tv Bulls Bears FOX News November 12, 2016 7:00am-7:31am PST
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>> you know how to make pizza. >> i think pete's had every one of them. in the after "the o'reilly factor" we're going to talk more. >> thanks too for everyone for coming. >> announcer: this is a fox news channel special presentation. president-elect trump. now neil cavuto. just hearing those words, president-elect trump, still inciting demonstrations out of the gates of portland, oregon, escalating into outright riots now. we've seen similar dust-ups in miami, dallas, columbia, south carolina, playing out across the country. again, this is more the exception than the rule. i want to emphasize that. welcome everybody. you're watching yet another live weekend here. by the way, i should say i might have missed a couple of days this summer. with today's show i have now made them all up.
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so i don't want any lectures from any of you about taking time off. in the meantime, we're getting indications now that donald trump isn't taking much time off. he is putting pen to paper and meeting with key advisors to come up with a cabinet we're told potentially sooner than most president-elects do. he wants to hit the grountd running. already signs about what he's going to put priorities on. and wouldn't you know a lot of them are economic, which is of course -- in the meantime let's get a sense of what to make of these protests. there's been growing calls that either mr. trump say something, president obama, hillary clinton, maybe a combination of all of the above, or maybe just let this sort out. joining us now a very big backer of donald trump and national diversity coalition. when you see this and what's been unfolding across the country, what do you say to those protesters not keen on the results? >> you know, what i would say to them is first of all that we love them. and that we know that they voted
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for hillary clinton. and, you know, we are -- we support peaceful protest. we understand that as americans we all have the right to express ourselves. that's what sets our country apart. but what i would say to them many of them are young. there is a website that they can go to called greatagain.gov. and they should apply for employment. there's also a place there where they can share their ideas with our president-elect as well as our vice president-elect. that they should make sure that if they have a problem or a worry or a stress about what may go on in this administration that they can actually apply for employment, a job, to help steer the nation, to help the vice preside president-elect and mike pence our -- >> they could be wrong, you're very kind and i think this is all they hate him.
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they don't like his policies. they're shocked that he won. they can't believe he won. and they're just -- they're going to give him a hard time before he's had a chance to prove himself. do you think that's right? >> but you know, that's -- he's not the first president to be boycotted or, you know, protested against. and he won't be the last president. you know, what i would say to them is that just be peaceful. your fellow americans are out there working every day just like, you know, you are. their businesses should not be destroyed. their cars and personal properties should not be destroyed. those are your fellow americans. they're making money. they have to take care of their families as well. and so what i would just ask of my fellow americans out there protesting, which is their right, just to do it peacefully and not with the violence. you know, don't hurt your own fellow americans. >> that unfortunately to your point, brunell, that's been rare. certainly in portland i don't know what's in the water out there, but it's been violent.
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you know, last time i had you -- last week before the election you said something very profound. you always do when we have the pleasure of chatting. that african-americans, minorities in general, just aren't all that into hillary clinton. and many of them are thinking about or were then donald trump. she got minorities in overwhelming margins, but not nearly the margins that barack obama enjoyed. >> exactly. >> might have made a key difference particularly with hispanics in florida, certainly made a big difference in pennsylvania, donald trump getting the highest minority support we've seen since going back to ronald reagan for republicans. but it could be even higher. what do you think minorities then will be waiting to see so that four years from now the numbers might be still higher. >> let me tell you something, donald trump is very -- our president-elect is very perceptive and very shrewd. and that is the reason why he's moving so fast and making sure that our economic team hits the
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ground running. i believe i heard him do an interview. and he said by 2020 he expects that he's done so well for poor people, minorities, that he will get 95% of the vote in 2020. and i believe that is what he and -- >> you think big. there is pressure on him though, right? i mean, among any type of voters, white or black or anyone in between. i mean, there's a sense that he wants to make america great again. and you want your president to think really big. but is there a fear you have -- >> absolutely. >> -- that he's put himself and raised the bar such that that's going to be a tough task? >> you know what, it's a tough task, but it's not impossible. he's mr. unstoppable. remember, he wasn't supposed to be president. he wasn't supposed to be our president-elect. and with god before you, who can be against you? i believe that donald j. trump, and mike pence, our vice president-elect, they have the prayers of the people, many
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people who silently prayed for them and then vocally went into that voting booth and voted. >> well, there was a hidden vote or whatever you want to call it. >> i told you. >> as you know. as you know. >> i told you. >> i like to consider myself a prominent show that predicted it. >> you're a prominent man. you're a prominent man. >> it's what i do, brunell. >> that's our role. >> look back at what's going on, do you think it's incumbent on the hillary clinton or even donald trump to come out, address these riots or disturbances or let them as i think one top law official said work themselves out? >> you know what, i thought that also that hillary clinton, secretary -- i believe that she should step forward and she should calm the fears and the hurt of her people that voted for her, just like i thought she should have come out the night that she conceded to come out and address them. i think that that will smooth over a lot with them as well as
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our president. maybe together the both of them addressing the nation. our young people need jobs. they need to know that they're not going to be forgotten whether they voted for our president-elect and our vice president-elect or not. and i think that that's important that they need to know that they have a voice. we have heard you. our vice president-elect has heard you. our president-elect donald j. trump has heard you. what we're asking -- now, i'm a lawyer and i'm a citizen. as you know, i'm the former vice chair of diversity outreach, but what i would say to my fellow americans is that give him a chance. i know that it was a heated and hot election. i know that it didn't come out the way that you wanted it to, but our enemies across the nation and in the nation are watching. we have to be healed. we have to show a united front. i know it's not easy. like i said at the top, go to the website. if you're really concerned about the nation, you really want to see a change, go to the website
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greatagain.gov like i did. i applied for a job with the trump administration. go there. it has a section. share your ideas with this administration as well as to apply for a job. take that energy into helping the nation. >> yeah. because i wonder just as a father skpr father, and i'm watching the kids protesting outside their colleges, why aren't you in class? you know. >> you know, it will pass. that's the thing. everybody grieves differently. >> you're absolutely right. >> people hurt differently. >> i eat. like me, i don't know about you, burnell, i just eat. when that happens, i just eat. but they found -- >> me, i get in my bible and read, honey. that's what i do. i read and i start professing the favor of the lord. and what i'll sigh e say to these young people like i said, give them their chance, let them grieve. not violently. if you're violent, you know you're going to deal with the law. >> not violently. get back to class. >> yeah. if you're protesting peacefully,
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that's fine. get back to class, get back to your day, get to that website. go and click and put your information in and choose change. >> all right. always great. >> be a part of the change you want to see. >> all right. thank you very much. it's been great having you -- >> oh, i got a question for you, mr. cavuto? provolone i heard? miss debbie told me to ask you that. >> all right. that's interesting. you know, by the way, i'd be remiss if i didn't wish you happy pizza day. this is national pizza day. >> oh, i love pizza, honey. i might be headed up north right now. >> expand the pie. thank you very much. great seeing you. >> god bless you and god bless america. >> to you as well. i noticed all the "fox & friends" guys not one italian american among them celebrating -- my producer, hello, i don't see any pizzas. anyway, i should let you know --
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obviously when you elect someone to lead the country, everyone scrutinizes everything he says, that's happening to donald trump. he's getting very high marks on how he's handled himself, comported himself, but just how far does this go? this is absolutely washington we're talking about here. and that was something he wanted to drain, right? the swamp. how does he go about that? after this. now that fedex has helped us simplify our e-commerce, we could focus on bigger issues, like our passive aggressive environment. we're not passive aggressive. hey, hey, hey, there are no bad suggestions here... no matter how lame they are. well said, ann. i've always admired how you just say what's in your head, without thinking. very brave. good point ted. you're living proof that looks aren't everything. thank you. welcome. so, fedex helped simplify our e-commerce business and this is not a passive aggressive environment. i just wanted to say, you guys are doing a great job. what's that supposed to mean? fedex. helping small business simplify e-commerce.
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i know we had a momentous week here and we elected someone that most others thought didn't have a chance. of course we said in our coverage that he was going to be elected. that's fine. momentous. it's national pizza day. and no one has brought a pizza -- >> no, no, neil, here you go. come on. come on. >> what do we have? >> you have a pizza, well, what's left of it. >> it's cold. >> no, it's not. >> did you have a warm -- >> tip? >> no, no tip for cold pizza. look at this. can you see this?
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>> it's a big crew. >> yeah, but i mean -- >> that's all i got, neil. i'm sorry. >> is this heart healthy? because that's what i'm into. >> yeah, sugar free and all of that. >> no, i see pepper heoni here. it bothered me "fox & friends" doing this and not an italian american among them. it makes me sad. but in this segment we have larry sabado to even this out. larry, you obviously knew it was national pizza day i assume, right? >> neil, not only did i know, i was counting on you to send me one. so far i've been disappointed. but it's only 10:00 a.m. >> you're in virginia, right? do they make them like they do in new york? we kind of think we own this turf. >> listen, i wanted one from lombardi's. that's what i requested in advance, and obviously you didn't get the message. we're both of italian decescent >> well, you were so rude to me
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during the entire campaign and dismissive with that wave. but again, happy pizza day to you, my friend. i look at this because more or less to tell everyone chill a little bit. i see all these uprising and protests, some of them getting pretty whack ki over an election where the people have spoken. you might not like it. it might not be your candidate. i know it's an american right to do this, but isn't an american right to start hurting property and hurting people. is this something you would have expected with a donald trump victory? i mean, have we seen -- obviously we've seen riots and protests for presidents once they take office, vietnam war, et cetera. but anything like this for newly elected president who's got some pretty weighty tasks to address? >> well, it seems a little early. >> yeah. >> he won't take office until january 20th. then it's perfectly okay to
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demonstrate. >> absolutely. >> do your american thing. that's what we do. but this seems a little bit early. i always tell people every new president deserves a chance. isn't that what we expect of our fellow citizens? give the new president a chance. if he screws up, then you can go after him. but give a new president a chance. i can remember in the past counterinaugurals. there was one against nixon in 1972, for example. but that was at the inauguration. obviously people need to -- >> he was already president. to your point give this guy a chance. but as you remind me and a great historian, i mean, the tone is important. and it began obviously with donald trump on election night and continued on. i want you to listen to this and get your sense of how the tone has been established by our leaders. take a listen. >> hillary has worked very long and very hard over a long period of time. and we owe her a major debt of
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gratitude for her service to our country. i mean that very sincerely. now it's time for america to bind the wounds of division. we have to get together. mr. president, it was a great honor being with you and i look forward to being with you many, many more times in the future. hillary called and it was a lovely call. and it was a tough call for her. i mean, i can imagine. tougher for her than it would have been for me. for me it would have been very difficult. she couldn't have been nicer. she just said congratulations, donald. well done. and i said i want to thank you very much. you were a great competitor. she's very strong and very smart. >> and so we go. i mean, after the campaign dies down among the principles behind it, how long do you think that lasts? >> well, i hope it lasts until the inauguration at least because he said the right
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things. she said the right things. president obama said the right things. hey, do you think it was easy for any of them to make nice? >> you're right. you're absolutely right. >> of course not. but they did it because it's our system. it's our process. it's our republic. they knew that was their duty. that was their duty. and it's really our duty as citizens to calm down and to look at this in as broad a way as we can, understanding that, you know, we're all americans. it's still one country. i sure hope we don't have another civil war, neil, because, you know, virginia and new york are a long way away and i may never see you again. >> you certainly won't get pizza. >> well, i know i won't get pizza. i'm not even going to get it today on national pizza day, apparently. >> no, not at all. >> but i think things have started out well in terms of what president-elect trump has said, what president obama has said, what secretary clinton said. this is the way it has to be.
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and i hope others will join in because, you know, we're not going to get through those four years otherwise. i mean really. >> they always argue, larry, that we're a 50/50 country and we're always going to have this divide. and i guess that is the case technically in polling and all. but it doesn't mean that the part that wins can't winover the part that does not, right? >> absolutely. and remember, there is such a thing as being a good winner and being a good loser. and i've been concerned that we're losing good sportsmanship period. we're draining all the civility out of our society. one of the fundamentals is good sportsmanship. and that means that the winner extends his or her hand to the loser, and the loser takes the hand and sincerely shakes it. and they exchange good words and maybe, just maybe, they can find two or three things in common to work together on. >> there you go. >> and, neil, this ought to apply to individuals too.
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why not sit down with a couple of people from the other side and ask, explain to me please why you supported x? whether it's clinton or trump. have a discussion without yelling, without getting angry. that's a good start. i'm not saying it's going to resolve everything. >> i'm going to say it's not going to happen. we have a national pizza day to try to deal with this, but don't push your luck, you know? >> neil, now that is cynical. >> i'm sorry. >> on your part. that's very, very cynical. >> i'm angry because i got cold pizza. >> that's something. now you owe me two pizzas. one for your cynicism and one because we're both italian and you didn't care about giving me pizza on national pizza day. >> it is rude on my part. i don't find it accidental national pizza day riegtd after our big election. so someone in our heritage is saying, come on. >> that's exactly right. exactly right. >> thank you, my friend. you're the best. >> thank you, neil. in the meantime, all of this
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shocker and whether it echoed brexit. the man behind that who predicted this, nigel farage is next. what's it like to be in good hands? like finding new ways to be taken care of. home, car, life insurance obviously, ohhh... but with added touches you can't get everywhere else, like claim free rewards... or safe driving bonus checks. even a claim satisfaction guaranteeeeeeeeeee! in means protection plus unique extras only from an expert allstate agent. it's good to be in, good hands.
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welcome back. what are you guys doing? you know, it's national pizza day. and look what i'm left with. can you see this? three cold slices of pizza on national pizza day. and i'm the italian american anchor. hello? little heart surgery and they're trying to send me a message. this is cruel and inhuman. i told them, you know, nigel farage is here. he strikes me as a pizza eater, which he doesn't. but anyway, good to see you, my friend. >> good morning. >> did you know it was in america national pizza day? >> i have to confess i didn't.
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i'm a bit of a red meat man myself. >> well, there is a lot of meat here. it's the meat lovers one. you created a worldwide revolution, young man. and because it extended to what happened here. once again polls everywhere seemed to show brexit had no chance, you said it would apply to donald trump. polls would understate his popularity. sure enough it played out again. >> yeah. i mean, brexit was the first brick out of the wall. it was the first real kickback against this liberal establishment that is dominated with its friends in big business and the big banks, dominated the world for the last couple of decades. they've had everything their own way. and my sense of it is that in britain, america or elsewhere, you know, families at dinner time have been saying what's going on in this world. how are these people in charge? and what brexit did was to give ordinary little people the chance to say what they thought. and they won. and it's now spread here to america with this dramatic victory of trump. >> you know what bothers me though when we see, nigel, i mean it's one thing to lose, and
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another to lose gracefully. or just to leave the scene. i mean, those who missed the trump phenomenon and those who missed brexit what you're talking about, they demean you beforehand and demean you now and even after the fact donald trump, these are the same people that questioned every step he took. if he recommendations, he'd never gotten off the escalator. bottom line is he ignored them, got the support of the american people in a convincing fashion and yet they're not stopping the dismissive coverage. >> no, and they won't. but what we have to do is follow the example given to us over 30 years ago by reagan and thatcher. they both won sort of counterrevolution elections. >> right, right. >> they at no point did the opposition on constant criticism stop and yet they just continued. you know what, they made the world a better place. that's now what we've got the opportunity, brexit, britain getting its independence back.
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>> how do they feel back in britain? >> do you know what, the media and elements of our political class keep talking about the need to run the referendum again, that we should water down the bill. >> so there's always that crowd that's worried. >> oh, yes. oh, yes. >> the nomads made a mistake. >> but actually when i got out around the kingdom and met ordinary people, they are absolutely thrilled at what's happened and say to me, nigel, if this government doesn't deliver the brexit we voted for, we're taking to the streets. so there's no way ultimately they can stop brexit from happening though 17.5 million people they really believe it. >> i agree with you on that, but there's this media impression that that was a dumb move on the part, even now. always stupid. >> very stupid. yes. >> but now i've even seen in the coverage of donald trump, he's getting high marks both in his victory speech and almost everything he's done since been very measured.
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but i always think there should be a honeymoon period for whoever wins. but he's just not getting that. and many in the media rather than apologizing or the closest the "new york times" came this morning, they're going onto say, well, the problems he's going to face and whether he's up to the task. the guy can't win for winning. >> do you know what, look at wall street. the stock market has taken the view -- >> you're right. >> -- that actually trump has some great ideas. i think to me if he couldn't make sure in those first few months he cuts corporation tax, we start seeing hundreds of billions of dollars being repay traited back to the usa. >> what do you think the markets are saying? i'm sure you were watching fox business which if you don't get, nigel, in britain, you should demand. >> we do. >> you do. one of the things we discovered as the night wore on it looked like it wasn't going to polls, looked like donald trump had a chance, down, down, down we went. and all of a sudden it's like the market had this euphoric
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epiphany, wait a minute. >> the reason the markets got it is simple because everybody believed the narrative -- i didn't, but they believed the narrative that hillary was going to win so their short-term trading positions would give that way. >> right. and they were unwinding afterwards. we should explain markets abhor uncertainty. what was certain to them was that hillary clinton victory. they didn't get it, unfortunately like you. >> absolutely. >> so now what? the markets are welcoming a president trump, he's going to move fast and furious. >> and he's got some good ideas. >> does he have to implement them quickly or what do you think? >> i think to me if he starts to get the economic measures in place, then he can work on the rest of his agenda. but sending the big signal that he's pushing for jobs and for growth, do that, and then he can do what he wants. >> you know, he's a very pragmatic businessman. and i always think the kind i saw on the stump didn't always
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jibe with the businessman over the many, many years because i think businessmen and women tend to be about getting stuff out of their inbox and getting stuff done. so that's the part that might tick some people off. already conservatives this morning are saying, wait a minute, is he backtracking on getting rid of obamacare? no, it seemed from the "60 minutes" interview i want to keep features i like pre-existing conditions, et cetera, but that's the kind of presser you face, right? as you start implementing what you want to do, you're going to tick some people off, right? >> but he'll be pragmatic. and if he staunch change a little bit on obamacare, provided he brings the price of it down, it doesn't really matter. >> you know, that's genius. i wish i had more pizza for you. all right, nigel farage, not a very big pizza eater, but you'll consider it when you're here, right? >> i'll consider it and i'm pleased to be here. and i look forward to the usa and the uk getting back to the
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