tv Outnumbered FOX News November 9, 2016 9:00am-10:01am PST
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now he has a chance to return. martha: this would be a nice moment to revisit the red america and the red, blue and purple america that he spoke of in the first speech. we watch and wait for the president of the united states to come out in the rose garden and make what will be a momentous statement, stay with us. we go now to bill hammer who will be covering throughout the course of it. bill, over to you. bill: martha, thank you. we have moved from studio f as in fancy to studio d as in what? >> delightful. [laughter] bill: we will take it. sandra: thank you so much. busy guy, good to have you here. a fox news alert for you, at the noon hour on the east coast we just heard hillary clinton's concession speech and now we are waiting for president obama to give his first public remarks on what maybe one of the biggest political stunners in u.s.
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history. donald trump shocking the nation and the world defeating hillary clinton to become the 45th president of the united states. this is outnumbered, i'm sandra smith. here today harris faulkner, megan mccain and fox political and legal analysts ebony williams and #oneluckyguy. bill: i got tight 40 minutes. it's kind of uncomfortable. go home, you -- shave, shower b. sandra: we are waiting remarks from the president. he is said to speak at the white house. political aftershocks across the nation. after a billionaire who has never held political office was elected president. donald trump soundly defeating hillary clinton in the race for the white house.
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turning much of the nation a deep red with big wins in florida, north carolina and ohio. and piercing clinton's so called blue wall in pennsylvania, michigan and wisconsin. minutes after the fox news decision declared trump the winner around 2:40 a.m. eastern time. president elect trump striking a gracious tone in his victory speech. >> she congratulated us, it's about us on our victory and i congratulated her and her family on a very, very hard campaign and we owe her major debt of gratitude for her service to our country. i mean that very sincerely. as i've said from the beginning, ours was not a campaign but rather an incredible and great movement made up of millions of
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hard-working men and women who love their country and want a better brighter future for themselves and for their family and i can only say that while the campaign is over, our work on this movement is now really just beginning. [cheers and applause] >> it became apparent that donald trump was poised for an historic win. clinton who did not give a formal concession speech spoke with supporters moments ago. >> this is painful and it will be for a long time. , but i want you to remember this. our campaign was never about one person or even one election, it was about a country we love and building an america that's hopeful, inclusive and big-hearted, we must accept the
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result and then look to the future, donald trump is going to be our president, we owe him an open mind and a chance to lead. sandra: president obama who made a congratulatory call to donald trump this morning has invited trump to the white house tomorrow. white house press secretary josh earnest says it will be about the smooth transition to power. bill hemmer. bill: wow, these are big events and they are moving quickly. sandra: hillary clinton finally speaking. she didn't address her supporters last night and concede publicly but we just heard from her and what did you make of her words? bill: i thought it was very gracious and human. i think it was very difficult for her to do that. you almost get the sense when they kept applauding that she was urging them to back off for a moment so she can get through it. i think it was heart-felt, she's
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been in this campaign arguably for a decade. and then some way, form, fashion or another in the next eight years there was a plan to figure out how you can make this possible again and i don't think her team saw this at all, and when you absorb the reality it could be a stunning thing. your start last night as the winds kept coming in state by state for donald trump, some of the key winds, what was megan mccain thinking? >> as you know, when i was on the show last week i was saying he could easily pull this off. i was talking about the ivanka trump voters and the bradley effect. that's exactly what happened last night. a lot of people didn't want to tubing because they didn't want
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to be judged or called racists and do you know how many people that work in media that didn't know a trump supporter, we need to take a cold-heart look at ourselves, not anyone on the couch but the media in general because when you're freaking out in the way that you are and you're so shocked, you're out of touch with the american public and that is what the story is as well on top of donald trump's incredibly historic win. harris: at one point i tweeted out chuck todd but did catch my attention for a moment, he talked about the underestimation of the rural voter and was there a hidden trump vote and went off to, you know, there was a lot of plantfication to try to come up with. maybe we didn't do the kind of brain stretches across all the mainstream media that needed to be done. here at fox we have all voices. it's not much of a gymnastic moves.
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>> i said on the show numerous times, how can you talk about the election if you don't know a trump supporter. i know many. harris: that's a wonderful question. yeah. >> i think going forward we cannot have these elites and i'm talking about people that make millions of dollars, people that never leave manhattan or the belt way. >> i know a trump supporter very well, it's my mother an she was delighted with the results and she's obviously a black woman and something that people got really wrong, of course there were not droves of black people but got much more of the black vote and latino vote than anyone expected, 8% black vote and 13% of black men voted for donald trump, 29% of latino voted for donald trump although there are questions out there around his positioning on race and culture and diversity and progress around those issues, ultimately the message that he had about draining the swamp representing political change in washington was so compelling that even people in those groups elected this man. if you would just allow me to
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say something because i want to say to the viewers what they're looking at the screen, i think it's important, you have former bill clinton there where hillary clinton has wrapped up the speech in the center of manhattan in the hotel. it's interesting because she and no one other than her chair, her campaign chair came to talk to her supporters shy of 3:00 o'clock this morning, you've got her husband going through that crowd. bill, you mentioned how difficult it is not just for her but for him too. it was journey twice and president obama stepped in seven minutes. she was over an hour left. bill: i often wonder why we don't read stories how the sitting president of the united states is not having lunch with the member of congress. when was the last time you read a story that pertained to that? when was the last time you physically went to capitol hill other than a state of the union.
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if it happened, i missed it. what i'm suggesting here that when people on the outside don't see the gears of government in motion, they conclude one thing and that's government has stopped working. harris: are they right? >> yes. i'm not as shocked about this as so many other people were. make no mistake, this is revenge for eight years of obama, complete and total rejection of the left policies of the last years. sandra: let's talk about what that means for the republican party. charles had strong words about what he sees is the future of the republican party, listen. >> this is an ideological revolution of the kind we haven't seen since reagan. what this means ideologically is that the republican party has become a populist party and the country is going to be without a classically conservative party. sandra: megan. >> he's not wrong. it would be the party of trump.
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trump is now the president of the united states of america which means whether he likes it or not he's a leader and he needs to mends fences. my only -- well, i have a few concerns. my main concerns is that the team he surrounds himself by will -- will hold grudges. we now have control of the three branches of government. we should be able to put across any conservative policy that we want and we can't get rid of the fighting in the election cycle, then i don't know what to say. i'm hopeful that he will be a leader. harris: two things and i'm wondering, i don't think we can answer this right now, what happen to the investigations going forward that congressman jason chaffetz said they want to wage against hillary clinton to find out what's going on with the hillary clinton e-mail? bill: maybe a president trump says, why don't we -- harris: move on. bill: move on.
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harris: you said that george h.w. bush spoke earlier. this now moments ago. this morning i called president elect donald trump and congratulated him on his election as president of the united states of america, laura and i wish the president elect melania and the entire trump family all a our very best as they take an annual awesome responsibility and begin an exciting new chapter in their lives. we pray for the success of our country and success of our new president. george w. bush. sandra: will we see the big come together moment, bill? bill: i think we will. there will be fray parts. there's a conservative right in the house of representatives that there's still looking for the pound to flesh and you wonder how they -- you know, how do they interact with a considerably less conservative republican president. it's a fascinating dynamic. i think what paul ryan said last hour was telling, he said trump will lead a unified government. he says they spoke twice in the
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last 148 hours. it -- 18 hours. paul ryan-trump relationship, they were stand to go mend and then he said we need to go big and we need to go bold. that's paul ryan speaking like donald trump. sandra: how important are the president's words as we wait for barack obama step up, first time we are hearing from him publicly. we are told he picked up the phone and congratulate him on the victory. as we face the transition now, how important is what he's about to say. >> what barack obama will say will be the most important part of his legacy in many ways. people were talking about, you know, the iran deal and obamacare and all of the things and what a trump presidency will mean to those things. as the leader that he is -- i believe him to be this is his opportunity, perhaps the final opportunity to demonstrate to
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america whether you support him or you don't that he's indeed capable of that type of leadership because that's his job as president, is to bring the people together, the people have spoken, the people have elected donald j. trump and this is the time for unity so that the gridlock bill is talking about can be eradicated. bill: on that point, former speaker john boehner was with bridget ten days ago and what he talked about the importance of voting for trump in order to get supreme court justices favor to the conservative side. you as president, you rule by executive order and what happens with those executive orders, they are challenged, they are thrown to the courts and the big ones decided by the u.s. supreme court. i thought it was a -- i thought it was a broad brush and i think it represents the way washington has been working or not working for several years now.
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harris: i would add to what ebony was talking about what the president needs to do when he steps up there just outside the white house, you know, he was not able to heal that divide in this country. >> he made it worse. >> i disagree with that. i can tell you that it's still there because when you look at vote total last night upwards of 120 million is almost flipped evenly between the two of them now when you look at electoral votes obviously donald trump won. but when you look at that, we are very much a divided nation and what he said is critical now too because this isn't just about the new president, it isn't just about the smooth transition although we should walk the democracy out like a beacon around the world and try to bring healing with his words. he's incredible order. we will hear what he says.
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watch this. >> many black and brown people in this country are feeling today and that is that while some see this is a miracle trump's election others see it as a nightmare. that's how they feel. donald trump will have an opportunity to demonstrate as he said last night, i think, quite poynantly and evaporate the divide that we have. as you said here, president obama right now in this moment can take a first important step around that, you know what, absolutely, there's a part of the people that supported trump that have racist and certainly we know that, but there's also another component to people that supported donald trump last night and it's not a pure rejection of black people, brown people, lgbtq. harris: i see what you're saying. >> i think it's important to make that distinction so that people feel as hillary said to have an open mind around this presidency. sandra: donald trump in the 6:00 o'clock a.m. hour this morning tweeted out such a
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beautiful important evening, the forgotten man and woman will never be forgotten. we will all come together as never before. bill: that is a reference to a book and comes out of the great depression and fdr the new deal and whether big government is a better government for the people and what he's talking about is forgotten man and forgotten woman in the mid western states and upper midwest that now is considered the rust belt and he is the voice for them after they've seen towns and families and communities be ripped apart by bad deals as trump would call it. and that's as a result of a loss of jobs. you go to pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin. all state that is went for trump. i'm struck by just a few days ago on the campaign trail, barack obama was in your state of north carolina and what he said was to a lot of democratic
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voters and a lot of african americans, i believe, his message went the following way, don't blow it, we've had eight good years, let's continue and don't go back. >> they didn't listen to him as a collective whole. harris: i think you hit the nail on the head. when you look at north carolina, if you do the math it's impossible that there were no black voters for donald trump. that's not even possible. so what would unit them? look at the economy there, look at detroit, look at michigan, look how late that state was called last night. people had something they we wanted to say and money talks, obamacare, premiums. >> we never recovered from the recession in 2008, people saw banks getting bailed out and
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completely lost faith -- harris: michael moore said it. >> i'm sorry, the idea that donald -- president obama did exacerbate tensions in this country we wouldn't be sitting here with the anker that fueled donald trump. the idea that president obama is culpable, rejection of the left. we didn't win senate house and the presidency last night because people weren't angry that obamacare -- >> i think people are angry about that. absolutely. i'm not rejecting that. it's a mistake to say it's either/or. i think to ignore the reality around how some people in this country feel this that's this was a rejection of them on a culture level would do disservice to the progress we need to be focused on on mending this issue. we are deeply divided. america has held a mirror up to herself and this is the reality. sandra: this isn't just bringing
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the left together, governor kasich not even showing at the convention. he tweeted out this morning, the american people have spoken, congratulations president elect. bill: barack obama leaves office on january 20th, i believe, the day of inauguration and he and his family will live in washington, d.c. and he will be the biggest power broker in the democratic party, period. he will -- his personality will be matched against donald trump who will move in to the white house and the dynamic of these two enormous american personalities, it will be the next perhaps political story, perhaps political battle that will play out. harris: so what happens to hillary clinton, what role does she play in the democratic party?
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is it a big a role of the constituents that she tried to inherit from bernie sanders. he led a movement within the democratic party and shut down by the machine that the establishment was. bill: i would suggest that barack obama is the clear leader starting january 21. sandra: you can see the president and the vice president joe biden walking up stepping. >> good afternoon, everybody. yesterday before votes were tallied i shot a video that some of you may have seen in which i said to the american people regardless of which side you were on in the election, regardless of whether your candidate won or lost, the sun would come up in the morning and that is one bit of prognostic that came through. the sun is up and i know everybody had a long night. i did as well, i had a chance to
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talk president elect trump last night about 3:30 in the morning, i think, it was on congratulating on winning the election and i had a chance to invite him to come to the white house to making sure there's a successful transition between our presidencies. now, it is no secret that the president elect and i have some pretty significant differences. but, remember, eight years ago president bush and i had pretty significant differences. but president bush's team could not have been more professional or more gracious in making sure we had a smooth transition so that we could hit the ground running. and one thing you realize quickly in this job is that the presidency and the vice presidency is bayinger than any of us. so i have instructed my team to follow the example that president bush's team set eight years ago and work as hard as we can to make sure this is a
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successful transition for the president elect. because we are now all rooting for a success and uniting and leading the country, the peaceful transition of power is one of the hallmarks of our democracy. and over the next few months, we are going to show that to the world. i also had a chance last night to speak with secretary clinton and i just had a chance to hear her remarks. i could not be prouder of her. she has lived an extraordinary life of public service. she was a great first lady, she was an outstanding senator for the state of new york and she could not have been a better secretary of state. i'm proud of her. a lot of americans look up to her. her candidacy and nomination was historic and sends a message to our daughters all across the country that they can achieve at
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the highest levels of politics and i'm absolutely confident that she and president clinton will continue to do great work for people here in the united states and all around the world. now, everybody is sad when their side loses an election. but the day after, we have to remember that we are actually all on one team. we are not democrats first, we are not republicans first, we are americans first. we are patriots first. we all want what's best for this country. that's what i heard in mr. trump's remarks last night, that's what i heard when i spoke to him directly and i was heartened by that. that's what the country needs. a sense of unity, a sense of
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inclusion, a respect for our institutions, our way of life, rule of law and respect for each other. i hope that he maintains that spirit throughout this transition and i certainly hope that's how his presidency has a chance to begin. i also told my team today to keep their heads up because the remarkable work that they have done day and day out, often without a lot of fanfare, often without a lot of attention, work in agencies, work in obscure areas of policy that make government run better and make it more responsive and make it more efficient and make it more
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service friendly so that it's actually helping more people, that remarkable work has left the next president with a stronger, better country than the one that existed eight years ago. so win or lose in this election, that was always our mission, that was always our mission on day one and every one on my team should be extraordinarily proud of everything that they have done. and so should all the americans that i've had a chance to meet all across this country who do the hard work on building on the progress every single day. teachers in schools, doctors in er clinic, small businesses, putting their all in starting something up, making sure they're treating employees well. all the important work that's done by moms and dads and families congregations in every
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state, the work of perfecting this union. so this was a long and hard-fought campaign. a lot of our fellow americans are exhausted today, a lot of of americans are less so. that's the nature of campaigns and that's the nature of democracy. it is hard and sometimes contentious and noisy. it's not always inspiring. but to the young people who got into politics for the first time and maybe disappointed by the result, i just want you to know you have to stay encouraged. don't get cynical. don't ever think you can't make a difference. secretary clinton said this morning, fighting for what is right is worth it.
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sometimes you lose an argument, sometimes you lose an election, you know, the path that this country has taken has never been a straight line we zig and zag and sometimes we move in ways that some people think is forward and others think is moving back. and that's okay. i've lost elections before. joe hasn't, but, you know, so i've been -- [laughter] >> you beat me badly. >> that's the way politics works sometimes. we try really hard to persuade people that were right. and then people vote. and then if we lose, we learn
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from our mistakes, we do some reflection, we lick our wounds, we brush ourselves off, we get back in the arena, we go at it, we try even harder the next time. the point, though, is that we all go forward with the presumption of good faith in our fellow citizens because that presumption of good faith is essential to a vibrant and functioning democracy. that's how this country has moved for 240 years. that's how we pushed boundaries and promoted freedom around the world, that's how we expanded the rights of our founding to reach all of our citizens, that's how we have come this far. and that's why i'm confident that this incredible journey that we are on as americans will go on. and i'm looking forward to doing everything that i can to make sure that the next president is
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successful in that. i've said before, i think of this job as being a relay runner, you take the baton and by the time you hand it off, you're a little further ahead. you've made a little progress. and i can say that we have done that and i want to make sure that hand-off is well executed because ultimately we are all in the same team. all right. thank you very much, everybody. sandra: that was president obama, first address to the american people since donald trump was elected president. he did say he has invited the president elect to the white house to discuss the peaceful transition of power. he said about hillary clinton, i could not be prouder. i'm going to open it up to the couch, the first words that we are hearing publicly from the president, bill hemmer?
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bill: he's thinking about how he's going to depart the office. this is clearly not what it is -- it is not what he had in mind. i think this meeting tomorrow is going to be very interesting. i think the way they address themselves, the physical interaction with each other and certainly the words would be very important. sandra: what does that discussion look like? bill: i'm not sure specially that you consider-barack obama was never -- he was never given a nickname, was he? harris: not by any of us. if you have one that you would like to share. bill: donald trump did not give barack obama a nickname. harris: at the end we were going back and forth about where he is going there. i want to pick your brain a little bit, megyn. >> i much preferred hers, this country is extremely divided, extremely anxious.
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i just -- joe biden is the highlight for me. i hope whatever speech he exits with is more emotional and more reflective of the tone of the country right now. harris: i mentioned and i said it before on the couch that what we don't need to enter into the political constipation mode. sandra: i have that in my mind. bill: millions of americans who have been far too long. harris: go ahead. >> here is the thing. i thought it was long-winded at the end by the president but i thought he touched about open-mindedness about donald trump. donald trump winning is us winning. that's important here. getting rid of the notion of us versus them as we go forward as such a divided space that we are in now. i want to say this, you talk about barack obama going to north carolina, basically giving
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a mandate to those that supported him to support her to preserve his legacy. harris: particularly the people that look like him. >> black and brown voters. it was rejected and here is why. this is something that hillary clinton and campaign never quite understood and i don't think the president got it either. she is not him and that kind of handing the bato, no to her never connected with voters and that was one of the many undueling -- bill: was the expectation that the african american turnout would be what it was four years ago? >> absolutely, bill. naively felt that black and brown people would turn up for her like they did for him out of obligation to him and she is not him, period. >> they said so much. michelle obama was saying, don't screw around with the protest vote. we are talking about my husband's legacy, the past eight years. harris: absolutely. >> usher in hope and change and
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i'm here last night front and center, the complete and polar opposite tone and the -- and what america wants. it could not be more different and he has to take some responsibility for the divisiveness that he helped usher in. harris: division is within the house too. it's not just the entire country. it's intrahouse, if you will as well. and so hopefully they can work together and caucus together so and and so forth and get things done but with the democrats, again, sandra go back to you and me and we watched it at the dnc, people were emotional like where do you take all of that? those bernie supporters, where do those millennials go? >> they were the most angry. if you had nominated bernie which is a pipe dream by the way -- harris: they gave their
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money. they supported the cause. sandra: that meeting is going to be happening tomorrow as the president just said he will be sitting with donald trump at the white house. more on how donald trump pulled off one of the biggest upsets of all time with some revealing fox exit polls are telling us. ordinary tissues left dakota's nose sore and red.
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harris: the glue is still on for donald trump's big win for most who voted for him but come january he is going to have to work on mending the relationship with establishment in congress. gop project today retain control of both the house and the senate. 51 to 47 with two races still outstanding, but many republican lawmakers including 12 senators distanced themselves from trump throughout the campaign. some calling on him to drop out, remember that? and now paul ryan survival as
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speaker of the house is in question just weeks before the election. he said he would no longer defend the now president elect trump. he spoke a little while ago, watch. >> ic our relationship is fine, i have spoken with donald twice in the last 18 hours, we spoke last night and we spoke again this morning and mike pence twice as well. i think we are going to hit the ground running, we are already talking about getting transitions working together, we are very excited. donald trump pulled off an amazing political feat. it kept our majorities and show the country that people didn't like the direction we were going. harris: all right. i mention the glow that some of the people who voted for him would have and i said some, we love you, we don't. they were like a moving fan around the room. >> i got it. i actually mike pence -- mike
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pence is going to be integral in mending fences and relationships. he was the peace flower given to quote establishment republicans and i think he's going to play a major role. there's still a lot of republicans in office, very powerful, my father is going to be chairman of the arms services committee. there's no other option for donald trump and mike pence to meet in the middle and i say that that republicans that were hesitant and it's time to move forward and a great opportunity to get conservative legislation through and repeal obamacare. harris: last night at one point donald trump said in his speech that he was hoping that others within the party would help him and he may not have been that specific. he said all would help him but i kind of thought, does he mean maybe his fellow republicans. >> i thought it was telling that he was positive and glowing in his embrace of reince priebus. he took an opportunity to make a
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statement with that. also whether they wanted to or not a lot of people that were reelected or elected to congress or the house -- the senate rather on the curtails of donald trump. absolutely, to megan's point it's in the best interest of their party and also getting rid of the gridlock situation for those people to be open-minded and come to the table in good faith to work with the president in office. harris: so barack obama also had love, we got obamacare. bill: listen, they had the house, the senate and the white house and they got health care without a single republican vote and that's a big deal. they paid a big price for it too. you could argue that this vote yesterday, when you look at the headlines at the end of october for what the rate of the increase was all across the country, this was the big part of this vote, so trump says he will repeal and replace.
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i had rand paul earlier today, he didn't really grab the ball and ran with it. other members of congress have talked and rand paul talked about this too about peeling back regulations that have been put on small businesses. there's room for that immediately. i think corporate tax reform is something that perhaps, democrats who have supported and that might be something you could do quickly. sandra: have you seen the stock market today? bill: will not be easy. there is no agreement on the table as to what you replace it with as of today. sandra: what donald trump did wasn't easy. he seems to be up for a difficult task. bill: noted. sandra: donald trump defying all the experts as fox news exit poll show the president elect did better than expected among women, hispanics and millennials, among female voters trump trailed hillary clinton by just 12 points. 54 to 42%.
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far cry from the wide gender gap reported from the media. among hispanic voters he outperformed mitt romney garnering 29% of latino support and among first-time voters which includes millennials hillary only edged out trump by a 56 to 40% margin. i don't know, ebony, i look at the numbers and i see how did everybody get this wrong? >> i will start with this, a lot of people on hillary's side are looking for someone to blame around this, they are blaming people that went third party, comey, you have to look at the candidate, white women broke -- 56% of white women broke for donald trump. that's huge for hillary clinton. that's a loss you cannot afford and so certainly, you know, people have said, his message, the simple message of i am different than what has been in washington, i am a movement in
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change in this country bringing us back to prosperity that drowned out so many questions because a lot of the voters, keep in mind, 70% had real questions around his legitimacy, his qualifications and all of that but the message of change and being a doer versus a talker. sandra: sticking with women, fox exit poll, does trump's treatment of women bother you a lot or some, 70% not much or not at all, 20%. make sense of that. >> i'm bringing up what i brought last week the ivanka trump voter, modern women, college educated, higher socioeconomic level that didn't want to be harassed by anyone that they are supporting donald trump. it's a real thing. i know people that were supporting donald trump that i would have never expected. i'm not as surprised as anyone else is. people lie today -- lied to
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pollsters. i was like, people, debatebly well known pollster. bill: i wonder if those voters chose to talk to the exit poll people at these polling places. [laughter] bill: it has long been argued that democrats will stay there and answer any questions they want and republicans get out of my way. the hispanic vote made up 11% of voters nationwide, that is up 1 point from 2012. you want more? 6 and 10 americans found donald trump and hillary clinton, 6 and 10 now unfavorable and untrust worthy. sandra: and i'm not going to make anything of that other than the fact that he won.
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he pulled this off. everybody is surprised, but i think when we were watching this unfold last night, right away when we saw florida, i go through the last night and unbelievable moment to witness. bill hemmer standing in the middle of all of it. bill: it was like 3d. harris: he was worried that it wouldn't work, right? little james wallace. 6-year-old. anyway, moving on. a couple of things were missing from the whole mix which i thought really may have driven donald trump's cause even farther. how much money did he spend on the ads? ground game, where is your ground game? [laughter] >> he has completely changed the game. i don't remember -- i think he had 1500 compare today her 5,000. bill: i was in trump tower, 14th
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floor, maybe there were 70 people on the entire people. maybe. there were probably 500 working for hillary's campaign. sandra: now donald trump promising to put millions of americans back to work but how will he do it, we will discuss that and look at the market's reaction to trump's bombshell victory, we will have it to you hello, i'm an idaho potato farmer and i finally found our big idaho potato truck. it's been touring the country telling folks about our heart healthy idaho potatoes, america's favorite potatoes, and donating to local charities along the way.
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>> we are going to fix our inner cities and rebuild our highways, bridges, tunnels, airports, schools, hospitals, we are going to rebuild our infrastructure which will become byay second to none and we will put millions of our people to work as we rebuild it. it's going to happen. [cheers and applause] >> we have a great economic plan. we will double our growth and have the strongest economy anywhere in the world.
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sandra: that was donald trump promise to go boost america's economy and we are watching wall street right now to see how markets are reacting to trump's win. this playing a big part in coverage last night. look at the dow now it's up 165 points. remember, when we were looking at dow futures overnight which would give us an idea of where u.s. markets are going to trade once they open in the morning, we were looking at dow futures up more than 800 points last night. harris: they were like the exit polls. sandra: stocks initially did fall but they are rallies in today's session and is often the case the economy was the most important issue for voters during this election cycle. but many investors are uneasy about the lack of specifics underlying a number of trump proposals. okay, can i just tell you, when we look at the dow up triple digits right now not only political pundits got it wrong
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but market analysts, wall street largely got it wrong. most large bank analysts were calling for a drastic selloff in the wake of a donald trump last night. harris: i want to interview for a second because i know you were leading the segment. you're the money person on the couch. i promise. as we look at this, it looked to me like maybe the markets also saw a little bit more of a mandate. i don't know what they trade on but when you see 150 million people voting -- sandra: market will go up in the hillary clinton victory. we have been in the low-interest environment. they saw hillary clinton victory, an extension of president barack obama's policies. as we look at the stock market rallies, he is promising to spend hundreds of billions of dollars rebuilding our infrastructure in this country,
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all right, construction companies, engineering firms are up double digits in today's market. i mean, there's big money already at play because of this donald trump victory. >> i mean, yeah, don't markets go down when a new president goes into office? sandra: time period is everything. >> listen, ebony and i were talking on the commercial break and we can echo this, i'm not a finance person, i don't warning in fox business in the same format that you do, people are anxious right now and what it means for my friend's boutique because there is a great unknown about what donald trump is going to do. i don't know if he's going to have putin over to the white house next week to hang out. that could change things in the economy. bill: there won't be next week. >> first week in office. sandra: markets don't like uncertainty and they were pricing in a hillary clinton victory. all of a sudden when it looked
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like she wasn't going to win, markets got nervous. donald trump has been elected president. >> we know who it is, many people nervous but many others see great opportunity. this is a great opportunity for business to grow. harris, you called the greatest power broker in washington. they're excited as to what this will mean fiscally. we don't know. in that lack of certainty, i think, represents opportunity for some. harris: my question to you, does the market look at it and say, we know what the people want and they don't care about that? i wasn't joking that they may have felt better for hillary clinton. they would know more about what was in -- bill: that was the whole chicken the sky is falling, that's what it was. harris: that's a good point. it hasn't. sandra: there's excitement and a lot of talk in the middle of the night when we saw markets
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selling off like that that firms would have interest in market selloff like that. we are just today as of today still just 1% off of record highs. harris: very good information to remind everybody. sandra: outnumbered in just a moment. ♪ turn the trips you have to take, into one you'll never forget. expedia plus rewards. earn points on over one million hotels,
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and we start with a fox news alert, the 2016 election shocking the system and now the world is responding. welcome to the second hour of "happening now" today. i am jon scott in ohio's capital city, columbus. >> and hi, jon. i am in raliegh, north carolina. and the next president of the united states donald trump winning the last night's election in one of the political surprises of the modern history. president elect trump heads to white house to meet with president obama. and trump spoke with supporters with a unifying home. >>
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