tv Fox and Friends First FOX News May 25, 2017 2:00am-3:01am PDT
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manchester. the president making a forceful argument that they need to do their fair share. that is a sentiment shared by his secretary of state, rex tillerson. >> he wants to persuade nato members to meet their obligations, you can expect the president to be tough on them, the us is spending 4%, we are doing a lot. the american people are doing a lot, we need to make sure you are doing your share. >> the president will be there at nato headquarters, fantastic facility, we will tell you about that later in the day. a working opportunity to have lunch with friends's new president. rob: curious how they will get along. >> the president's visit to belgium comes after he visited leaders of the world's three
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major religions. rob: charles krauthammer praising the president think this is an indicator that america is back. >> i understand, trying to tie it together to look nonpolitical but the real story is not the vatican or the israeli trip. american policy, getting 50 sunni nations lined up that this is a new day in the middle east with revelations for many years. that is the story. a new middle east, america is back. heather: fake russian intelligence may have impacted james comey's investigation into hillary clinton. the washington post reporting the fbi obtained a document claiming loretta lynch assured the clinton campaign that she
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would not let the investigation get too far. in july comey announced the investigation was over. by august the fbi concluded that document was fake, possibly meant to confuse the euro. rob: donald trump expanding his search for a new director after joe lieberman is out of the running, he was described as the president's top pick but ran into pushback from democrats with concerns about having a politician running the fbi. the president fired james comey earlier this month fighting his handling of the clinton email investigation. >> calling her neck out of a job but he has dedicated fans off the field, dozens of supporters rally outside nfl headquarters in new york city. organizers claim he is not being treated fairly after kneeling for the national anthem and speaking out about social issues last season.
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he opted out of his san francisco 49ers contract in march, he remains unsigned but is in talks with the seattle seahawks. >> so much for flying under the radar, cops busting a pigeon with a tiny backpack full of drugs. this bird near the border of iraq and kuwait with nearly 200 ecstasy pills in tow. what an interesting story. >> a big story, the fox news alert for massive manhunt intensifying for more terrorists linked to the manchester killer and his family. rob: chilling details about the brother who was planning his own major missed. heather: the family's worldwide terror ties. >> reporter: that is right, new information about the person
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behind this terrible attack, more memories for those who were killed as the camera shows the mountain of flowers that over the last few days has built up in the center of manchester to the 22 who were killed, remembering the 64 who still remain in the hospital after this incredible attack. police firmly on the trail of this attacker's network, eight more arrests, eight in custody right now. raids this morning, arrests overnight, clearly they are thinking there was a network behind this man, he did not act alone as we get new hunting images of 22-year-old salman abedi, leaked information and images indicate that he was wearing at the time a complicated sophisticated backpack, explosives filled very carefully with shrapnel that
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exploded and was aimed to do maximum damage. detained in the last 12 hours or so his father and his brother in libya. his brother under questionable detention by one of the militias saying he knew about the process and isis knew about too. his father reported secondhand links with al qaeda. he was involved in the uprising against qaddafi and militias there. this as overall security in the uk ramping up. teresa mack, the prime minister, has said this is a heightened security alert, the highest terror alert, that means troops are on the street fearing another attack might be imminent. finally as attention paid to the victims 22 dead, three more
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identities, a 14-year-old girl, a young couple 19, 17, one minute of silence two hours from now across the uk. it will be a very emotional time. rob: some sort of solution to global terror, katy perry says we need to look no further, she may have the answer. >> the greatest thing we can do is unite as people, fan bases. i think the greatest thing we could do is unite and love on each other, no barriers, no borders. we need to coexist. >> critics i bashing her hug it out approach as over exemplifying a worldwide crisis. >> perry was a staunch supporter of hillary clinton and vocal member of the resistance
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movement. >> the tsa is ramping up security. >> cheryl casone he from foxbusiness here with the major change to screening procedures. >> attention packrat, the bag you are taking to the airport and might need to be later with new rules from the tsa about which things you will have to remove when you get to the check point. the new procedures are in the testing phase but if they are implemented it will require all food and most electronics will have to be removed and placed on the been separately. travelers would remove electronics bigger than cell phones with the goal to cut back on manual bag checks, the tsa change not associated with the laptop been, and testing a new
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machine that verifies travelers ids. they are testing facial recognition technology. testing is underway at small airports like colorado springs, boise, texas, there is also tsa check points in los angeles, phoenix, boston, detroit, puerto rico, starting to reflect what may become national rules. in kansas city earlier this month screeners asked passengers to remove all paper from their bags, even notepads but that test didn't go too well and the tsa dropped the idea. the bigger issue is airline baggage fees, passengers don't want to check their bags, loading of their carry-ons. officials admit it has created a big issue because overstuffed bag takes more time to screen at the check point by the security official, the tsa says of the new procedure is enacted it would not affect those with tsa
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pre-check or global entry. just a little thought, advice for travelers out there. heather: it is taking a little longer to stuff everything in your carry-on. thank you. rob: i felt the rain coming. >> the same system moving into the northeast, rain and thunderstorms. across the southeast the potential for severe storms last night. moving into the mid-atlantic, you see temperatures in the eastern half of the country cooler than average, satellite radar imagery and settled across the rockies and the system in the mid-atlantic and the middle east if you're traveling today, make sure you are checking online because we will see delays and cancellationss, over a dozen reports of tornadoes across the southeast and all of this will lift across the
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northeast with marginal risk of severe storms and the new system moving out of the rockies that can bring strong to severe storms as well. heather: we will check back later. it is 9 minutes, almost 10 minutes after the top of the hour. special election spotlight, all eyes on montana. heated contest just took a twisted turn. the republican candidate sending off attacks accused of assaulting a reporter. rob: the bomber the son of a refugee. our next guest is comes down to assimilation in their nation. >> a little boy who got a new lease on life after a visit from the first lady. ♪
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republican house candidate is charged with assault, forced to defend himself accused of body slamming a reporter in montana. how could this affect the neck and neck special election? the very latest this morning. >> reporter: good morning. montana republican greg gianf t gianfor gianforte, the seat, and i on victory over his democratic challenger but after an incident with a reporter, he is now facing misdemeanor assault charges and reenergizing the democratic party just hours before the polls open. the incident was caught on tape and witnessed by our colleagues. take a listen to this tape. >> let me talk to you about that later.
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>> sick and tired of you guys! last time you did the same thing! >> jacobs, after the incident tweeting he was body slammed and his glasses broken. the campaign is defending the incident saying, quote, after asking jacobs to lower the recorder jacobs declined. he then attempted to grab the phone that was pushed in his face, jacobs grabbed greg's wrist and spun away from greg pushing them both to the ground. it is unfortunate this aggressive behavior from a liberal journalist created this scene at our campaign volunteer barbecue, democratic congressional committee jumping on it releasing facebook ads calling for him to drop out of the race and the republican party to denounce him. three of montana's major newspapers are withdrawing their
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endorsement, something to watch, the absentee vote today as it comes in. third of the vote has been returned, they have no fault voting so those votes will count. >> we will continue to follow it, thank you. back to this, days after the tragedy in manchester many are asking the same questions candidate trump did in 2016. >> good to brussels, go to paris, go to different places. there is something going on and it is not good where they want sharia law. they want things, there has to be some assimilation. there is no assimilation. >> wire refugees having such a hard time assimilating to their new culture and does this make the world more vulnerable? national security analyst at the heritage foundation, thanks for joining us.
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let's bring this up. series on some attacks that happened and this is telling. in paris on november 15, 2015, two individuals became radicalized, 130 people and it up killed and in july, the tunisian national who drove a truck into a crowd killing 84 people and in berlin 2016 failed asylum seeker drove a truck through a crowded christmas market killing 12 people, the video was horrifying of that one. what is the problem and why are these refugees not assimilating into the cultures? >> a few things. first of all you have isis. because of the refugee flows going into europe isis is specifically targeting those refugee flows to infiltrate, get that preexisting operatives into
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europe so they can carry out some of the attacks you mentioned but you have to say because of the scale of the numbers coming into europe it is almost impossible for any of the receiving countries to begin to deal with this and deal with integration, assimilation issues in a responsible way because in june alone you had to million people come into the country and two years. i think any country in the world would struggle with that. these european countries are very uncertain about a sense of guilt about colonial past procedure making it more difficult. mahmoud abbas out-of-control numbers, no way to control it, what would your answer be? close off the borders until there's a way to figure that out? >> not close the borders entirely but you don't have to be an open borders advocate to say the numbers coming into europe are crazy and this has been discussed in the uk for
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years where you had poll after poll of people saying they want immigration cut very significantly and yet politicians being unwilling or unable to act on that and that is how you see a big divide between the political class and those people and their government. >> what about those muslims who believe in sharia law. two thirds of muslims in the countries from which we accept refugees in the united states believe in sharia law and that runs opposite of our beliefs in america. >> this is where you have to say the refugee situation is especially pertinent. of europe is accepting people in such a large numbers from people fleeing from syria or parts of east africa or the middle east or wherever it may be there has to be part of the social
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contract is there has to be integration to the core values of the country which you are arriving in, the core values of the country you are arriving in europe and the us as well do not revolve around sharia law. they revolve around the will of law, modernity, democracy, human rights and a sense of identity that doesn't involve being dictated by religion. >> people have the right to govern themselves among other things. thank you for joining us, difficult topic to tackle in a short time, thank you. >> 20 minutes after the hour, violent gang members about to enter and stay in the united states under president obama's watch. the bombshell report that could pinpoint the source or one source of america's ms 13 problem, dramatic moments as a woman jumps onto the hood of her moving suv to try to stop a
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and add phone and tv for only $34.90 more a month. call today. comcast business. built for business. rob: welcome back to "fox and friends" first, city officials pulling support for an event honoring the leader of a terror group. the daily news joining the nypd commissioner, jetblue, coca-cola and more and arching away from the puerto rican day parade in new york city. the event elevating oscar lopez rivera. 's group claimed responsibility for more than 100 bombings across the us was new york city councilman told tucker carlson rivera is a, quote, freedom fighter, not a terrorist. >> you don't follow this into
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any detail. he is a terrorist. >> nelson mandela was viewed as a terrorist in 2008. rob: rivera spent decades behind bars but was released from prison after president obama commuted his sentence. bombshell report revealing the obama administration allowed illegal and violent gang members into the us. senator ron johnson said customs and border protection documents showed 16 teenagers caught crossing the border in 2014, admitted to being part of the deadly gang but that didn't stop the feds from placing them in community homes across the country. immigrant children poured into the us and received benefits under president obama. rob: foxbusiness alert. 20,000 car seats, the webing can break in a crash.
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may not keep kids restrained. the recall affects certain my ride 65 and vertical feet in 2014. they will notify owners and dealers will provide a replacement harness free of charge. google wants to watch how you shop even when you are off-line. the text i planning to track how much people spend in physical stores after clicking on digital and thinking the ad might have driven them to the store. google trying to sell more online advertising saying it won't be able to examine specific items purchased or how much a specific individual spends, not that intensive. rob: 26 after the. any moment we are monitoring this, the president will be on his way to meet with the newly elected president of france. heather: live on the ground in brussels, stay tuned.
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rob: fox news alert breaking overnight donald trump welcomed by european leaders in brussels, belgium. heather: you are watching "fox and friends" first, we always appreciate it. rob: donald trump will attend his first nato summit. >> international committee of spencer and nato with more. good morning. >> reporter: it is a huge media center. this thing goes back 100 yards. obviously trade, economic cooperation and security coordination part of what we expect the president to talk about as he meets with european leaders today been a number of other issues to keep an eye on. the paris climate accord as well. the president is stepping up.
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>> nato summit, he will be there later to meet with the newly elected president of france, emmanuel mc crone, a more center, not left or right candidate that won the election over a far right candidate. we will see if they have common ground. >> you have to be inside that car. kevin, let's get back to you and talk about the other things they are going to be discussing in the g7 meeting. >> the paris climate accord. i know at home people probably glaze over when they hear about that but i do believe this is a pretty significant economic component of the paris climate accord as well, we expect the president to talk about that and not only that but you will hear him speak a great deal about nato, not just his relationship on the continent itself but the us contributions to the alliance. as you read and heard the us is contributing 4% of gdp to the
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nato alliance and that keeps beekeepers where they need to be but it is supposed to be a goal of other nation members to give at least 2% of their gdp to the alliance and only five nations including the us are doing it out of 28 nations that belong to the nato alliance. i expect the president to have her on that point and this idea that nato will increase its contributions in the anti-isis effort. secretary of state rex to listen talked about that. >> nato joining the isis coalition. that would be an important step for them to take. they have been in observer but they have become more and more engaged in the actual fight to defeat isis. the secretary-general feels that would be an important step for them to take. >> reporter: we are also keeping
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an eye on the nato handover, a beautiful facility, working lunch with friends's president, the president is on his way to italy for the g7. heather: a massive manhunt for more terrorists linked to the manchester killer and his family. >> brand-new details about the brother who was planning his own jihad. is a massacre. >> worldwide terror ties. >> reporter: as we stand in front of the memorial, flowers in the center of manchester, to those killed in the attack monday night in the concert hall we are learning more and more about the attacker and his support network. we learned of more arrests
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overnight and raids this morning, all told eight people are under arrest believed to be part of this network that police say are actively supporting, actively helping this mom or. this as new images of salman abedi emerge and details about how he committed his dastardly act, images showing a backpack full of explosives and shrapnel meant to do ultimate, massive damage to anybody near him and it did, detained also overnight, the last 24 hours or so, the father and brother of salman abedi in libya. the brother allegedly claims he knew about the attack and isis links to the attack, no confirmation of that from libya.
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the father allegedly had links to groups associated with al qaeda in the past. a lot more questions on that front as overall security continues to be ratcheted up, security level at its highest and that means troops are out on the street, possible threat of an attack is seen here. and one half hour there will be a minute of silence here and across the uk for 22 killed, 64 remain in the hospital. heather: heart wrenching hearing from all those families. take a look at this. she jumped on the whatever card to stop thieves from driving away. they were trying to get away with her suv. a man dressed in black, the woman in red immediately jumped up on the hood, bangs on the windshield trying to stop him but the thief tries to drive away anyway and after a you seconds he digits his plans, jumps into a getaway car, the woman jumping off her suv running to catch it as it rolls into traffic but he got away
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with her cell phone and her purse. hopefully herself and has gps on it. she likes her car. rob: a miracle as a sick boy finds a heart donor just hours after a visit from the first lady, melania trump, blessings and faith, she released a statement saying her heart was filled with joy after learning the news he got the transplant, speaking italian to children in the hospital, she will continue to pray for them. heather: did the obama administration break its own rules by using the nsa to spy on americans. how routine was it? we discussed that next. rob: a breakdown of the republican plan to repeal and
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>> impressive new evidence that the nsa under president obama illegally gathered the phone calls, emails and personal information of countless american citizens. >> the new report showing one in 20 internet searches conducted by the nsa violated constitutional privacy protections. >> joining us to weigh in on that, philip started liberal analyst kathy a rule. thanks for coming on so early this morning. i think a lot might see both
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sides of this, it clearly appears to be something quite illegal but on the other hand people sometimes say this is the way you keep americans safe, checking on everybody. that is what the nsa does. >> in 2011 the obama administration loosened the rules on how to collect data on americans and since that time there has been a threefold increase in the search on americans, part of that unmasking susan rice did came out of that. you just mentioned a fifth, 1/5, 5% of people have been violated, this is a strong ruling, so strong and not partisan, the aclu condoned this as well. heather: what do you think? >> reporter: i can find very few reports on this is congressman rand paul saying if this is true, if this truly happens it
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is a big deal. we are not quite sure. in an era after the patriot act and september 11th we expect this as americans, that they would survey this. we are not sure yet. we expect a lot more reports if this is the truth. heather: inform, the nsa, the prohibition with greater frequency than previously disclosed. >> reporter: it is being uncovered, we will find out even more, to be expected so doing for our own security, another september 11th on our watch on the president's watch, hopefully
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they are doing it safely for us. >> as safe as it could be. republicans will jump on this as a breach of our rights from the left which talks about how you need freedom from this kind of oppression and stuff like that but personally as a person -- i don't do anything wrong, if this will keep me from getting blown up on the subway i don't have much problem with this surveillance. >> my point, my counterpart over here, the bush talking points from a few years ago these rules loosened by the obama administration done in 2011, they were not done in 2001-2002 after 9/11. i would be interested in know why those rules were loosened.
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if you read the court filing it does say that nsa, we are not going to stop doing this but we will try. that is not what the court said. they said stop doing this. that is the most important thing to look at. >> it could be. we don't know. it could be a big deal. >> hours before the polls open, republican candidate charged with assault. >> the neck and neck special election in montana. jenkins in montana. >> reporter: the republican candidate gianfortre thought he was on the path to victory but misdemeanor assault charges reenergize democratic party hours before the polls open, this altercation caught on tape,
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take a listen. >> sick and tired of you guys, last time you did the same thing. >> reporter: this incident happened, jacobs tweeting he was body slammed and his glasses were broken but the campaign defended the candidate in the statement saying asking virginians to lower the recorder jacobs declined, greg did attempt to grab the phone, pushing his face, he grabbed greg's wrist and pushing them both to the ground. and the campaign volunteer bbq, democratic congressional committee jumping on the opportunity, releasing facebook ads falling on the candidate to drop out of the race and
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republicans, withdrawing endorsements. heather: coming up on "fox and friends" katy perry thinks we should hug it out, right? just hug it out. can i read lips? rob: you might have a lot of it at 6:00. we will be right back. on. so when i need to book a hotel room, i want someone that makes it easy to find what i want. booking.com gets it. they offer free cancellation if my plans change. visit booking.com. booking.yeah.
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still finding a way to stay no way. cheryl casone he from foxbusiness here to make a little sense of all of this. >> the democrats are mad about this, congressional budget office released its score, both sides of the political aisle, immediate attack mode, the report found the bill would lower the average cost of premiums for the insurer and release the deficit by $119 billion over the next decade. the cbo reported in its analysis 23 million fewer americans would be uninsured by 2026. that includes those who choose not to sign up under the exchanges. that point is hardly debated. democrats like bernie sanders took to social media to slam the
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gop bill, sanders tweeting in three words, what a disgrace. chuck schumer said the gop should throw the bill in the trash. the white house late last night issued this statement, history has proven the ceo to be incapable of accurately predicting how healthcare legislation will impact coverage. more alarming is yesterday hhs reports based on data from the obama administration show average individual market premiums more than doubled since 2013. many insurance companies have been pulling out of the exchanges because they couldn't afford it. >> another health insurance company -- blue cross blue shield will no longer offer plans in parts of kansas and missouri, the company citing $100 million since 2014.
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>> donald trump getting a warm welcome in brussels, belgium overnight just hours from now. he will attend his first nato summit. tough talk on the first 4 and trip before they come together and try to eradicate terrorism as a group. here to weigh in on this, thanks for coming in. he wants to get nato more engaged in this fight to eviscerate this group. >> this is going to be a real test of donald trump to see if he can do that. so far so good with his tour, his speech in saudi arabia, that was a telltale sign of how he will be perceived. with him in nato, to show strength here.
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>> spending on military defense. that is a big thing too. one interesting thing i read this morning by the bbc says the germans and the french are going to agree to this fight against isis but germany and france say it is a symbolic agreement. i don't know of two countries that have been more inundated by terrorism than france and germany. they don't want -- >> not only that but this is an insult. look what happened in manchester, especially france. the nice attacks, how can they use that kind of language and say that? rob: you would think the leaders would be jumping at the bit to drop some bombs, the french
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bombs from paris -- >> major targeted sidewalk cafés. everyone has to come together globally. this is not isolated but a global problem. rob: the president has been busy handling three major religions. summits and leaders, in sicily time, beautiful. doing pretty good. a lot of negative media scrutiny internationally, has domestic problems but what did you about the meeting with the pope and how that went. >> i thought it went great. glad you brought that up. he exchanged a lot of nasty tweets. a lot of people didn't know how this meeting was going to go. it has to do with when you meet
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someone in person you can say something about someone from afar but when you actually meet person and get to know each other, the pope and trump came away with a better understanding of what each person represents. rob: the president smiling at the pope has that look on his face, probably nervous. everybody came out all smiles. >> overall the trip went really well. >> we will be right back. untain? let's take a flight to colombia. this is boris calvo. boris grows mind-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee.
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heather: it is another busy day for president trump on day 66 first international trip. rob: this morning is he going to have lunch with emanuel macron. they both are politically novice in their positions. neither of them have experience in politics. so hopefully they can find some common ground. the president then heads to the nato summit before having dinner with leaders of the 28 different nato countries. heather: lots to discuss there. including other nato countries contributing more financially amongst some other things. rob: that 2%. heather: president flies to g-7 summit in sicily and visit with u.s. troops stationed in italy before coming home. rob: i can't imagine for a better place for a g-7 summit than sicily. it's a beautiful place.
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heather: i haven't been there. rob: it's something. heather: people have been talking about his trip so far. guest says she thinks it's been successful. rob: lot a lot of news come out of this international trip. heather: let us know what you think. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> alleged bomber spent three weeks in libya before we turn to england just days before the attack. >> allow people go and be deeply radicalized. we might be scared? we might thought to be racist. >> president's budget unveiled and democrats wasted no time deploying the ridiculous scare tactic. >> senior citizens will lose perhaps the one nutritious meal they get. >> it is not overstatement to say that some children will die because of this. >> president trump continues his marathon european journey with a stop in belgium. >> president trump has been pushing nato to become more relevant by taking on a
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