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tv   Americas News HQ  FOX News  April 30, 2017 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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could delay their upcoming harvest. it's incredible. i'm glad it didn't happen here. >> that does it for us for now. see you again at 6:00. leland vittert and elizabeth up next. elizabeth: president trump lodge in his next 100 days where he went after the media and promised to do everything he could to bring good jobs back to america. leland: plus the deadly storms causing major damage in the south and midwest, including as you see they are a series twisters in texas. adam klotz in the fox extreme weather center with where the storms go next. tranter exclusive interview with chris christie. president trump just a pointing hand to having passports for the opioid epidemic. much more including his plans for the future when he leaves
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office just eight months from now. elizabeth: welcome to "america's news hq" from washington. leland: day after the white house correspondents dinner. everyone is here. i am leland vittert. the president who skipped last night as at his golf club. if you're counting, and now comes the next 100 days as he tries for victories on health care, tax reform and trade. kristin fisher from the white house to look at last night's rally as a kickoff if you will. elizabeth: for a milestone the president trump called ambiguous coming he sure knew how to celebrate it last night in pennsylvania. he used the occasion to blast
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his favorite target the media at the exact same time as holding the annual white house correspondents dinner. >> and i could not possibly be more thrilled than to be more than 100 miles away from washington swamp, spending the evening with all of you and with a much, much larger crowd in much better people. reporter: president trump spent the first 11 minutes giving a failing grade for the first 100 days while giving himself high marks. what he believes are his greatest accomplishments of taking office, getting judge gorsuch, renewing the keystone accel and the code access pipeline and killing the transpacific partnership. he also talked about all the things he hopes to accomplish
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over the last 100 days with major and runs on tax reform, and terminating arafat and repeal it and replacing nobody cared what the plan he treated about this morning, saying it will have much lower premiums but at the same time taking care of preexisting conditions. hanging over everything president trump hoped to accomplish with the next 100 days is the growing nuclear threat from north korea. president trump simultaneously offered an ambiguous ultimatum and praise for kim jong un. >> a lot of people tried to take the power away, whether his uncle or anybody else. he was able to do it. obviously he's a pretty smart cookie. but we have a situation that we just cannot let what has been going on for a long period of years can a new.
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reporter: president trump calling north korean leader kim jong un a pretty smart cookie in an interview taped one day after north korea test launched another ballistic missile. the third time that has happened this month. leland: all right. kristin fisher was the main sites from the north lawn. thank you. liz has more. elizabeth: let's bring in political correspondent gabe ben gaddy. i want to start with you basically recapping the past 100 days. we have his national -- weekly address where he boasted a successful first 100 days, the rally and two new executive order signed by the president. what is the take away? >> will resize the president didn't want to think of his first 100 days as a way to judge the presidency, but he did russia get a lot done. a lot of legacy defining things done.
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when it comes to appointing neil gorsuch to the supreme court, but at the same time it's clear what he's been learning. foreign issues are more complex than he thought they would be an it's not as easy to do with congress as he anticipated even though it's a republican-controlled congress. >> we spoke with the lawmaker yesterday who said the same, if there is a tax rehaul, if we see the economy do better, the economy and the market doing better, complaints will go out the window. he was basically saying if he turns things around, nitpicking would go out the window. >> it depends who you talk about. democrats have made it clear they're not going to work with him on the vast majority of the issues he's working with. for republicans in congress committee willing to work within 90 see them trying to get an agreement on health care or tax reform, you see more and more collaboration with the white house. the things that got to say we should give them a shot. >> i want to talk about upcoming issues quite difficult in what you foresee with reporting.
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in the next couple weeks hopefully talking more about health care, a little bit more clarity when it comes to tax although that is not anytime soon from what we hear. what does the president made for his priorities when it's working with lawmakers to right now obviously haven't got legislation through. >> as a surprise to people to the extent to which the white house does want to push health reform right now. they've made it clear this is one of their top priorities in the administration but after a failed a few weeks ago we thought they would push it off for a while. now we see a major push in the coming days trying to work with people on the hill and not means bringing the more conservative and moderate members of the republican caucus in the house together to move toward a health care bill because because they have to keep the promise. >> something you said would bring together the conservative and moderate republicans and i want to play a quick soundbite senator chuck schumer obviously been a democrat in how he feels about the first hundred days as he also needs to work with
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democrats. >> to name calling doesn't work. let's look at values. let's look at issues. the president's first 100 days have hardly been a success. he has roped in promises to the working people of america, unfulfilled others. when he campaigned, he campaigned as the populace against the democratic republican establishments. but he is governing like someone from the hard right, wealthy special interests. elizabeth: i don't get the sense that senator schumer wants to record the president nor does he affect the president can work with factions in his own party. i'm getting a sense. >> that's exactly right. but democrats were expecting a nervous about is the white house would come out and passive infrastructure bill that democrats would feel forced to collaborate on. what you see from schumer and other democrats, more or less saying you can't get your own party on the hill. don't get us in line. because president trump is so
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unpopular with the democratic base, democratic senators, congresspeople basically say he's your problem. elizabeth: my last question is did he underestimate the complexities of international relations question aren't >> he said he didn't anticipate the issues like that. you see the way he's talking about korea, china. it's been useful for him to get face time with foreign leaders in here from the folks in these fields before. that's something he said. elizabeth: thanks for joining us. we have a lot coming up in the weeks ahead. we will have you back. leland: congress starts this week the same way they did last. the five day window government shutdown. the deadline hangs over any movement or plans on repealing and replacing obamacare, which is taking longer than many republicans would like. lauren blanchard with the battle lines for the week ahead. >> you are right. back in the same situation, just
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a week ago. the dreaded spending plan or risk the shutdown had republican lawmakers may take another crack at a health care package after the first failed last month because of members of their own party. the president and gop leaders are optimistic they can push through another plan as early as this week are democrats say the president has to change his negotiating approach. senator chuck schumer telling "fox news sunday" the president has to back off a full repeal of obamacare if he wants any democrat help. >> he is not covering for the middle. he is governing from the hard right. that is why his regime has had hardly any major six with the exception of gorsuch. if he changes, we can work together. he can't dictate what he wants. the country doesn't work my way or the highway. >> lawmakers work on a package for the president planning to make tax or i'm a tough issue for his administration.
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the white house spending the next week gathering feedback from members and working with the house ways and means committee. the president himself may hit the road to tout his new plan although that is still in the air, all hoping to get something passed within a year. >> the ways and means committee has been working for weeks, months on tax reform. pulmonary work has been done. that's what gives me encouragement. i am thrilled the administration has made this a top priority. this is our time to do it. >> member of the gop leadership cap! boris rogers says they are united by two goals, to simplify the tax or even close the polls. >> to see if they stay united. lauren blanchard on capitol hill. thank you good let's bring in our panel, served on the clinton campaign national finance team. brad blakeman, ferment is there to president george w. bush. gentlemen, good to see you as always.
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i will start with you and focus on health care. how disappointed are democrats but it appears as though republicans kind of have their stuff together to get health care for some form of repeal and replace passed this week? >> with all due respect, that's terrible description of the situation. the best they will do is get a bill through the house, maybe. if they do is dead on arrival in the senate. >> the new bill isn't technically doa, but modifiable. >> that's how i see it. they can't get a build that satisfies the moderates. they have a built but the freedom caucus, what does that mean? taking away people's benefits come at some of preexisting condition coverage, perhaps guaranteed things like care for health care for women, children. it's not a winning formula. leland: let's listen to what the president understands "face the
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nation." >> i'm not hearing you say there's a guarantee. >> we have a clause that guarantees. we are going to have lower premiums. let me just tell you sent in. obamacare is dead. >> they have a real coherent message on this? they want obamacare gone, but that's the only thing republicans truly agree on. >> were in the, negotiation stage. it will be in the senate. democrats remind me of the arsonists who gets mad when the fire department shows up to put out the fire. they started a fire burning out of control and now we have to put it out and we are going to repeal and replace obamacare. having said that, will make her promises to the american people that people of 26 or younger can stay on their parent's policies. who will make sure and accessible. leland: have expectations gotten
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a little bit out of whack? if you go to pennsylvania talked to folks, they thought of repeal and replace tax reform and changing trade deals was going to happen, it was going to be done. they believed that and now all of a sudden, exit patients in reality come into shall we say lack of quality. >> of course. these are general changes. hasn't been done since the 80s. the changing and revamp in national health care. these are things that take time to negotiate in to work its way through government. the good news is republicans understand 2017 must be the year of action. they made promises to the american people. the american people go to the polls and say that republicans keep their promises and if they don't, were in trouble. >> let's get away from the policies themselves onto the politics of it. does that work well for
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democrats to just be obstructionist to monitor what when it comes to obamacare and tax reform? >> i think if they are taking lessons from the mitch mcconnell playbook, though be obstructionist. the president is now the president and republicans control both chambers. democrats are more than willing to work on health care reform. most democrats believe obamacare is partially working. the notion that these things take time, republicans have for eight years been campaigning on getting rid of the law. plenty of time to reflect and now they don't seem to be able to do it. leland: the president said it's a little harder than everyone thought it was. >> it is. democrats and they passed a bill, nobody read it. 3000 pages in a jam it through their own caucus and pass a law they had no clue how it's going to work years and now we
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understand it's failing. republicans have to take charge. they made promises. republicans are doing the democrats should have done and that is make sure you have people invested in what they're actually going to vote on. leland: we'll see if lessons continue to be learned. great to see you as always. appreciate it. good to see you. elizabeth: fox news has learned that longtime moderate republican congresswoman linda ross leighton will retire from congress opening up a potential battleground state in south florida appear she was first elected to the house in 1989, the first hispanic woman in congress. the former chairwoman of the house foreign affairs committee. paul ryan reacting to news of her retirement. a voice for the voiceless and vulnerable. first hispanic woman in congress did such a privilege to serve with her.
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leland: part of the show as well. we heard a lot during this program from none other than chuck schumer. but can it general h.r. mcmaster with chris wallace. those full interviews coming up right after this show, 2:00 p.m. right here on the fox news channel. tomorrow night, you won't want to miss the two new shows at 5:00 p.m. the fox news specialist with eric boling, ebony williams and stick around for our good friend and colleague, martha mccollum who has the story after the first 100 days. 7:00 p.m. eastern right here. transfer at least five people died in more than 50 people are injured after tornadoes ripped through parts of east texas overnight. the tree or center had been set up at a local high school to
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help emergency crews still in the area. one twister stretched half a mile wide, flipping cars, uprooting trees and flattening at least two homes. in arkansas, one person died after retrieved blue into her home. causing major flooding statewide. at one point, 80,000 people were without power. meteorologist adam klotz tracking all of these storms. any relief in sight? hard wea folks. reporter: it really is. we are sticking with it through the rest of the week. today a very active system. really getting on the eastern side of the mississippi river. to the north of iran, to the south center thunderstorms at times dramatic levels. the red polygon is a tornado watch which means the ingredients are there. the good news is that they continues to move towards the
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east, weakening a little bit. absolutely everything. the backside of the system with snow on portions of colorado stretching off here. snow still falling in places on the backside of this, some cold air fare. all sorts of weather event on the northern and of that band of rain, absolute downpour. flash flood watches and warnings in place across much of the midwest, southern indiana and the further south towards little rock into the arkansas area. our concern for the rest of the day continues to be where the line of storms is to slowly move with the chance of severe thunderstorms. a tornado or two as we continue to track this into the evening hours. turn the thread should be dying down five or 6:00. as i said, lingering today.
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the overnight hours we will see some rain to the northeast in eastern coast but that will not be nearly as severe. though be able to pick up later today into monday. elizabeth: thank you so much. appreciate it. reporter: you're welcome. leland: president trout -- but his executive order through international trade deals means for you in your job. plus, national security advisor h.r. mcmaster speaking exclusively to fox news about north korea's failed missile test this weekend. how the u.s. will respond to the communist regimes defiance to the west. and new jersey governor chris christie sits down with elizabeth in an exclusive interview about how his site is personal against the opioid epidemic and so much more. reporter: 52,000 people died last year in our country.
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whether the people who died from car accidents in gun homicides combined. these are children who are dying unnecessarily indiscriminately unnecessarily indiscriminately socioeconomic status in our country. glucerna. everyday progress. (i wanted him to eat healthy., so i feed jake purina cat chow naturals indoor, a nutritious formula with no artificial flavors. made specifically for indoor cats. purina cat chow. nutrition to build better lives. yes, wise man. i'm confident in my credit score... just not about protecting it. confidence is a state of mind. find it in the free creditwise app from capital one. the
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>> she was given 30 percocet. 30 percocet for two wisdom teeth. fortunately, i have been educated, so i took the percocet, i handed her a bottle of advil and i told her to tough it out. elizabeth: governor chris christie getting personal about his own daughters easy access to pain medication after routine surgery. this is an annual addiction converts in the state of new jersey were according to the state attorney general's office, heroin and morphine deaths increased 200% between 2010 and 2015. the decision to assist the president in leading a task force to take on what is now a growing national epidemic was easy. the governor said. we sat down to talk about just that in part 1 of our exclusive said down.
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>> is an absolute mission for me. the president has been great. i met with all the people at the white house involved in the sun twos day. the president told me less income you tell me what we need to do here and were going to do it. very supportive. i met for three hours on tuesday with both members of the house and senate. the great thing to report despite all the things in washington as this is completely bipartisan. the meetings were completely bipartisan. democrats and republicans agree with each other. they were offering to help the president. it's really an issue so that they know the party doesn't matter on this anymore. what i need from them is cooperation and we will make those recommendations in the report. reporter: you talked about fortified addict began on pharmaceutical pills that prevention is huge. what is working in new jersey?
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$50 million ad campaign the electronic tracking doctors are using, are those things we see in the report that things can be implemented nationwide like you do in new jersey? >> yes. i think the president is ready to spend the money because we'll spend it on matt or funerals. >> where's it going to come from? >> right now we spend so much money to fight for them. how much money are spending on this problem? gao put out a report last year criticizing the drug czar's office because it's been ineffective despite billions of dollars. part of my job is about the governor and he wants to take a look at where the money is being spent and how we can spend it better. we put a lot of our money in, but spent the money differently because we are not succeeding.
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elizabeth: when we talk about money, obviously we talk about the budget. the budget to attend the discussion will see a continuing resolution. talking about fiscal year 2018. when i look at new jersey in particular, things are/were your when you get programs like these getting cut. proposed of course. >> as part of the negotiation between the president and congress and he wants to try to get their attention on the way money can be spent better. they need to be examined. i'm a republican. i don't think washington d.c. is spending the money they spend wisely. i'm flood insurance, get the government out of the flood insurance business. right now feel the way you can get it is for the government. that's ridiculous. they screwed up flood insurance so badly they have to do it twice. the fact is we should privatize insurance to let the insurance companies who know how to do it
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the right way. it will be hard to sell to new jersey voters. if they never heard the phrase national flood insurance program that would be the best day of their lives. believe me. transfer the next half-hour, conversation with the governor. how do battles on capitol hill from the budget showdown impact him as chief executive of the state? stay tuned for that. >> we look forward to that. president trump slaps tariffs on our neighbors to the norse setting up a showdown to renegotiate nafta. a look at what is at stake in what it means for american jobs. as north korea's test another missile, is the white house running out of patience with kid jobs un. how the administration has responded publicly and behind the scenes coming out. >> what's important is for all of us to confront the regime. pursuing the weaponization of a missile with a nuclear weapon.
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this is something that we know we cannot tolerate in terms of a risk to the american people. the president has made clear he will resolve the issue one way or the other. can shape your smile up to 50% faster today at invisalign.com what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. truecar has pricing data on every make and model, so all you have to do is search for the car you want, there it is. now you're an expert in less than a minute. this is truecar.
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leland: president trump calling kim jong un a pretty smart cookie today, but also said he will not be happy if north korea conducts another nuclear test. garrett taney with what the administration might have over the hermit kingdom. >> it's important to know just a few days ago they came hours after secretary of state racks tillerson said they were willing to discuss talks. so at least for now, those talks appear to be off the table and left on the table is a possibility the u.s. will take military action.
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so did the president he liked to avoid that can't completely rule out at this point either. administration officials realize that a direct military action could spark a war. the national security advisor h.r. mcmaster explained why north korea's nuclear missile program is a much bigger threat than their goal of being able to launch an attack on the u.s. mainland. >> they are not developing nuclear weapons for defensive reasons. they want to use it to block nation and they've declared the type to sell nuclear weapons openly. reporter: several u.s. officials have said while todd -- calling for new sanction and those of us already in place. but god and having moved ahead with sanctions for years, the u.s. believes any real change
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will come from pressure from the closest ally and trading partner, china. >> the key to this is china. they can put the brakes on this. i do not believe that kim jong un will do that by himself. the welfare of his people to say the least. china is the key to this and we tell the chinese there's a whole a lot at stake unless they bring us to a halt. >> president trump believes china is going to de-escalate its program but said more pressure is needed and may be willing to give that trade deals should order to make that happen. leland: garret tenney life here in washington. eggs. >> we are going to save americans health care and repeal and replace that disaster known as obama cared, which is dying,
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dying, died. >> president trump on a topic that continues to haunt lawmakers. this is governors across the country waiting to see what lawmakers decide. repeal and replace their readers see. should voters fear losing medicaid coverage as part of a new deal and what is the art in and out of coverage. chris christie continues. >> what a scary for people is how much premiums have gone up under obama cared. obama kerry needs to be changed. as far as expanding medicare, i made that decision. we are getting very good result. i think what you need to do on expanded medicaid is give increased flexibility. we've gotten waivers to change parts of the program. we've done so much better and we
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are spending less money than we were before. it helps to have patients that not much of an increased cost. the president will find a way to make sure expanded medicaid stays in effect. it will not allow obama cared too can get you in the dirt because it's been a failure. the rates have gone on. thus people have access to the private insurance market. succeeding on the medicaid side. he might talk about the president getting things done are talking about the first 100 days in office. you would give the president to be. do you still feel that way? a lot of things on its plate right now. how is he doing right this moment? >> right this moment the president is doing pretty well. elizabeth: what could he be doing better? >> there's so many things that i think the staff has to do that,
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has to give discipline into the process of getting laws made and laws changed. that is hard. the staff has to do that. the president can't do a map on his own. the biggest reason i gave him a b. list because it just is gorsuch. he got a new person on the supreme court that i believe given good health will be making decisions for the next 25 years. that is a great thing for this country to have a smart and conservatives up there to interpret the constitution. that will be one of them. whether it's for years to rate yours, that will be seen as one of his biggest achievements. elizabeth: how does the task force stated? >> the president can enter if there is work and try considering at that time. my expectation is my work will
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be done with the administration and congress by october 31st. it's my intention to go into the dirt. we have four children, two of whom will be done with college by the time i've done the governor, but to have to go to college. i've been in this now for 16 years. i became u.s. attorney in 2002. i'll leave in 2018. 60 years of committing yourself is a lot that i think is time to try some other things as well. elizabeth: there's huge eyes and there's huge loads. -- huge. why do you feel like that in the u.k. are? you are proud of your
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accomplishment and you've done a lot. i've done everything i can hear decide how you walk away? >> for me, no one likes it when your approval ratings are lower than you'd like them to be. i've been at 75% job approval and 25% and everywhere in between. the only thing that is worth is two things. getting reelected with 61% of the vote in two trying to get things done. i've only got eight months left to get things done and i'm still doing okay. that's what really matters. people who jealously guard their job approval ratings are more concerned with how they look at what they do. i'm more concerned with what i've done. i've done a lot from a state of my time is u.s. attorney. every career will have some regrets. he don't do everything 100% right in what he looked back,
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you learn i've learned a lot. i have no big regret. >> certainly sounds like you're more concerned about the impact which also ties into the fact you take this so seriously. >> no doubt in the end that is the way you are judged. no one will remember approval ratings a year from now. but will they remember if you help save lives through setting up new avenues of treatment for drug and alcohol in your state? will they remember you helped create an economy with over 300,000 private sector jobs? they all have a better life. those are things people remember. the rest of the stuff will be background noise. i've been good most of the time at keeping out crowd noise in the background. elizabeth: governor, thank you so much. appreciate it.
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elizabeth: very nice to sit down with the governor. he was very human, very raw. i was interested in his opinion on health care because they talk talk about lawmakers said the decision david. governors all over the country have to hit the ground running if something does happen to the health care law. true to your front governors on both sides of the aisle. they don't know what is happening. williams of dollars in any state, new jersey, colorado, especially when it comes to medicaid that they have to do with or without. great interview. coming out. buy american, higher american. we've heard that before. now he will renegotiate a major trade deal to cut a better deal for the united states. but it could need for jobs and for your wallet when we come back. i have tried so hard to forget what it felt like
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>> and if it's not a fair deal for our country, because you have to understand, we have been on the wrong side of the deal with canada and mexico for many, many years. leland: president shrub speaking at his rally in harrisburg, pennsylvania. doubling down on his plan to renegotiate with the american free trade agreement while some have williams of jobs is created to feel the benefits to the united states are in their words minimal. "the wall street journal" reporter who specializes in these areas during this now. great to have you. big picture here. what does this mean for the average american voter? we are really getting a raw deal i'm trade and they hear i will get a better deal. is there a better deal? >> there certainly is a better deal. when nafta came into effect, we
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barely had an internet. the car industry was in a different place and a lot of updates could be dead to the agreement. now when you talk to wants to keep the agreement like it is with the exception of a lot of u.s. farm groups and the congressman to represent them. think about a lot of things in technology picture of the administration wants to claw back a bigger share of the auto industry. that is some event like to do. they would like to reduce the trade deficit with mexico which is over $60 billion now. >> when we hear the words free trade to the most simple of plain text reading it means free trade. is that what it is or is it a little more nuanced question i asked in the it's basically what it is. a lot of the tears dropped zero for 1994. some took many years. now they are pretty much at zero.
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as much corn, as much beef down in mexico. no quotas, no tariffs. a wonderful thing. and mexico if they produce an eg please, a wiring harness, axle that goes into the gm product or forward or chrysler, they can send that back. >> you see that when you look at a car. the parts came from 4000 different places. real quickly, there will be winners and losers in this. the automakers get more jobs in the united states. >> the administration is very weary of doing anything that hurts farmers and we spoke with overrides the commerce secretary today. there's a lot of red states that supported donald trump did a lot of senators of the midwest. orders they had those people are not disappointed at the end of the day. leland: more of that interview with wilbur ross. also how long all of this could take. stick around and we will see you
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on the other side of this break. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo is specifically designed to open up airways to improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. learn more about better breathing at mybreo.com.
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leland: back now talking trade and what i pocketbook at home. the president on so many issues
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this week. south korea and renegotiating south korean trade deals earlier this week at the canadian lumber tariff already pulled out of tpp in the first 100 days. all things the president has touted. it has created enormous uncertainty in the market. how does the commerce secretary planned to try and mitigate that? >> it will be interesting to watch. right now the market doesn't seem to be too worried about a trade war for trade agreed schmidt was south korea. leland: why do you think the market is worried about some in-house and willing to do. >> it's got a split in this administration. the people of the market are closer to the white house. they are closer -- leland: are they saying some in different? they behind-the-scenes reassuring the market and this is what the president is saying
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publicly? >> your rhetoric on both sides. you have people wanting to work with the markets and international companies in the administration with wide latitude. the aluminum and steel could have a huge and act on the market or they could just be a study that ends in a small terrace on aluminum or steel. >> what he is talking in terms of time frames. is it something in the next month or a year long horizon? >> secretary ross said december they went in a ship in nafta renegotiation before the big election. this is an industry that trump's advisers know very well. they wrap these cases have been give recommendation. >> we see the ministrations deadlines. we'll see if they keep them. great reporting as always. look forward to having you back.
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>> take a look at this and keep a straight face. contestants in a drag race that got in there wackiest outfits in d.c. obstacles trying to outpace the competition if you will. part of an independence day celebration marking 35 years with a symbolic secession from the u.s. in 1982. i don't know if anyone can, that these men have it down. these men have it down. >> yep, i've got nothing.okes i'm not now, have a wonderful sunday. leland: see you next weekend. an aspirin regimen. for the car you want. what other people paid after that, just sign up,
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chris: i'm chris wallace with the trump presidency now past the 100-day milestone, what's ahead for the next 100? >> for the last 100 days, my administration has been delivering every single day with a great citizens of our country. chris: this hour, we will break down what the president has accomplished so far and what's to come. we will start with foreign policy towards north korea, iran and russia. in an exclusive interview with general h.r. mac master, then the democrats push back.

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