands, every month. >> reporter: he says he is torn. while security is paramount, he needs a robust work force. >> our labor is getting tighter and tighter. every spring we lose crops. >> reporter: under part of his immigration plan, donald trump originally called for immediately deporting the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants already calling the
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u.s. home. he has since said he will focus on kicking out drug lords and criminals first. then after building his wall, make a determination on the rest. though a trump supporter, he says he is afraid of what that could mean for his farming business. considering an estimated 70% of the country's agriculture employees are undocumented. >> if he takes 70% of the workers in any industry and try to get them out, it's going to be devastating. >> reporter: across town -- >> it concerns me. >> reporter: this man is also pondering the implications of each candidate's position. >> it's hard for us to listen to people come down and tell us how safety is. >> reporter: he is in favor of mr. trump's platform. >> the first thing to do is to stop the illegal traffic. >> reporter: while trump's strategy is keeping people out,
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the cornerstone of secretary hillary clinton's immigration policy has been comprehensive reform, including securing the border. she vows to create a pathway to citizenship within her first 100 days in office. >> i can be a good citizen. i can be a great american citizen. >> reporter: this man came to america at age 17. he attended high school and college in texas. an option that wouldn't have been on the table under trump's plan. as senator in 2003, secretary clinton co-sponsored legislation to protect people like marco. and she still supports it. >> we want an opportunity to be able to stay with our families. and succeed in the american dream. >> reporter: there's one facet both candidates agree on. extreme vetting and criminal background checks for not only immigrants coming in but refugees as well, syrian or otherwise. someone like this woman.
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>> translator: it's impossible not to cry. to leave everything behind. >> reporter: she says her husband was kidnapped by cartels. so she fled her native country of el salvador with her 2-month-old daughter. she says it took about 14 days before finally arriving at the texas-mexico border and surrendering to border patrol. >> translator: very afraid. i was afraid for her. i was afraid she would get sick, that she would die. >> reporter: frank says he feels compassion for people like her and others who truly want a better life for their families. but he can't help but wonder at what cost. >> we have to get control of the people coming across that we know who is here. >> reporter: a recent fox news poll shows 77% of all registered voters actually support a path to legal citizenship versus mass deportati deportation. republican primary voters echoed
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those sentiments earlier this year in nearly every state with an exit poll. >> thank you. tomorrow we continue our ten-part series. the issue tomorrow, foreign policy. we continue all of these issues that matter along the way to election day. up next, we are taking you to the other front in the war against isis in iraq. first, here is what some of our affiliates are covering. philadelphia, amtrak agrees to pay $265 million to settle claims related to last year's deadly derailment that killed eight people and injured northern 200 others. lawyers who noti s say they wil money by june. a state official says officials in north dakota are using non-lethal shotgun beanbag rounds and pepper spray to remove protesters demonstrating against the dakota access
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pipeline. the activists set up camp on land owned by the company. they said the new camp was their line in the land. it continues at this hour. this is a live look at los angeles from our fox 11 affiliate. one story there tonight, police have arrested a man suspected of using a sledgehammer to destroy republican presidential candidate donald trump's star on the hollywood walk of fame. the hollywood chamber of commerce which maintains the tourist attraction says it will take several days to repair trump's star. that's tonight's live look outside the beltway from "special report." "special report." we'll be right back.
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be the next president, made their first joint appearance of the campaign this afternoon. it happened at a battleground state where there happens to be a key senate race up for grabs. jennifer griffin is covering that story tonight from north carolina. >> we go high when they go low. >> reporter: with 12 days left to go, hillary clinton called on the democrat with the highest favorability rating to get out the vote. >> as you are out there working your hearts out for my girl, here is the thing that i just want to tell you all. because this has been a draining election. but i urge you to please, please be encouraged. >> reporter: timing is everything in politics. early voting started last monday in north carolina. the real clear politics average shows clinton up two points against donald trump. >> dignity and respect for women and girls.
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is also on the ballot in this election. and i want to thank our first lady for her eloquent, powerful defense of that basic value. >> reporter: last debate and revelations in the tape led to a bump among women voters for clinton. the drip, drip, drip of wikileaks e-mails orchestrated the u.s. intelligence community and campaigns say by russia to harm clinton is causing the drop in poll numbers. a new fox news poll shows clinton has hit a new low on n honesty and trustworthiness. 67% say she's untrustworthy. it shows clinton's closest campaign advisors have struggled with her baggage. they wrote to john podesta in july of 2015, do we actually know who told hillary she could use a private e-mail? has that person been drawn and quartered? michelle obama and hillary clinton was not always close,
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concerns about the bullying rhetoric unleashed during this election brought the first lady out to deliver clinton's strongest closing argument for tolerance and acceptance. >> they are trying to convince you that your vote doesn't matter. that the outcome has already been determined. you shouldn't even bother making your voice heard. they are trying to take away your hope. >> reporter: michelle obama never mentioned donald trump by name today. she reminded the crowd that her husband won north carolina in 2008 by just 14,000 votes. he lost in 2012, even though the democrats held their convention here. she said don't let anyone tell you that your vote doesn't matter. >> jennifer, thank you. now to the senate race in the tar heel state that's turned nasty. it might have a major impact on deciding which party controls the u.s. senate. >> reporter: in the battleground state of north carolina,
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republican senator richard burr and democratic challenger deborah ross walk a tightrope between party loyalty and political baggage. >> senator burr has towed the party line even when donald trump has crossed the line. >> you talk about a rubber stamp. it's beside me and it's for the clinton administration. >> reporter: burr has pointed ross as too liberal. >> deborah ross opposed the sex offender registry. >> reporter: the ross campaign fired up. >> he quote doesn't have much of a report cord to run on. >> 30% of the voters couldn't tell you if they approve or disapprove of burr. >> reporter: ross is leading burr by a fraction of a point. the real clear politics average shows burr leading ross by 3.2
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points. still a statistical dead heat. >> north carolina is a swing state. it's a republican swing state to lose. in order for a democrat to win north carolina, it has to be a particularly bad year for republicans. >> the fact is that we're exactly where we planned to be with one exception. we didn't plan for the presidential race to be quite as weird as this presidential election has been so far. >> reporter: fox news invited burr's opponent to participate in the story. the ross campaign rebuffed more than a dozen interview requests. we asked the state democratic party chair for her take on this tight race. >> to have a strong woman in the presidential slot certainly helps with a female candidate for senate. it makes north carolina important. it makes deborah ross important. >> reporter: the this afternoon deborah ross joined hillary clinton and michelle obama as they were campaigning here in north carolina trying to woo that all important female vote. also this week, "the new york
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times" endorsed ross saying that she may be able to help put an end to obstructionist politics in the senate. >> jonathan, thank you. senator ted cruz is hinting republicans might block a supreme court nominee from hillary clinton should she win the election. john mccain made a similar suggestion earlier this month. there has been an opening on the bench since the death of justice scalia earlier this year. the president's nominee to fill that opening has not received a hearing as of yet. yesterday, clarence thomas said the supreme court nomination process is evidence that washington is broken in some ways. the dow dropped 30 today. the s&p 500 lost 6. the nasdaq was down 34. there are new questions tonight about the relationship between hillary clinton's team and a major defense contractor. money changed hands, a lot of it. now it is yet another perceived
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impropriety. the democratic nominee must answer for. james rosen has details in the story you will only see here on fox. >> reporter: in early 2012, as hillary clinton embarked on her final year as secretary of state, raytheon yearned for a bigger slice of the action of foreign military sales. the firm hired three lobbyists. amo among them, heather podesta. in 2012, john podesta held the title of senior adviser at the department of state. records show raytheon hired two lobbyists at dla piper. they were donors for hillary clinton in 2008 and 2016. between them, they raised hundreds of thousands for clinton's campaigns and earned hundreds of thousands lobbies
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her. >> everything i did as secretary of state was in furtherance of our country's interests and our values. >> reporter: approving foreign military sales at the time was assistant secretary of state andrew shapiro whose previous job had been as an adviser in clinton's senate office. he is now as a consulting firm. >> while there's one person who has final signoff, that one person can't do it without a whole body of evidence and analysis and review and interagency consensus before they get to that point. >> reporter: raytheon's gambit worked. they snagged 17 foreign military contracts, including three for sales of advance weapon systems to qatar that accounted for $19 billion. an e-mail published in the sixth of wikileaks releases shows the year before, qatar pledged $1 million to the clinton foundation to mark bill
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clinton's berth dairthday, seek five-minute meeting with him. after clinton stepped down as secretary of state, raytheon discontinued its relationship. >> the appearance is akin to one of the pop-up stores that materializes just to sell halloween candy july 4th fireworks. that was need has been met, vanishes. sg >> the only considerations is the furtherance of foreign policy objectives of the united states of america and the efforts by external groups to lobby, as you say, or to influence that decision. >> reporter: the republican national committee said it undercuts denials from the clinton campaign there was no pay to play culture at the clinton state department. >> the people that sought access and had -- stood to gain from access to the state department didn't agree. that's why they made these
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hires. the lobbyists, their experience was getting access to hillary clinton and raising money for her. >> reporter: the clinton campaign told me, mrs. clinton never took action as secretary of state because of any donations and any suggestion to the contrary is false. raytheon said its lobbies practices are fully disclose and comply with all federal, state and local laws. dla piper did not respond to a request for comment. heather podesta sent me an e-mail saying, i never lobbied the secretary or john podesta on this matter. >> james, thank you. 22 children and six teachers are dead following air strikes on a school complex in syria's rebel-held idlip province. it is said to be the deadliest attack on a the civil war began their six years ago. another attack on a rebel-held damascus suburb left at least eight dead. we take you to the other front line in iraq. far away from mosul and will put you in the middle of the action.
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benjamin hall comes to us from near sinjar where he is traveling with kurdish peshmerga forces and one very brave american. >> reporter: iraqi commanders said today they pushed isis militants out of a small town south of mosul and are now 20 miles from the city. in the east, special forces have dug in saying they are awaiting more progress on the southern front before moving forward. 40 miles west of mosul, the story is very different. a forgotten front where a small group of men are under almost constant attack. there we found u.s. special forces veteran david shulmuck. he came two years ago having lost his daughter and joined the quick reaction kurdish special forces. >> we received no support, actually. in the year that i have been here, we have never seen an american officer or an official come to this front line. the media is so focused on mosul they forget there's a front.
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this is the closest to syria. this is the direct supply route that daesh uses. >> reporter: much of the equipment they have, including vehicles like this humvee, they won back from isis. >> we need everything. we beg, borrow, whatever we can do. the general and i raised money in america to get eye vision goggles. this is the limit of our night vision capability. this is a very old class two night vision scope. that's what the general and amid had the other night on the front line being shot at trying to find daesh. >> reporter: their leader says they are a close-knit group. they fought against saddam in the '90s and they are fighting isis alongside the former u.s. pararescueman. >> this is a first aid kid and get my weapon and we go. >> reporter: three days ago isis launched an ta eed an attack he.
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on that occasion, they fought them back. but they are surrounded on three sides. in some cases less than half a mile. the feeling is here that they are coming back. >> benjamin hall, thank you. this weekend, we will take a look at the state of the u.s. military and what the next president faces. calls to rebuild a force bruised by years of war overseas and cultural transformation here at hoement. how we fight features interviews with major figures like ash carter, former defense secretary robert gates and chuck hagel and the architect of the iraqi surge, general david petraeus. >> in responding to these situations, american leadership is imperative. it's indispensable. there's no substitute for it. >> reporter: general petraeus would like to see more decisive action taken in syria. >> i have long advocated a safe zone, no-fly zone.
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we crater the runways. tell the russians that if you bomb our guys, the ones we are supporting on the ground, the opposition, we are going to bomb your guys, assad's regime forces. >> join us for how we fight. it remeres 8:00 p.m. eastern. we are down to a dozen days before election day. we will see where we are, what to expect and what's out on the trail today when the panel joins me after the break.
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carolina has gone through with the efforts to suppress people's vote, you will turn out in the biggest numbers ever to say, no, we demand the right to vote. >> when you hear folks talking about a global conspiracy and saying that this election is rigged, understand that they are trying to get you to stay home. >> the first lady on trail with secretary clinton. also donald trump out and about. let's look at the poll of polls here. we have it at clinton plus 5.2 nationally. that includes fox news, washington post, abc, ibd, tipt. with that, let's bring in our panel. lisa booth, columnist with the washington standard.
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lisa, they are making the closing argument, michelle obama, it looked like helping and trying to energize the turnout with young people especially in north carolina. >> that's exactly what they need to do. i think what we're looking at right now is a race that is tightening in the lead that hillary clinton does have. if you look at this race after the "access hollywood" tapes, we were talking about losing the house. if you are the republican party, you are feeling better about the situation as far as where this -- the senate majority holds as well as the households. that being said, donald trump is looking at a really tough road to victory. he is not only got to keep states like arizona, georgia, texas and utah, but he has to flip states that romney lost in 2012 that will be tough for him. looking at nevada, florida, ohio as well. i think we're looking at a tightening race that hillary clinton still has. >> we see these polls about georgia, about arizona, texas.
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most of the experts in the states say they're not going to go blue. but there are some of the polls that are really tight. they say, maybe not a trend but about this election, per se. >> right. if hillary clinton were to win in georgia or arizona, i don't think it's a permanent democratic realignment in those places. it does require more resources, you know, trying to get out the vote in texas, where it's looking close, trying to hold arizona as a red state. she has something more than 30 field offices. i think trump has none. this is still something that in the end it costs money and manpower and it's stressful. as the party tries to mobilize its supporters. they don't want to protect hillary blocking in red states. she would argue it's worth resources. with a good ground game, what if it was close and she could push
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it up and take a state because she had the boots on the ground? that's why you see them going there and they stash the money in advance in case an opportunity like this arose. >> i want to ask you about these e-mails and what we're seeing inside them. first of all, mills, she's been the former chief of staff for hillary clinton. one of the wikileaks e-mails exchanges at the end of it, she points out that in a note to send it to another account, not state.gov because as a reminder, government e-mail is maintained as federal records. don't send it there if you have something to tell me you shouldn't be -- that we shouldn't be saving. >> look, this brings us back to where we started. why does she have a private e-mail? she said convenience. that was ridiculous. it was obvious she was hiding something. think about it.
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she set it up in 2009, before becomiing secretary of state. she anticipated having exchanges that she would not want anyone to see. we have been asking ourselves on this set for a year almost what exactly didn't she want people to see? now we know. as we speculated, the most plausible explanation was the rank corruption of the clinton foundation and its corrupt -- i don't know if it's illegal, but corrupt relationship with the state department. her only defense as we saw earlier, the democrats are saying, there was nothing she did as in the raytheon case, that was corrupted by donations. you can believe that if you want. there's a reason that people give donations in large amounts. that's to influence the outcome of decisions. we are getting unfolding to us exactly what she anticipated
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having to hide. and it's really dirty business. >> another e-mail, lisa, john poe da podesta to mook says, did you have any idea the depth of this story? this is when "the new york times" breaks the e-mail private server story. mook writes back, nope. we brought the existence of e-mails but were told everything was taken care of. those are two top officials in this campaign saying they had no clue. >> i find that pretty astounding. typically when you work on a campaign, you do opposition research on your own candidate. >> that's what he is referring to. to prepare for a run. >> exactly. that's what they were doing. the fact that they didn't know the depth of it i find very interesting. typically, individuals, especially people that are at the top like that, would be aware of all the deep, dark secrets that are going to surface, because you want to do is get out in front of you and know what's coming to protect yourself. clearly, this is a massive campaign issue for hillary
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clinton, the fact that we're still talking about this. if you looked at polling post-fbi director comey when he made at announcement they're not going to bring forward a recommendation for charges, you had 92% of americans that think she broke the law or did something wrong. that's a lot of americans who had a negative viewpoint about what she did. this was a serious campaign issue. i find it shocking that she is that secretive that she didn't even let the people at the top know exactly what was going on. >> talk about the foundation next. and some of the revelations there. your thoughts about how this kind of evolves? the media is -- it has been on front pages. it has been on some -- >> this is -- i'm not surprised. she's extremely secretive. she only trusts a few people. a know what she's doing. there are not a lot of other people. you could see others talking
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about, maybe we could mitigate this. is there any way to prevent this? the optics are terrible. it comes from the top. she feels entitled. she's completely politically sort of obtuse. nothing smells wrong to her. she blazes forward. they are left to clean up the mess. that's the details of the wikileaks e-mails show the way she conducts herself. >> the irony is the most secreti secretive, obsessed with secrecy campaign and now it's not secret at all. there are no secrets. we're seeing the conversations because of the wikileaks, which were hacked. >> it was one more reason. we saw in one of the e-mails, because she could get away with it in answer to the question of why wasn't all this released 16 months ago. get it out of the way. that's the history of the clintons. they have always gotten away with it. including the famous story, the
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monica lewinsky story. clinton calls a pollster. he said what happens. if you confess, you are done. you have to resign. you are out of here. he lies for eight months. in the end, that worked. he got away with it. >> next up -- >> that's what she learned from her 30 years. >> next up, who is doug band? how did he make millions for the clintons? welcome hi today we're gonna be comparing these two truck beds. let's start over here with this aluminum bed. you put your toolbox up here... whoa! that's a big hole. that is unbelievable. now let's check out the roll formed steel bed of the silverado. same angle,same empty tool box. took it way better. the steel held up. it's truck month! make a strong decision. find your tag and get over eleven thousand total value on this silverado all star. silverado proved it is the toughest truck here.
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california grown with no antibiotics ever. let's get comfortable with our food again. meetings are set up all the time. members of congress do that all the time. members of the white house could that all the time. the white house actually has a political director. and they can do it all the time. the secretary of state is out of elected politics. in every case i read about,
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hillary knew the person involved and had for years. so, i have no idea why someone called doug band. keep in mind, he worked in my also, in my capacity as a former president. so, we realized all that had to be cleared up and we fixed it. >> well, that was the former president trying to unwind what is a very tangled web of fundraising charitable giving and profitable activities led by a guy named doug band. these wikileaks emails have produced a lot of information about the clinton foundation. one of them is a giant memo from doug band about for profit activity of president clinton. independent of our fundraising decision-making activities on behalf of the foundation we have helping the president
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there are many more of these emails that show specific engagements. the speaking fees doubled when secretary of state hillary clinton was in office. we're back with the panel. lisa, as you go down into this, this potentially is the biggest part of this whole email thing. >> and there is just a lot there. and to charles point earlier, this is sort of the perpetually gray i will locally and unethical territory that the clintons
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operate in and have been operating for decades. and you look at this memo. you lock at the facts that bill clinton profited $66 million in personal income from these clinton foundation sources. the same donors who had business in front of the state department. you also look at that a.p. article from not too long ago about the fact that more than half of the nongovernment meetings were clinton foundation voters and that puts that in question and perspective in the people she was meeting with you also look at one example like u.b.s., bank, she essentially intervened with the state department which the "wall street journal" said was an unusual intervention by a top u.s. diplomat. and what she did was basically help protect them, cut them a deal from as state department from the irs. that was a big clinton foundation donor. they also paid bill clinton's speaking fees. you can go down the list and lock at example after example which certainly does look like pay for play and corruption. >> yeah. we did this more than a year
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ago in an hour special called tangled web. and based on the clinton cash book by peter schweitzer. pull into clinton emails it does brings things brought up. let's talk about that today jen palmeri, people have made their judgment with the clinton foundation. clinton foundation four star rating has done a lot of great life saving work and compare that to the trump foundation which has been i will locally donations to political candidates and spend money buying portraits of donald trump. within the press core, in particular, there is a lot of interest behind the scenes staff entry. we understand that but we don't believe that this is something that voters are going to focus on or going to care about. >> a.b.? >> they're hoping that this is baked into the cake of people supporting hillary clinton because they don't want donald trump and they are going to vote for her anyway. they better hope that the wikileaks has not saved the best for last because this
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is -- these are the details of the drama that we have always known about. that there is not only double dealing but triple dealing and everything is always connected from his former presidency, his for profit stuff the foundation. her secretary of state business is always in one universe where there are never any walls or boundaries. >> charles? >> we have answered the question what was she hiding? this. and we now know how did they get obscenely rich without visible work? and the answer is right in here as well. i think if the clintons imagine that this is already factored, it's not going to hurt them they are wrong. the reason it's tightening is because this is giving flesh and i think impetus to the corruption. when you see it black and white like, this drip, drip, drip every day, that accounts for the tightening of the race. the two most unpopular candidates ever, the one who is in the news is losing. she is in the news. >> that is it for the panel. we'll have more on a world
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it wasn't needed after all. a businessman heard schlegel is sending the veteran and his son to seats in the front row. the nearly $13,000 raised online will now go to the purple heart foundation. as per predictions, no surprise. schlegels are picking the cubbies to win it all. the g.o.p. nominee donald trump sits down with me for the first time since june. see how that goes. thanks for inviting us into your home tonight. that it for this "special report," fair, balanced and unafraid. "on the record" with brit hume starts right now. >> it is friday october 28th. this is a fox news alert. tense moments on the tarmac. vice presidential nominee mike pence's plane getting off the
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rain soaked runway. >> donald trump is in battle ground states. they want to give him well the election right now. >> we should just cancel the election and give it to trump, right? what are we having it for? her policies are so bad. >> this as hillary clinton tries to use the first family to help her power through in the final days before this election. >> talk about the pot calling the kettle black. >> i am usually loud tonight i am baby trump. >> one of the things he has been trashing trump for. "info of starts right now.
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♪ >> live look at the new york skyline. cold out there today and dark outside. i love when they play this song because it's here. >> i am abby huntsman. >> i am heather childers. >> thank you for starting your day with us and ending your week. you saw the rainy skies in new york city. a plane carrying vice presidential nominee mike pence skid right off a rain soaked
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