tv FOX Friends FOX News June 5, 2017 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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tough way to start off the week talking about a story like this. jackie: this is. we would love to here what you guys have to say. "fox & friends" starts right now live from their brand new studio. don't go away. rob: we will see you later. jackie: bye. [sirens] ♪ >> this blood shed must end. this blood shed will end. >> he understands the seriousness of this issue and he's not being distracted by people that want to scream about political correctness. >> how is the time to come together to defeat terrorist organizations and extremist ideology. >> my view is the president certainly has the right to put in place extreme vetting. >> to many of these communities, what we think of as extremism is actually mainstreamism. >> we should crush that sense of urgency and be packets that the about it? >> the current way the eu
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operates provides opportunity for terrorists and extremists to operate with the greatest degree of freedom. >> even as london grieves, manchester is trying to heal. >> we love you so much. [cheers and applause] ♪ the way you look that much ♪ oh baby ♪ you should go and love yourself ♪ ♪ ♪ can always be found ♪ know you're not alone ♪ because i'm going to make this place your home ♪ steve: welcome to our new tv home it is monday june 5th, 2017. this is "fox & friends" from our brand new perch on the second floor of studio f as in "fox & friends." ainsley: this is so exciting. if you see our big building on sixth avenue.
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we're right here on sixth avenue. it's so cool. you walk into the front door. you can see our studio. we're upstairs on the curvey couch. right down there is out our kitchen and living room. brian: did you know the date ahead of time or wait for it to scroll and suddenly say it's june 5th? answer the question young man. steve: i know what day it is. people thought i was off last week i was in here painting. brian: good job. can i still smell it a little bit. ainsley: you wear many hats. steve: thank you to all the people who made this possible. and thank you to you for joining us on this monday morning where we start with a fox news alert. two more terror suspects arrested as london police launch new raids overnight. brian: this as isis claims responsibility for the attack that left seven people dead and dozens injured. this morning police say they know who the killers are. ainsley: we have fox team coverage. kristin fisher live at the white house with the president's response. we will start with our senior foreign affairs correspondent greg palkot who is live in central london. greg?
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>> hi, folks, we are just outside of the tight police cordon around the terror site as they continue their intense forensic investigation into any evidence behind the horrendous terror attack from over the weekend. as you noted recommendation there were raids today there were raids in this area two different locations with arrests. raids to 11 we are told by police. they do have the identities of the three killers. already criticism about one. he is said to have been known to police for at least doing some kind of low level extremis isis now also claiming responsibility as the tales of horror continue. er are, these three attackers got into a rented white van, slammed into pedestrians on the london bridge on a very busy saturday night and then got out and stabbed patrons at bars and restaurants around the area. seven killed. 36, we are now told, are in hospitals. 21 critical. here's a bit of what u.k. prime minister theresa may had
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to say just moments ago. >> the police have now identified all three of the attackers. and when progress in the investigation permits, metropolitan police will release the names. the national threat level remains at severe. that means that a terrorist attack is highly likely. this was an attack on london and the united kingdom. but it was also an attack on the free world. >> now, the first of the dead has been identified. she is 31-year-old canadian christine or chrisy archibald. she used to work at homeless shelter in canada. now she came here to be with her fiance killed on that bridge. along with the british, other nationalities killed. but we don't think so far at least any americans involved. tales of bravery, too, guys. an off duty police officer trying his best to take all three down. he is now in critical condition as you hear the politicians speaking out about cracking down. back to you guys. brian: all right.
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thanks, greg. i'm in awe of the police response. 8 minutes? 8 minutes and they are confronting the attackers? what about those people in the pubs who took the pint glasses and throwing them at them and fighting back. steve: it's all they had. greg, at the end of his report was talking about one police officer who took them all on. what he didn't report was didn't have a gun. he just had a baton. ainsley: you see the videos of people in the market hiding behind chairs. a chair blocking them from a terrorist with a knife, with a hunting knife. i have a friend that lived in london and facebook did ache aactivate this safety check thing where you could check in and say my friend, i won't give you her name, but she is okay. it gave me relief to know she is okay. listen, they are using vehicles now, they are using knives in the marketplace on the street. you can't hide. you have to be in a bad place at the wrong time. brian: three attacks in three months in england. meanwhile in the wake of the london attacks president trump is vowing to keep america safe and obliterate terrorism. ainsley: saying the blood shed must end.
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steve: kristin fisher is at the white house with more. >> president trump is offering the british prime minister the full support of the u.s. government. but he is also renewing his commitment to keep america safe above all h else. listen to what he said at a fundraiser here in washington last night when he spoke about the latest terror attack in london for the very first time. >> this blood shed must end. this blood shed will end. [applause] as president, i will do what is necessary to prevent this threat from spreading to our shores and work every single day to protect the safety and security of our country. our communities, and our people. >> now, this is the third time in less than three months that president trump has had to call the british prime minister about a terror attack in her country. they had just sat down at the nato summit in bruferls 10 days ago to talk about the bombing in manchester and now.
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this but president trump has a far less friendly relationship with london's mayor. after the attack the mayor, who happens to be the city's first muslim mayor, told his constituents that there is, quote: no reason to be alarmed. now, his spokesman says that he was simply urging loan dorners not to be alarmed when they saw more police, including more armed officers on the streets. he is now accusing president trump of deliberately misconstruing that remark in this tweet. president trump said, quote: at least seven dead. 48 wounded in terror attack and mayor of london says there is no reason to be alarmed. well, now the u.s. ambassador in london is getting involved. in fact, the acting u.s. ambassador to the u.k. is coming out and saying that he is strongly praising the mayor of london for his remarks and directly contradicting the white house on this one. brian, ainsley, and steve. brian: thanks, kristin. i guess when you get contradicted is because president obama put that ambassador in place. not the ambassador that president trump wants in place.
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steve: president trump did say and we just heard the sound bite from ford's theater last night this blood shed must end. this blood shed will end. he wants to do everything in his power to stop the violence. obviously one of the reasons he was elected president is a lot of people liked the idea of the temporary travel ban. and, in fact, that is the subject of something he was tweeting about last night. ainsley: that's right. this is what he said. we must stop being politically correct and get down to the business of security for our people. if we don't get smart, it will only get worse. and then he goes on to tweet this, brian. >> brian: we need to be smart, vigilant and tough. we need the courts to give us back our rights. we need the travel ban as an extra level of safety. i understand the sentiment, but the travel ban would have halted in six or seven nations any type of travel because they don't have the proper background checks because we don't know who exactly they are. which you can understand. he wanted 90 days to evaluate to put together sam. we already passed 100 days. his people should have come up
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with a system already to look at those seven nations. ainsley: even if they did, brian -- brian: iraq is eliminated. sudan and others that are, i guess, terror laden. ainsley: even if his people did come up with a plan, it seems to be halted. brian: he would have had another plan. the plan would have been implemented right now. ainsley: people who like the idea of having that ban temporarily. he said it's a pause. just to let us -- get everything in order and see what we're dealing with. steve: tool in his tool belt responding to terror. and that's one of the reasons people did like the idea of what he was talking about. unfortunately, tied up in the courts, exactly. where does it go from here? right now it's in the supreme court. all right. it is now 9 minutes after the top of the hour. and jillian joins us upstairs with the headlines. jillian: good monday morning. ainsley: how do you like the set? >> it's beautiful, it's fun. it's fantastic. hopefully you guys at home are
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liking it as well. let's start off monday with this. secretary of state rex tillerson four nations cut tieties with cutties with qatar. accusations qatar support terrorists. tillerson offering the gulf states help in working out their issues. qatar says there is no legitimate justification for the diplomatic changes. the country plays a major role in fighting isis. out-of-control violence sparking try to shut down a pro-trump rally in portland. 14 people put in handcuffs as protesters hurled bricks at portland police. some describing the chaos as a war zone. [chanting] hate, hate, hate. >> here for two reasons and two reasons only. i'm here for freedom and i'm here for god. >> make this day positive with no hate and no violence. >> officers confiscating knives and brass knuckles from protesters.
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portland's mayor came under fire for trying to shut down the pro-trump rally citing safety concerns. organizers refused to give in and held the rally anyway. russian president vladimir putin once again shutting down claims moscow interfered in the presidential election. putin telling nbc's megyn kelly it's all fake news. >> i haven't seen even one direct proof of russian interference in the presidential election in the united states. created a sensation out of nothing. you people are so creative over there. good job. your lives must be boring. jillian: putin conspiracy theory any work of the u.s. intelligence community. he calls report russia has damaging information on the president, quote, a lot of nonsense. so pop star arianna grande returned to the manchester area to honor the victims of that horrific terrorist attack outside of her concert two weeks ago. this time she brought some of
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the world's biggest music stars along. take a look. >> i love you guys so much. and i think that the kind of love and unity that we're displaying is the medicine of the world really needs right now. ♪ ♪ one lo, one love. >> i want to take this moment to honor the people that were lost or that were taken we love you so much. [cheers and applause] jillian: all proceeds from the concert go to the victims' families. this was just so moving to watch yesterday. steve: especially when she was -- arianna grande was talking about she spoke to the mother of one of the victims and dedicated the show to that girl olivia. jillian: it's beautiful. you see something like this. she is so young and to have this much of an impact. she went to the hospital with the kids before. she was taking pictures with them it's incredible. brian: you know it's getting
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bad when your charity benefits are overlapping with terror attacks. three attacks in three months in london. as much as people are sad they have got to be enraged, too, that no one is protecting them. ainsley: absolutely, 100 percent. steve: jillian, thank you for the news. jillian: thank you. steve: rash of terror attacks in the forcing the world to face harsher reality. is it time to bring surveillance into the mosques in the united states. we will talk about that. brian: hillary clinton's supporters may have something else to cry about this morning. the next election? ainsley: we have a huge show ahead for you and your family. we have michelle malkin and dr. sebastian gorka and kellyanne conway. they will all be live coming up. steve: there is the time. i'm going to set my watch ♪ see what's coming around ♪ playing with my heart ♪ get out of my life ♪ a brand new startr ♪
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here to talk to us is former new york city police department lieutenant and army veteran dr. darren fortune. doctor, good morning to you. >> thanks for having me. >> famously there was surveillance of mosques here in the united states in new york city a while back but then they stopped. >> right. under the bloomberg administration under police commissioner kelly they conducted this surveillance of the mosques. however, that was something that was derailed with the incoming mayor michael bloomberg. steve: right. >> we didn't get fruitful information with the mosque surveillance. i'm a strong proponent using intel gathered by police officers that are going undercover and cooperators that are in the mosques. we need them to coalesce with law enforcement to ensure that we are able to irradicate the threat. in addition to that we need to have a credible threat of criminality in these mosques. it t. requires a mask amount of resources to conduct this surveillance. therefore, it's more fruitful for law enforcement to have, excuse me, informants and undercover officers. steve: sometimes it's hard to
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get somebody to goes to those mosques to help you, to cooperate with you. >> believe it or not, more and more members of the islamic community have a problem with the radicalization that occurs in these mosques. what they are looking to do is irradicate a that and separate themselves from radical perspective of islam and bring more so a religion of peace. steve: after the terror attack in london a couple of nights ago, the united kingdom police issued mind boggling three step plan, metropolitan police said run, hide, tell. now, here in the united states, it's run, hide, fight. what do you think of this? >> well, we want to go back to 9/11. when we look at the 9/11 hijackers, we had one of the commercial airliners that crashed in pennsylvania. the reason why that airliner crashed and didn't crash into one of our targets here is because the people on that plane fought with the hijackers.
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i'm a strong proponent and we look back at what happened at the pulse nightclub just recently. after people come together they coalesced and attack the assailant. you are going to be more susceptible to erratic indicating that assault. steve: if first is run you north going to do that. >> goes back to i'm a strong proponent of engage the assail lent directly. steve: our first guest in our brand new studio. >> i feel honored. thank you so much. steve: thank you, sir. a real pleasure. next up on the rundown on this monday. think political correctness isn't a problem? what if we told you the mastermind of 9/11 planned to use it to spread terror around the globe. dr. james mitchell went face to face with khalid sheikh mohammed and has a powerful message for america. that's next on "fox & friends." ♪ ♪ what's the best way to get
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steve: meanwhile a fox news alert. in the wake of the london terror attacks, president trump delivering a blunt message tweeting we must stop being politically correct and get down to the business of security for our people. if we don't get smart, it will only get worse. and our next guest thinks the president has a point. brian: if you think about it, seven attacks in two years in europe and three in a row in britain. it's a lesson he learned by interrogating 9/11 mastermind khalid sheikh mohammed abu and others. was he right? ainsley: here to enhanced surveillance program. is he author of the book enhanced interrogation dr. james mitchell. good morning, dr. mitchell. >> thank you for having me on. ainsley: you're welcome. what did ksm say to you when you were intier gating him? >> one of the things he said to me is that we lack the political will, the motivation and will to do the things that must be done to stop in part pause we he wanted the whole
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world to like us and we were afraid of criticism. he said that our freedoms were and civil liberties were weapons that allah had placed on this planet so that it would be easier for them to defeat us. as we talked about radicalization, he scoffed at the idea really that we were going to be able to prevent that. in part because of our religious freedom and because of the political correctness that acts as a cloaking device. his point, i think, to paraphrase what he was saying is that under the guise of political freedom, people who want to destroy us can come to our country, they can set up mosques, they can spread their jihadi message and recruit people to do things all without committing any crimes. when you push back against that they claim that you are violating their religious freedom. so the hard work of radicalization is already done before we do anything -- before a crime is complicitied. before anything is detected. brian: jim, how much good if any could a muslim mayor of london do by speaking up and
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saying this does not represent the islam that i study and those people amongst us in our community who do this and go into a -- does he have more credibility within the muslim community than anybody else? >> well, my take on what he said was that it's naive, right. he is a muslim and he is entitled to his opinion, but the suggestion that islam, as it's practiced by the jihadis is not islam and that it's a religion of peace is ridiculous. if you take the 1924 cairo version of the quran which is the quran that's the mainstream quran there are over 100 verses in which they call for violence against non-muslims including several verses where they call for unending war against non-muslims until everyone is either converted, subjoe gaited, slaughtered or enslaved. that's not peace. steve: dr. mitchell, a moment ago you mentioned political
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correctness, a cloaking device was your expression. the president of the united states says the political correctness has to end. and you say that the terrorists have used political correctness to spread their message. explain how that works. >> well, again, like i said, they set up these organizations that appear to be outreach organizations but they are actually spreading their violent ideology. or even let's go back to something that prime minister may said. prime minister may said we must do a better job of teaching western values. the odds are pretty good the people that attacked her were born in britain and grew up in britain. if they don't understand western values by now, either there is something horribly wrong with the school system in britain or there is something horribly wrong with the muslim community. and the political correctness that we experience here in america, prevents us from
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holding the muslim community responsible for allowing this festering to take place in their midst. they are the oned who should be offended by it they should be standing up and pushing it out and not being politically correct. if it doesn't represent their islam and doesn't represent the quran, then they need to get up and do something about it. ainsley: all right, dr. james mitchell, author of "enhanced interrogation" you can also download the audio book if you prefer to listen to it while you are driving. great. excellent read. brian: it is. dr. mitchell thanks very much. meanwhile 31 minutes before the top of the hour. london's mayor says terror is part of life in big cities. do we really have to accept radical islam as the new normal. our panel of experts is here live. brian: al gore facing new inconvenient question on climate change. >> what we need to do today is to recognize we have not stopped reaction taking place in our schools, our prince. brian: that wouldn't be it.
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that would be a great topic for later in the show what we wantside al gore trying to justify his declarations of 10 years ago when his movie came out. we will talk about that and his response to that burning question next. ♪ you can't always get what you want ♪ you can't ♪ always get what you want ♪
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brian: fox news alert now. police in u.k. conducting more raids after weekend of attacks in london. isis takes credit for the attacks that killed seven people. president trump vowing to do whatever it takes to keep us safe. >> this blood shed must end. this blood shed will end. [applause] as president, i will do what
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is necessary to protect the safety and security of our country, our communities and our people. brian: how do we irradicate islamic terror. the gravy train paydirt would be new york city. here with us to talk about that is new york city assembly man and mike barrick and/or tellin.>> people tried run over people in times square he wasn't isis inspired. three attacks in three months in london from british citizens. where do you start. >> one thing we have to do in this country and amazing we have to do it. we have to win hearts and minds of people in our own country to realize this is a real threat this is a unique threat. even in the last 48 hours since the london attacks. you hear people giving eequivalenceys while there was oklahoma city bombing. there isn't consensus among
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enough americans that radical islamic terror is bigner scope and more of a potential for body count than other things. brian: i think people are realizing now you see brussels, you see paris, london, manchester and everything. we have charity fundraisers for the victims the day after a terror attack now. they are running in to each other. they talk about social filtering, that would be the problem theresa may talks about. social media. >> look, i think theresa may, she said the right thing when she came out after this london bridge attack. but the problem that they have got in the u.k. and problem that we will probably be experiencing, we are a little bit behind the u.k. i think in this issue is that it's taken generations, it's taken years for them to realize sort of effect of the self-inflicted wound multiculturism you don't have to assimilate and come into this country and be british first and respect our culture and our laws. she said the right thing.
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but it's not going to change overnight because this problem has been developing for years and years. and the problem is they are going to have to bang this thing out in parliament. they will have to figure out how to change those laws. just like our fbi here works within the confines, the parameters they are loued within law so do mi 5 and 6 and the met and the counter terrorism command. they all have to react with what they are allowed to do. that's going to be a big parliamentary conversation. brian: if the daily mail is true today. 27-year-old documentary about islamic extremism and caught radicalizing kids. manchester bombing we knew he was under watch and traveling to libya not like they are come out of the woodwork they are watching them. >> no, it's not. relationship with us quite close. i think a lot of ways we still have like a 9/11 mentality of what terrorist rssments we think of usama bin laden in the cave. but what we have to realize now is in 2017 the average terrorists is a millennial.
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it's a media savvy millennial who knows how to go online and social media and recruit people just as you said in the report today in the daily mail. and when you also look at what's going on in the u.k. the house of commons released a report last year that shows that employment is higher for muslim communities in britain. the education level is lower than other religious communities in the u.k. so, the integration of them into the society is a problem at large. but i think the lesson we can learn here in the u.s. is that we need to look at what our cyber security laws are. we need to have a whole in government approach. we are not teaching social media and counter terrorism as if it's a battle. if we were a terrorist group in the middle of libya training people, recruiting people to fight we gold after them. we are not doing that the same way on social media. >> in a way you could argue this is groundhog day. how many years ago it we start talking about this problem? i remember sitting in the old studio and by the way did you a great job personally designing this new studio.
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i remember us sitting in the old studio years ago and we were having the same conversation. i would argue i spent a long time combating dealing with counter terrorist operations overseas and i don't want to sound cynical and pessimistic but we are not going to see the end of this in our life times. we do have to realize. it's like something that campaigns and shines and got to get tough and stop being politically correct that's all great. operationally we need to change the laws and make a difference. brian: you are going to lead off the next time we have a panel. sadly we have another panel about this. thanks, guys, appreciate it jillian, have you other breaking news while we were talking about this breaking news. jillian: that's right. we have a lot of the breaking news we are following this morning. oklahoma man shot dead by a neighbor as he tries to drown his 3 month old twins, a boy and a girl in the bathtub. leland foster shot twice in the back as police say he held the babies under water and threatened their mother with a knife. a child inside the home running to that neighbor for help. he was questioned by police but released.
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the twins will be okay. al gore is confronted on global warming predictions as he slams president trump for leaving the paris accord. >> you said unless we took, quote, drastic measures the world would reach a point of no return within 10 years and you called it a true planetary emergency. we're 11 years later. >> yeah. >> weren't you wrong? jillian: so how did he respond? like this. >> unfortunately, and regrettably, a lot of serious damage has been done. we are going to suffer some of these consequences but we can limit and avoid the most catastrophic consequences if we accelerate the pace of change that's now beginning. jillian: new segment being added to gore's upcoming sequel film to account for president trump's withdrawal from the paris agreement. take a look at this video. incredible moment caught on camera. man dives head first to to
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save a woman -- can you see him moving into traffic. driver comings opposite way notices, gets out of his car and jumps into the passenger's window can you see it right there. my good news, look at that incredible. that's a look at your headlines on this monday, guys, you see videos like that and it's just incredible that he was able to get this that car and save a person. brian: like a movie. steve: some quick thinking. ainsley: let's head out to janice dean. janice: congratulations on the new studio. could you at least get me new plants on the planter. brian: new bike rack for security. a lot of folks are complaining about the weather in the northeast. quickly look at the temperatures. cooler across the great lakes and the northeast. and it's going to remain sort of unsettled with all of this gulf moisture moving up towards the southeast, the gulf coast states the mid-atlantic of the workweek.
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that's going to the weather pattern for the weekend. i want to show you amazing picture i found over the weekend that is taking the internet by storm. this is in alberto, canada. this is actually a real picture. it atlantic took me a while to authenticate this. this fellow decided he had to do his chores. he had to mow the lawn out there. it just so happens there happened to be a tornado in back of him. so his wife took this picture. she said the whole neighborhood was taking pictures. she wanted to take a picture for her parents that live in south africa. and i guess they don't see tornadoes out there. this fellow out there in the prairies of canada was not too concerned. he said he was going to keep an eye on things. so how about that? ainsley: you canadians must be tough. steve: or crazy. janice: it's incredible picture. i worn everyone. iwarn everyone.if there is a too indoors. ainsley: wife taking a picture. steve: she was taking a picture of the tornado.
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he happened to be in the picture. janice: only in canada, eh? steve: blame canada. thank you very much, janice. right now, terror sweeping across the united kingdom. authorities tracking down links to the london bridge attack that killed seven. why is the mainstream media still obsessing over the a russian investigation? do you know why? brian: having breakfast with friends in connecticut finding out what hard working americans care about. steve: breakfast ♪ my love is making music with my friends ♪ i can't wait to get on the road again ♪ on the road again ♪ going places that i've never been ♪ seeing things that i may never see again ♪ and i can't wait to get on the road again ♪ on the road again
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♪ ainsley: a fox news alert. overnight police in london conducting more raids, arresting two more suspects tied to this weekend's deadly terror attack. as isis takes credit. moments ago, the president tweeting the justice department should ask for an expedited hearing of the watered down travel ban betancourt and seek a much tougher version. but the big story, according to the mainstream media is climate change and russia, russia, russia. russia's alleged involvement in the elections. is the media off message once again? here to debate that is executive director of bustle.com julie alvin along with the hill contributor and author of government gone wild kristin tate. thank you both for being with us. >> thank you for having us. ainsley: kristin, do you agree with the president's recent tweet that we need to speed up this process and get it through the supreme court? >> absolutely.
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>> why? >> because we have to do something. trump's travel ban is the only solution being proposed right now that will actually protect this country from future terror attacks. but the media, those in the media are falling over themselves trying to vilify him for his travel ban. and spending time covering nonstories. there is still no evidence of collusion between trump and russia during the campaign. there is no evidence that staying in that paris agreement would have any impact on the environment. but there is 100 percent evidence that radical islamic terror is sweeng through europe and causing death and destruction but the media is so obsessed with taking down trump they will focus on any story that makes him look bad while threatening january. ainsley: julie as a democrat, what's more important to you russia, russia, russia and climate change or making sure we are safe as a country. >> these issues are all incredibly important the narrative that the mainstream or liberal media is not covering these issues is
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false. i don't know if you were watching msnbc yesterday, cnn "fox & friends" -- not "fox & friends," face the nation, meet the press, every single one of those shows led with the story of the london attacks. ainsley: you can't deny that the mainstream media loves the narrative of russia, russia, russia and there is no proof. >> i think that first of all there is certainly smoke. this is something that i think we should get to the bottom of. and honestly fox news itself released a poll last week about what issues their voters and their viewers were extremely concerned about. number one was government spending. number two was russian meddling, number three was the economy. number four was climate change. number five was war with the north korea and number six was terror attacks. ainsley: kristin, what's your response? >> the fact that these outlets covered the london attacks yesterday does not prove anything about their bias. they had to cover these attacks. i mean it just happened. >> you are saying they didn't cover it when that's not true. >> i'm saying they are not talking about the root cause of these terror attacks. i'm joust wondering how many
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more people need to die before the left and the mainstream media call out the root cause. i mean a lot of the people on the left still won't say the words radical islamic terror. we had seven people just die in london. 22 people died inma died in man. they won't talk about the cause. talk about bias, look what happened in the campaign, 91% of the media coverage about trump was negative. there is no question. ainsley: kristin and julia let's look at the headlines. you are saying they are covering it but won't. >> discuss climb change before leaving paris deal. march for truth calls for independent probe of trump's alleged russia ties. "new york times" how g.o.p. leaders came to view climate change as fake science. >> i believe these are cherry picked headlines to be honest with you, again, i pay attention to the liberal media. i pay attention to the mainstream media and i pay attention to sort of the more
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right wing 78d and all of them were talking about london yesterday. fox news was also talking about russia. i went on "watters' world" last night we talked about putin and the paris accords. so to say it's just the liberal media that is covering issues other than london right now and that they're not covering london, that's just false. ainsley: i watched you last night and you said it's very important for liberals to start calling it radical islamic terrorism. >> i didn't say it's important for liberals to do it but i said i'm willing to say that the root of this is radical islamic terror. i think the key word there is radical. okay. this is not what, you know, your at this point at this typil muslim who follows the letter of the law. perverted misguided cruel misinterpretation of islam and therefore we can call it radical. ainsley: kristin, julie, thanks for being with us. good discussion. we will continue to analyze the attacks with michelle malkin, dr. sebastian gorka and mark steyn who will join us next hour and pete is having breakfast with friends in plainfield, connecticut ♪ you don't have to worry
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about it, baby ♪ you can make me up ♪ in the dead of the night ♪ my plans ♪ baby that's all right ♪ this is the drop every thing kind of ♪ it's ok that everybody ignores me when i drive. it's fine. because i get a safe driving bonus check every six months i'm accident free. because i don't use my cellphone when i'm driving. even though my family does, and leaves me all alone. here's something else... i don't share it with mom. i don't. right, mom? i have a brand new putter you don't even know about!
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♪ ♪ steve: all right. 125 miles north and east of our brand new studio is plainfield, connecticut. ainsley: even with the new studio, we are still doing the diners, brian. steve: because people love them. ainsley: breakfast with friends. old american diner and that's where pete hegseth is, good morning. pete: good morning, guys. it's a fancy new studio. i like it. can't to wait check it out. old american dirn in
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plainfield, connecticut. a county that that has not gone with a republican president candidate since george w. bush. get a sense of what they think about the state of the country and definitely not politically correct around here. we're having a good time. richard, thank you for your service and the army, i want to get your take on how president trump is doing right now. >> i think president trump is doing one heck of a good job. is he a little stalled out by the democratic congress who are trying to make him look bad at every turn. and i just think he is a man of his word and if they let him go, he is going to make america great again. pete: a man of his word. you built submarines in connecticut. what do you make of the resistance and what he is attempting to do. >> is he trying to do what is he supposed to do you know. and like a gentleman said,
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too, people, democratic party back at every turn. trying to. so,. pete: what do you make of the response of the attacks in london. >> i don't like that at all. pete: the attack, obviously? >> oh, the attack, the whole thing. i mean them people, they can get rid of them if they can. pete: he talked about a travel ban which is something he talked about for the country. >> oh, yeah. pete: tony, you mentioned north korea. an issue that's huge on the world stage not being talked about that much. >> i served in korea in 1962. today i sit here with all of you because i did serve there denial after me. today we are watching this fellow leapfrog to the united states with nuclear power. god forbid it only takes one. i want america back and trump can do it. pete: there you go. what we haven't heard this morning is russia. no one talking about russia. i wish we could have gotten to lenny a painter and reggie as well. a lot of common sense.
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you guys are literally on the menu this morning including the prime rib and eggs is the special. i will be having that shortly of course. brian: thanks, pete. we will get with you shortly coming up straight ahead. amongst our guest dr. gorka and kellyanne conway. please get dressed. bp engineered a fleet of 32 brand new ships
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i know this is sudden, but they say...if you love something set it free. see you around, giulia ♪ ♪ [sirens] >> i will do what is necessary to protect the safety and security of our country. >> this blood shed will end. >> he's not being distracted by people who want to scream about political correctness. >> the political correctness that we experience here in america prevents us from holding the muslim community responsible. now is the time to come together to defeat terrorist organizations and extremist ideology. >> my view is the president does have certainly the right to put in place extreme vetting. > vetting there is really no evidence to suggest that by banning muslims that we would make ourselves here in the united states safer.
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>> the current way in which the eu operate provides an opportunity for terrorists and extremists to operate with the greater degree of freedom. >> even as london grieves, manchester is trying to heal ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm on the edge of glory ♪ and i'm hanging on a moment of truth ♪ i'm on the edge ♪ of glory ♪ steve: good morning. brian: do you think anyone's alarm clock wakes up to lady gaga? ainsley: i thought you said her name is lady gaga? brian: i have problems with accents.
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steve: good thing we don't have many. ainsley: welcome to our new studio. steve: today at 11:30 in the east room the president is going to kick off infrastructure week and we have had some infrastructure changes here at fox news channel. we are in a brand new studio. it has two levels. we're up here on the curvey couch concourse, let's call it in studio f as in "fox & friends" right at 48th and sixth avenue. brian: by the way, we did not have to raise taxes on anyone to build this studio. maybe the country can take our lead on that. ainsley: we appreciate you watching every day because you allow us to build these fancy nice studios so we can bring the news to you. friends are asking me why did you decide to move to the new studio. they built this for the election. why are you laughing? brian: hut decision at the last minute i decided to. ainsley: i made it sound like i decided? no, no. the powers to be here at fox decided. i don't make those decisions. but brian does. so brian talked to the bosses and said we should use the election studio and they said
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that's a great idea. brian: it was abandoned. steve: we are here for another two hours and we start right now with a fox news alert. ainsley: if you missed this over the weekend, we are going to start with a fox news alert in the wake of that deadly london attack or several attacks. president trump is vowing to keep america safe and to obliterate terrorism. steve: the commander-in-chief saying the blood shed must end. brian: kristin fisher is live at the white house with what the president is saying this morning and tweeting. hey, kristin. >> good morning. in the immediate hours after the london attack, president trump took to twitter to remind americans why he believes that his travel ban, which is still stuck in court is still necessary. now this morning he is making an even more aggressive push and shying away from any that red oshredof political correctn. people the lawyers and the courts can call it whatever we want. i'm calling it what we need and what it is is a travel ban. he then said the justice department should have stayed
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with the original travel ban not the watered down politically correct version that they submitted to the supreme court. he is now urging the justice department to ask for an expedited hearing betancourt supreme court. at an event last night here in washington, he spoke about this latest attack for the very first time. >> this blood shed must end. this blood shed will end. [applause] as president, i will do what is necessary to prevent this threat from spreading to our shores and work every single day to protect the safety and security of our country. our communities, and our people. >> president trump is now offering the british prime minister the full support of the u.s. government. remember, they had just sat down at the nato summit in brussels 10 days ago to talk about the bombing in manchester and now this. the third time in less than three months that he has had to call her about a terror attack in her country.
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back to you steve, ainsley and brian. steve: thank you very much. also in washington, d.c. this morning is michelle malkin. good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: the president also tweeted out after talking about how we need the travel ban, he also tweeted this, in any event, we are extreme vetting people coming into the united states in order to keep our country safe. the courts are slow and political. all right. what do you think of the president making his push, once again? we need the travel ban. we are extreme vetting right now but we need the travel ban temporary. >> yes. i'm glad to see him assert what is an historically plenary power that the president has to exclude any kind of threats to this country. in fact, it is a power that he can invoke to exclude anyone for any reason whether it's national security or economic security. and i have to say that whatever disagreements people may have in this country about this president, the things he
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stands for and the things he says, one thing has been absolutely consistent. before he took office and as he has taken office, he has been singularly focused on the threat of radical islamic terrorism. he has never wavered from it. and for that i am extremely grateful and every patriotic american should be. it is moments like this latest attack or manchester or the dozens of them that have occurred over the last couple of years across europe and in our own country that are very clarifying. it shows you whether you are talking about the media or hollywood or the democratic leadership where people's priorities really are. brian: right. >> you get to see that we have a president who does believe in defending, protecting, and preserving our country and its laws. brian: here it is ramadan and the way these islamic extremists celebrate ramadan is trying to kill us.
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they are on a bit of a roll. three hits in three months in london. seven overall hits throughout europe since 2017. and many people are weighing in on the reasons why, including the former secretary of state john kerry. he said this on meet the press. >> they have had a long standing problem with respect to greater levels of alienation, a harder time asimulating into the broader british society. a lack of similar opportunity. so there are a lot of ingredients. ainsley: mitchell, what do you think about that? they say they are attacking us because they feel ail alienated? steve: they are alone. >> ainsley, this is the fundamental misdiagnosis among progressive leftist and enablers of jihad that somehow
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the problem lies with our inability to accept and tolerate the vast numbers of muslims that are coming in to western countries, not because they embrace our values but because they hate them. they're completely i understand grated into society. we have welcomed so many of the leaders of these al qaeda cells. they go to las vegas and they go to strip clubs like the 9/11 hijackers did. steve: yeah. >> they allow themselves to ingratiate themselves into our communities and, you know what? they exploit western liberties. steve: sure. >> they exploit our toleration of their extremism and then only after dozens and dozens of these attacks not only on hard targets but increasingly soft targets have you clueless people who are just completely taken over by demitude like theresa may finally acknowledging that gee maybe we have accepted too much
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extremism in our borders. you think? steve: no kidding. police over in london say the attackers names will be released as soon as it is operationally possible, whatever that means. there are drips and drabs coming out about some of the dead terrorists. apparently one of them has an irish i.d. card. he had lived in dublin although he was born in that rocco. there is another story about a woman who apparently called the cops about her neighbor because she was -- the terrorist was radicalizing children over in the park and tried to do that to heir child. brian: that guy appeared in a documentary on terrorism. >> yeah. that's right. i mean, this is the thing. they proclaim their motive so loudly and yet the louder that they talk about what their aims are their intents and goals are the louder so many apologists for jihad try to deny the obvious. i mean, they are screaming out allahu akbar and this is for allah and all of a sudden what
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do you get in response? all the liberal media headlines gee the motive is still unknown when they're screaming it at the top of their lungs. ainsley: why are the liberals so upset about the tweets about process of the supreme court when you have those guys over in europe trying to radicalize kids on a playground. do we really want them here? >> of course we don't want them here. and in the case of the radicalization in free speech parks, in the middle of london, they are holding up their signs that say behead all those who insult islam. they have been doing this for decades now. as i said it is the exploitation of our western liberties and tolerance that have fell to demise. historian said the civilizations die by suicide. not by, you know, outside forces. and this is exactly what's happening. i mean, have you got people who are exploiting 21st century technology to try and drag all of us back into the stone ages.
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brian: point out a couple things. they keep on saying this president is enraging the muslim community? really he went to saudi arabia and heads of 50flations showed up. head of nato showed up yesterday on face the nation and had nothing but positive things about the impact president trump has made as they started to implement a terror strategy while emphasizing they have been in afghanistan for years. so a lot of negativity is not adding up to the people where a lot of this extremism is born and bred and that's in the middle east. >> brian, that's a great point. let me point out, also, that you have apologist groups like cair who since 9/11 have been urging people in their communities not to cooperate with the fbi, not to become snitches, to do everything to obstruct national security and homeland security efforts to keep us safe. these people worry that, you know, people are going to be alienated? that there is going to be some kind of stigma? the solution is not to walk on
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egg shells around this but for truly moderate muslims to condemn and stigmatize like we all should people who want to throw people off of buildings because they are gay, stone them because they look the wrong way at men or women, and do what they have done in manchester and westminster on these bridges from boston to san bernardino to our orlando to every major city in our country as well. they deserve a stigma. brian: right. look out. they are not going away. thanks so much, michelle. five active investigations by mi 5. 20,000 looked at various links to extremism in the u.k. that's overwhelming. steve: it certainly is all right. it is 7:12 in new york city. time for headlines with jillian. jillian: we with began with fox news alert. secretary of state rex tillerson weighing in overnight after four arab nations cut tie ties with qatar.
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egypt, saudi arabia, bahrain and uae. qatar offering gufl state help in. there is no legitimate justification for the diplomatic changes. the country plays a major role in fighting isis. days before former fbi director james comey testifies on capitol hill, the top democrat on the senate intelligence committee admits there is no proof of russian collusion with the trump campaign. take a look. >> there is a lot of smoke. we have no smoking gun at this point but there is a lot of smoke. jillian: comey heads to the hill on thursday, one month after being fired. the president is not expected to use executive privilege to block comey's testimony. a quick look at your headlines this morning, guys. we will send it back to you. steve: all right, jillian. thank you. brian: that will be must see tv. no english, no problem. the states making it easier for immigrants to get a license without ever learning
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english. ainsley: theresa may changing her tone in the war on terror but is it too little, too late? taking a look at the prime minister's past. take a look at our new set. do you like it ♪ ready ♪ [ girl catching her breath } [ bees buzzing inside vehicle ] the all-new volkswagen atlas. with easy-access 3rd row. life's as big as you make it. thithis is the new new york.e? think again. we are building new airports all across the state. new roads and bridges. new mass transit.
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>> there is, to be frank, far too much tolerance of extremism in our country. so we need to become far more robust in identifying it and stamping it out across the public sector and across society. it is time to say enough is enough. steve: but as the prime minister who once ran the home department of equivalent of ourselves shouldn't theresa may have seen this coming? ainsley: ed henry joins you now to discuss. >> this good morning, guys. ainsley: should she have seen this coming. >> she should have. last minute conversion here. that's what's fascinating. somebody who is now saying we have to have these uncomfortable conversations about radical islam, maybe we need to do more with the internet to stop the spread of this hate and extremism online that spurs people on to do these kinds of attacks. she was home secretary for several years. she had an opportunity to take all these steps and did not do it. why is she doing it now? well, there has been three
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aattendance in 75 days in the u.k. 34 people dead. dozens more injured. by the way, guys, she is facing an election battle on thursday. just in three days. so what's fascinating. brian: by the way it's not going nearly as well as she thought. >> of course. here she is three days before that saying we have to have a much more robust response. she is playing defense at this point. you have president trump here playing offense and being criticized at every turn. whether it's a travel ban or just his rhetoric, his tweets. the "new york times" had a story today about his tweets and how his whole reaction was tweets that they believe are out of the mainstream. talking about guns and political correctness. they have editorial saying what happened to american leadership that was principled and sober? steve: sure. >> think back to the obama days when the president was talking about leading from behind. brian: not showing up after paris attack when every other world leader was there. brian: the "new york times" editorial page wanted this week's editorials to be climate change is the biggest
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national security. brian: and comey. >> wait a second. climate change is important. shouldn't be dismissed but terror is still here, never went away. theresa may had several years to do something about it as homeland secretary. here she is now about to face the voters saying we have got to be a lot more robust. that sounds like defense and not offense. steve: absolutely. the news this morning she is going to keep the threat level as severe. after manchester it went down a notch and then it went back up. >> contradicting the president of the united states because there are a obama holdovers there. that's a problem but there is a problem for the trump administration because they are not getting ambassadors up there. brian: put your trump person in. >> there put your person in place now have you three three terror attacks in 75 days. ainsley: learn lessons from them. thank you so much, ed. good sty. coming up next, former medal of honor recipient dakota meyer has a message to all the bureaucrats who don't understand how to take out the enemy.
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i need one number... not two. i'm always moving forward... because i can't afford to get stuck in the past. comcast business. built for business. ♪ ainsley: here are some quick headlines on new immigration resources. there is now a new weapon to fight deportation, a ring tone for their cell phones. [foreign language] ainsley: that catchy tune created by hotel and restaurant workers union urges immigrants to say nothing, to sign nothing, and to contact an attorney when confronted by
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federal agents. soon could be easier for immigrants to get a drivers license. offer freelance late tores when they take exams. they will be all volunteers, seven different languages available starting june 21st. meat packing plants, the largest employers in western kansas drawing a diverse population. steve? steve: thank you, ainsley a fox news alert. new details are emerging about the london terror attacks including isis now claiming responsibility for the carnage. this just reinforces the need to annihilate isis but there is something that bureaucrats simply don't understand about taking out the enemy. dakota meyer is the united states marine corps vet and the recipient of the medal of honor he joins us live right now. dakota, good morning to you. what don't bureaucrats understand about annihilating isis? >> i mean, i don't know. i don't know what their problem is i don't know how much clearer this can get. i think i came on here a couple years ago in december when all this started kicking off. i think i was on with brian. i said this is going to continue until we do something to stop it you can't go in
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your house and lied. i don't understand. i think they live in this fantasy world. i think what we have to be thankful for as a nation right now is that we don't have their leadership in charge of our country. that we have a man there who is not a bureaucrat, who is not on their side. at least in this area and who is going to be there to protect our country and put our country first. steve: sure. it's time that the terrorists understand that you say they should not under estimate our resiliency. explain that. >> absolutely. i mean, i'm going to till. i think they seen that during 9/11. i think they have seen that every time they have tried to come on our soil and try to pull one of these cowardice attacks. i mean, look, the resiliency of the american people don't under estimate who we are or our resiliency to fight or go after our freedom or our willing news to bring like i said over and over the gates of hell on you if you try to hurt our people or you try to come in on our freedom.
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i mean, that's what makes us the greatest country on the face of the planet. the good thing is i know i'm speaking on behalf of all my friends because if they don't feel this way they are not my friends. have you plenty of men and women who will wear the nation's cloth and willing to go over and do this ass-kicking that needs to be done. steve: you you have been on this program and talked about it in the past. that is the fact that after attacks of various nature, some people just come out, their solution is a #. hash tag dakota is not going to do it. >> you are not going to hash tag these people away. can you sit and think all thought out strategy. i don't know what the strategy is you have to i think general mattis says it best. you have to kill, kill, kill, and kill these people until the killing is so ugly until they have shed so much blood until it's cost them so much in lives that they say you know what? we're done. that's the only way these people understand. you don't go and hash tag them out. why is this the new norm?
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you take kathy griffin standing here and people saying she is holding the head of the leader of our president. the president of the united states of america and they are saying why is everyone so sensitive? when did we become insensitive to this type of behavior? steve: the president himself has said regarding, this not the kathy griffin thing but the terrorism we have got to stop being so politically correct. that's something you have said on this program for a very long time. >> yeah. i mean, you know, the last administration wouldn't even call this radical islam. this isn't a war on muslims, christians, it's not a war on one religion. this is a war on terrorism. this is a war on a belief that is honestly it's challenging and dangerous to our way of life. i mean, it's the new norm. how is this the new norm? we see this happen, a political leader comes out and says well, it's a lone wolf attack. the media says it's a lone wolf attack. and we don't do anything about it. i mean, it's time to get busy. no matter how you look at it, no matter how you spread it out, guess what? it's time to get busy. i think that we need to sit
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here and the people who are making decisions on behalf of our country, who is wanting to take out, you know, these bans on -- the president is trying to put in with executive orders, i hope that they have the information behind it, because when people start getting in this country and start making it unsafe and start holding the same attacks here, i think these judges have to understand they will have blood on their hands. steve: dakota meyer joining us live today by skype. thank you for your service? >> thank you so much. steve: what do you think about that? email us at friends at&t foxnews.com. is it even possible for police to to react to terror attacks. mainstream media's seems to think so. watch this. >> there is certainly a risk to of under reaction. is there any risk of overreaction of deploying too much? steve: dr. sebastian gorka deputy assistant to president trump reacts live from the white house next. take a close look at the school crossing sign.
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brian: 27 minutes now before the top of the hour. it's time to talk terror and go to the white house. deputy assistant to the president donald trump joins us right now dr. sebastian gorka. dr. gorka, third attack in 75 days. can you make sense of this? >> yes. i mean, brian, this is a global phenomena, islamic, radical islamic terrorism isn't just something confined to the middle east. they wish to have world domination. they wish to incite violence on the land on what they sees a the infidel and isis is either controlling these attacks, training people, on inspiring them, brian. brian: what do you hear? what are the early indications?
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because we understand march manchester investigation led us back to libya a cell there meeting took place tag into germany. have you seen anything like that with these three that are now dead? >> as the president has already tweet, we are giving our british cousins as much support as they request from us. but we are not going to second guess them. i think it is important, however, to note the method of attack in this last case. the vehicular attack and then the knifing. this is classic. it goes right back to lee rigby the british soldier who was almost beheaded on the streets. we have seen the knife -- this is the classic tactics of the global jihadi threat. that tells you a lot already, brian. ainsley: i know dr. gorka, many thoughts are i'm not going to go to london for a while. this is not the first attack. we have seen several last two weeks.
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then their thought goes back to the homeland. are we safe here? and what is the president doing to keep us safe? >> the president understands that his primary responsibility is to secure the safety of all americans. yes, we are redoubling our efforts. whether it's taking the immigration executive order all the way to the supreme court, whether it's unleashing, literally unleashing our agents at the department of homeland security under the incredible leadership of secretary kelly. whether it's reinvigorating the correct use of intelligence, especially in human intelligence, and then, of course, we have to crush them in their heartland. so that is why you see secretary mattis deploying our isis plan to crush the heart of the islamic state in syria and iraq. steve: well, dr. gorka, we know that the president of the united states over the last 24 hours has been tweeting about the travel ban, how we need it, we need it now. just about within the last half hour, the president
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tweeted in any event, we are -- we are extreme vetting people coming in to the united states in order to keep our country safe. so if we're already doing that, why do we need the travel ban? >> because we have to improve it. so, steve, if you look at what happened under the obama administration, we had unbelievable shortsighted policies put in place. if you remember, the san bernardino killers at that time the state department was forbidden by internal directive to look at the public facebook postings of people applying for visas to america. if we had been allowed to do so back then, maybe those 13, 14 people would be alive today. so, the system was broken. the system that we inherited and the president and his team is fixing it right now. ainsley: when dr. james mitchell was interrogating ksm, he said that as a terrorist he was telling him he thinks allah making our country weak so they can attack more. listen to what he said. >> the political correctness
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that we experience here in america prevents us from holding the muslim community responsible for allowing this festering to take place in their midst. they are the ones that should be offended by it they are the ones that should be standing up and pushing it out and not being politically correct. because if it doesn't represent their islam and it doesn't represent their quran then they need to get up and do something about it. ainsley: what's your reaction to that? >> look. this is absolutely essential. whether it's empowering our muslim partners in the middle east, the people of jordan. the people of egypt, supporting the king abdullah the second. supporting presidency i presidet sisi. that's our first line of defense. it's not a battlefield 8,000 miles away. it's when a local muslim leader, community member says this just isn't right. what this person is doing, choices they are making and informs authorities. and that's what we have to reestablish. to see something, say
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something. again, was broken under the last administration. we have to rebuild it. we have to make those connections and do the kinds of things the nypd did, which is create amazing undercover intelligence capacity to find those people before they build the bomb. before they buy that kitchen knife and kill innocent women and children. brian: some of the things that ray kelly was doing with mike bloomberg as mayor, kicked off the fbi because they got ahead of the fbi in many cases because they wanted to take things into their own hands which would bring up another issue. now yesterday on msnbc, they believe that even this conversation goes too far that maybe we are paying too much attention to terror attacks. let's take a listen. >> go ahead. >> have analyzed these incidents post facto as well as during as you have so many times with me and others here on msnbc and nbc news, what is the risk, there is certainly a risk of underreaction is there
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any risk of overreaction of deploying too much. brian: is there a risk of overreacting? >> i just ask that individual, i would ask him if nbc what the loved ones, the people left behind after manchester, after this recent attack, after fort hood, after boston, whether the people who were maimed, the people who lost loved ones whether that's their fear, whether their fear is overreaction. this is outrageous. simply outrageous, brian. brian: stabbing, they were going for the neck saying this is for allah. >> yeah, i mean, this is not -- people need to understand that this isn't an anomaly. you wrote the book on the bar bury war. something we have faced as a nation since our creation. there are always people out there who will use totalitarian ideas to take our freedom away from us. whether it's nazis or
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communists now it's global islamic terrorists. brian: since 2011 they were saying this is for 1492. really? for 1492. this is the war they are fighting. thanks, dr. gorka i appreciate you joining us. ainsley: head over to jillian for headlines. jillian: good monday morning to you. good morning to you as well. how about this one? an oklahoma man is shot dead by a neighbor, as he tries to drown his 3 month old twins. a boy and girl in the bathtub. leland foster shot twice in the back as police say he held the babies under water and threatened their mother with a knife. a child inside the home running to that neighbor for help. he was questioned by police but then released. the twins will be okay. former v.p. al gore getting some inconvenient truths of his own courtesy of our chris wallace. take a look. >> you said unless we took, quote, drastic measures, the world would reach a point of no return within 10 years and
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you called it a true planetary emergency. we're 11 years later. >> yeah. >> weren't you wrong? jillian: so how did he respond? like this. >> limit and avoid the most catastrophic consequences if we accelerate the pace of change that's now beginning. jillian: a new segment is being added to gore's upcoming sequel film to account for president trump's withdrawal from the paris agreement. all right. you have got to listen to this story. it looks like road workers need to head back to the classroom. a painting crew misspells the word school. you can see it right there. this is on a road right in front of an elementary school of all places. it happened in canada. city officials say the crew accidentally mixed up the letters o, h, spraying them upside down and backwards and just wrong. the mishap going viral on social media. people getting out of their cars to pose with the error. they have corrected the misspelling. as you guys know you have got
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to double-check when you are spelling something. steve: traffic proofreader. ainsley: how did that happen? it's a common word. glad they fixed that. steve: maybe that's the scohol dome. not anymore. brian: what do the american people think about what's happening around the world. pete seeing seth at a diner that switched from blue to red first time in almost 30 years to vote for president trump. is he catching up with voters straight ahead. ainsley: what can learn political u.k. is that correct stein says pc culture is the stamp of pc culture is looking for. mark steyn joins us next. >> fabulous. ♪ ♪
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steve: terror in london on friday night when a van tried to mow down as many people as they possibly could. mark steyn joins us on the curvey couch on the mezzanine level. journalist and author as well. you say political correctness, once again is a problem. >> yeah. we're not honest about the nature of the enemy. and if it were so that we give these people essentially the running of the free world. one of these guys in the latest london attack was on a national television documentary on extremism. brian: 27-year-old. >> yeah. so he is basically up for a posthumous emmy nomination for
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best jihaddist in extremism documentary. this is a ridiculous way of allowing yourself to be hollowed out by these people. brian: only thing can you do mark, is go into these areas and do prearrests. i'm not sure what you are up to. i cannot take the risk. council witcome with me. then there is outrage with that right now mi 5 says they have 500 active investigations and 20,000 people that they know have direct links to terror. >> right. the arithmetic on the number of people you need to do that. with the era they had internment without trial. they would do things like if a person of interest wanted to get on a boat and go from belfast to liverpool, they would stop him. the guy hadn't been convicted of anything, but they would do that. that's only 20 years ago. brian: i don't know that. >> no. it's interesting. because you think it's easier to do because in a sense it's one group of white europeans
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getting at another group of white europeans. now because of political correctness in the last 20 years, everyone says oh, no, you can't do that. that's islamophobic. you are an entire community. people are more relaxed. ainsley: it just realized london bridge. i'm a mom teaching my kids all these nursery rhymes. london bridge is falling down. next time i'm singing that to my daughter i'm going to be thinking about this and terrorism on that very bridge. what can we do to learn from them to protect our own kids here? >> i think that's actually a very good example, ainsley. because they understand the symbolic power of it in a way that we don't. they understand that london bridge isn't some bridge across the muddy river it has symbolic power that in a same way the arianna grande thing does. and they are serious. they have declared war on us. and we keep saying no, no, you can declare war on us all you like. we are not treating it.
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brian: we are going to protest the paris agreement. we are not going to be outraged that tourists got run over and stabbed to death. >> no. you know, there is a grieving family in british, colombia, canada this morning mourning their daughter because she went to london and got killed by these guys. ainsley: right. >> is h sediq khan the mayor of london said you don't need to be alarmed. this is one the safest world cities on the planet. by world cities he means places like new york, london, or paris that have become big multicultural centers where there are whole areas that you don't know what's going on and people are running mosques, people are part of networks. it's a very slippery phrase when you allow essentially areas of your city to succeed from. brian: as a muslim mayor i would have loved him to speak up to tell us the difference between what he thinks and what they think. they would have gone a long way. >> he is very dishonest and
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would he seely on all that, you stuff, brian. ainsley: meanwhile that woman will never walk down the aisle. she was going to plan her wedding. >> i would like us to stop being reactive on things like that. i don't want any more grieving families in british, colombia. this needs to stop. brian: thank you. straight ahead, how do we stop an attack like that from happening in america? president trump pointing to executive order on travel. but will washington listen? kellyanne conway live in minutes. steve: meanwhile, our own pete hegseth is having breakfast with friends this morning up in connecticut. good morning, folks. you're next. ♪ can't keep no chains on me ♪ i was born. pete: i'm with bill and lenny union guys former democrats who went with president trump in this election cycle. we are talking politics every single angle. paris climate accord whether they care about it or not. we will get their pulse on breakfast with friends my prime rib and eggs is cooking right now. i can smell it. it will be out soon. stick with us on "fox &
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♪ ♪ >> steve: you know, if you were thinking i would like prime rib and eggs for breakfast, we know exactly the place to go today. ainsley: steak and eggs. where would should we go, steve? steve: go to the old american diner 125 miles north of where we are in plainfield, connecticut where pete is with a bunch of friends. pete: thanks; the old american diner is a great place. lot of great conversations bring with you right now. county that went for president trump for the first time since george h.w. bush.
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i'm here with a former democrats who crossed over, union guys who said president trump is more represents their interest. bill, you are a union carpenter, were for many years and went and crossed over and supported president trump. how do you feel like he is doing so far? specifically we were talking about his reaction to the terrorist attacks in london. he talked about the need for a travel ban. what's your take on all that? >> well, i'm glad that president trump is watching out for us like he should be. and this travel ban thing never should have been stopped by any of the courts because he has the constitutional right to do that. and putting words, the courts used his words. pete: campaign words. >> campaign words to put a stop on this ban and you can't do that. you have to follow the law. you can't use feelings. and that's the problem with this country. everything is feelings now instead of law. pete: that's a great point.
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feelings instead of law. >> lenny, we have been talking all monk. what is your thoughts on how the president is doing so far. >> i think he has the best interest at heart. he took the job because he had the money. he had the recognition. i think he wanted to get into the position of power so he could make change for this country to get the country back on track. mainstream like america used to be like he said. let's make america great again. pete: you said the democratic party left you. rye why? >> like ronald reagan said. he was a democrat and he said i didn't leave the democratic party. they left me. i feel like this is what happened again. i voted for president obama the first time but the change he made i felt was not representative of what he promised and i felt that the left fringe of the democratic party has driven them too far off the mainstream road and that's why the country is going in the wrong direction and they need to get back on -- into the center again. pete: well, brian, ainsley, steve, you heard it bill and lenny kind of telling it like it is and feel like the president is doing what he
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said he wanted to do which is make america great again. we will keep bringing it to you from plainfield. steve: there is his breakfast right there. ainsley: kellyanne conway at the top of the hour. stay with us. for adults with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy, including those with an abnormal alk or egfr gene who've tried an fda-approved targeted therapy, here's a question: who wouldn't want a chance for another...? who'd say no to a...? who wouldn't want... a chance to live longer.
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[sirens] trump: this bloodshed must end. this bloodshed will end. >> he has been singularly focused on the threat of radical islamic terrorism. he has never wavered from it. >> how many more people need to die before the left and the mainstream media call out the root cause? >> the political correctness that we experience here in america prevents us from holding the muslim community responsible. >> this isn't a war on muslims, christians, it's not a war on religion, this is a war on terrorism. and you're got an hashtag these people away. >> if you keep getting hurt by mosquito bites at some point,
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you decide to start killing mosquitoes. >> we have to crush them in the heartland. >> we love you so much. ♪ ♪ oh, baby you should go and love yourself. ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: we went big with our new home. welcome to studio f in the heart of midtown manhattan. brian: two floors. it's going to be great for our quads and long-term cardiovascular conditioning,
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but i would like an elevator. steve: why? brian: because i don't want to have to walk. it should be one floor. ainsley: there's one over there. brian: yeah, but the elevator's only used. you just have to keep on bringing. you only bring up equipment with it. steve: there you go. ainsley: we're so excited. this is amazing. this is the election studio. it's huge, it's beautiful, and then down there we have our living room and kitchen. and if you're walking in front of fox news on 6th avenue, you can peak your head in. steve: yeah, we asked you what you thought and we got an e-mail from norman, your new studio is great. but after watching you from 20 years, i will watch if you're broadcasting on a hayfield. she's not on a hayfield, but kellyanne conway is on the front lawn. >> good morning. congratulations on your new crib. that's awesome. steve: thank you very much. of course we've done some infrastructure work here at
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fox in the new studio. today kicks off infrastructure week at the white house. tell us a little bit about what's going on because i know the first thing is going to be for the president to suggest to privatize the air traffic controllers. >> it's really an exciting week and thank you for giving it coverage. nobody else seems to want to. even last week secretary transportation announced there were half a billion dollars in infrastructure investments at over 500 airports in this country, which of course enhances security safety, convenience, improving our runways, improving frankly the protocols and the way that air traffic controllers speak to each other. the way that our nation's infrastructure works. and this is actually something that impacts real lives. you just don't hear about it because it's not in a tweet or it's not a; isn't that correct that people on other networks can put against the president. but thank you for covering it because when the president was running, and he was president-elect and now president, he has made very clear his commitment to improving infrastructure. and secretary childs has been a leader here too.
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they've been talking about the labyrinth permitting process in this country that the fact we don't build anything anymore as a country that our roads and bridges are in disrepair. so just a exciting thing that people will literally see the fruits of the promises beginning today. steve: great. ainsley: kellyanne conway, the president tweeted should ask for a expedited hearing of the travel ban before the supreme court and seek much tougher versions. he also tweeted in any event, we are extreme vetting people coming into the u.s. in order to help keep our country safe. the courts are slow and political. what is your reaction? >> well, the president has made very clear from the beginning of his candidacy and how presidency, ainsley, that his first duty is the safety and security of the american people. and an attack on london is an attack on american values, and we stand with our allies there. but the president's frustration reflects the fear of many americans and freedom-loving people all over the world who don't want this to be the new normal. there are 21 attacks in the
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last couple of years that isis is claiming responsibility for. whether the attack 36 hours ago in london was isis directed or isis inspired, it remains the same that terrorists have the upper hand in some of these situations where whether they're children standing in line for candy, celebration in nice, or people just having dinner out in paris waiting for a concert to start. innocent people in brussels. and of course in manchester and now in london. this cannot be the new normal and this president got elected in large part because he was the tougher person on national security and defeating radical islamic terrorism. he of course is willing to actually say the word. you name it, and then you defeat it. hillary clinton referred to them as our quote determined enemies in her convention speech last july. and imagine if the mainstream media every time said russia
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said isis, every time they said terror said terrorists. just imagine how different it would be. brian: yeah, speaking of russia, a quick reaction team with a russian group within the white house. would be headed by i guess the lawyer handed that. has any progress been made on that? >> no. i would refer all questions about that investigation to the lawyer. but all the speculation and what the washington post even referred to or somebody referred to many weekend as a nothing burger. so far the speculation maybe inside. but, look, this white house will continue to be on offense and defense. and offense includes shaming people or guilt them or telling them to be responsible by telling them things about the investigation. a new hotline for veterans
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here at the white house. it got very little coverage because it's a positive. but you know what? the opposite of negative coverage is not just positive. the opposite of negative is relevant. and i am duty-bound to make sure that the american people are hearing all the positive things that are happening here on their behalf, and those are two very quick examples that happened on the same day. sean spicer, our press secretary, they give a whole list of positive things that are happening. action that's being taken by different departments and agencies, it gets very little coverage. so i'm hoping that people will cut out the middle man, go right to our website, watch these press briefings, not just the combative q and a so they can learn exactly what's happening that has real people impact. steve: good point. so the white house -- this white house is on a fence. meanwhile, the last white house is on a fence against it is last white house. susan rice said the
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president's temporary travel ban would actually lead to more trouble. listen to this, kellyanne conway. >> there's really no evidence to suggest that by banning muslims or a particular set of six countries that we would make ourselves here in the united states safer. i think there's a very real risk that by stigmatizing and isolating muslims from particular countries and muslims in general that we alienate the very communities here in the united states whose corporation we most need to protect these homegrown extremists from being able to carry out attacks. they need to feel part of this challenge we face as a nation. steve: kellyanne, it's not a muslim ban. >> that's right. and she knows better. susan rice reminds everybody that no one on tv is under oath. she knows better it's not a muslim ban. and i would say her comments yesterday are just really
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parallel to the lie she told after the benghazi attack, which took the lives of four innocent americans. she lied there that it was about a video. she knows it's not a ban against a certain religion. she knows very clear that these are six countries that were identified by her obama administration department and that these six countries do not have screening and vetting procedures in place that give us confidence. that what's happening around the globe happens here. the president has constitutional authority and statutory authority. very clear everyone read the authority, geek out with me. but read the statute. it very clearly shows the president has the authority to keep people out temporarily when there is a -- when there is a reason. in this case, the reason is the lack of screening and vetting procedures from countries that harbor and train export terrorists. brian: but, kellyanne, the 90 days would be up already even if it was implemented in the
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broader context. have we made any progress in setting up a system that would help us stay safe with these six nations? >> this president and his national security team do feel like progress is being made. i mean, first of all, they're much more vigilant and serious about it than has been done in the past. and secondly, all these that these national security enhancements and even domestic security enhancements are responsible for everything from 60% decrease in illegal border crossings to people feel safer to a lot of these would be terrorists i think seeing what's going on here and thinking. but, look, there's homegrown terrorists, there's people being radicalized on the internet. our national security team is very vigilant on working on tech procedures and protocols. why? because even one of these savage, evil murderers from saturday night in london was reportedly according to telegraph uk last night, was
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reportedly called out by two neighbors as being radicalized. his friend reported him to the authorities by saying my friend is radicalized. he's been watching youtube videos and radicalized. a different -- >> no. >> -- said that this savage murder, now dead, was trying to radicalize her three spectacular small children at a playground. ainsley: yeah, trying to prevent a attack happening here or another attack happening here. he's going to eradicate isis. but then you have tom roberts at msnbc, he's suggesting that the president is trying to provoke terrorism here. listen to this: >> the president doesn't want us to be politically correct; right? so let's not be pc about this. is the president trying to provoke a domestic terror attack with this twitter rant? because only to prove himself right. ainsley: what's your reaction to that? >> well, i -- does he have a job today? i mean, that is really over the top. even by those standards. think about what he said and
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think about the accusation he's making. in other words, -- and, again, i was asked on the flagship show on in nbc earlier today, the president should apologize to the mayor of london and this man is suggesting that he suggests, but i won't repeat it because it's so disamatory. but you know what? this president should apologize for what? for trying to keep us safe and secure, for calling radical islamic terrorism for what it is, i was there in the room when he said we will stand with uk and the bloodbath stops. we will bring to justice the perpetrators, and we will become more vigilant. and, again, an attack on the uk is an attackous. but, look, for people on tv to be saying what they're saying, cnn anchor yesterday calling the president an expletive, kathy griffon also of cnn doing what she did last week, which is really over the top and then blaming the trump family. i mean, people are really losing their minds over this presidency instead of trying to cover the that things he's doing to help all americans and really coming together.
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let me tell you something. defeating terrorism and putting isis truly in retreat and eliminating them from the face of the earth should be a nonpartisan issue in search of bipartisan support. and when you hear things like that and people still keep their jobs, it's truly remarkable. steve: all right. kellyanne conway joining us from the north lawn on this the monday of infrastructure week at the white house. kellyanne conway, go get your hard hat. you have a busy day of building stuff. ainsley: thank you, kellyanne. a man jumps inside a moving car and the reason why? we'll tell you next. brian: plus, remember this campaign promise? trish: you're going to win so much, you may even get tired of winning. and you'll say, please. please. it's too much winning. brian: governor mike huckabee says president trump has been winning since he took office. so why is no one talking about that? we will next. plus, we have david bossie and. steve: congressman jason chaffetz.
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brian: president trump is a leader who loves to win. trump: you're going to win so much, you may even get tired of winning. you'll say, please, please, it's too much winning. we can't take it anymore. mr. president, it's too much. and i'll say, no, it isn't. we have to keep winning. we have to win more. brian: and is he indeed on a winning streak with huge successes of his first foreign policy trip according to some and withdrawing from the paris climate deal under his belt, which is a victory for many on the right. how does he keep up that streak if indeed he is on one? former 2016 presidential candidate and former governor of arkansas mike huckabee joins us. governor, do you look at this president as on a winning streak which could be a difficult week? will do that every week is difficult for donald trump because the press hates him and the democrats are doing everything they can. but despite that, the stock market hit record highs. look at all the things that
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has happened. everybody said varney chance to get the nomination or the election. he got the nomination and the election. he said he would implement extreme vetting on immigrants, he did it. if you look at the fact that he said the government swaled his campaign, a lot of people scoffed at that. over and over whether it's the overseas trim or the paris climate deal, he is winning. more importantly, it's not about him winning, it's about the american public winning. so we're seeing jobs come back, lowest unemployment numbers. these are good things. so i don't think we do get tired of winning. i have to correct the president. we don't get tired of it. we want to see some more. >> how does he handle this week in which he wants to talk infrastructure and terror because those things are priorities.
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but knowing james comey's testimony looms on thursday, and it may be the highest ratings you're going to see anywhere. >> well, it might be, and i think wow there's interest and fascination with the comey hearings, quite frankly i don't think americans are that concerned with what james comey said or heard when he was having a meeting with the president with the white house. because if he heard something that he thought was inappropriate, it was his responsibility to immediately report it. the fact that he didn't and the fact that he and others in the justice department pulled from the investigations, i don't think the president has anything to worry about as mr. comey does. brian: unfortunately, we're coming another terror attack over the weekend. governor mike huckabee. congratulations on your next show, and i look forward to seeing you again and good luck to your daughter today. she is the press secretary today. thank you so much, governor. >> thank you, brian. brian: all right. straight ahead, seven people dead, dozens more wounded in the
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latest uk terror attack. but many in the media still obsessed with the russia investigation. so are they missing the story? former trump campaign manager david bossy is next. and we have jason chaffetz live the whole country booking on choice hotels.com. four words, badda book. badda boom... let it sink in. shouldn't we say we have the lowest price? nope, badda book. badda boom. have you ever stayed with choice hotels? like at a comfort inn? yep. free waffles, can't go wrong. i like it. promote that guy. get the lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed. when you book direct at choicehotels.com. book now. your insurance on time. tap one little bumper, and up go your rates. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it? news flash: nobody's perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident.
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♪ ♪ ainsley: good morning. welcome back to fox and friends on this monday. he's a quick look at your headlines. several schools across the nation are trying to keep kids in the classroom longer, and they hope to do that by keeping kindergarten mandatory and increasing the drop out age. those opposed think parents should have the final say.
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and democrats have another reason to cry coming 2018. people in the largest voting demographic are more likely to remain loyal to the republican party than those who identify as democrats. that means dems will have a very hard time winning backseat back seats in both the house and the senate. ainsley: thank you very much, jillian. overnight police in london conducting more raids, arresting two more suspects that are tied to the deadly terror attacks as isis is taking credit. brian: but some members of the mainstream media, climate change, russia's involvement in the elections, and we wonder is the media off message again? fox news contributor david bossie joins us from a gray washington, d.c. david, good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me. steve: okay. do you buy that some members of the mainstream media, they hate the president so much. they really just want to talk about whatever's going on in the world, they want to talk about russia, they want to
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talk about comey. they want to talk about climate change. >> certainly. this has gone back to the campaign. they have obsessed with this president then candidate trump then president-elect trump during the transition. they can't focus on the fact that the american people chose donald trump to lead this country at a time that we are in a very pro cares place at home and abroad, and it's because of the weak policies of barack obama that put us here. whether it was his horrible economic policies or foreign policy or his military policy, we -- this president has taken the last several months to just stand up in the administration to get things back on track. and that's why -- he doesn't care what cnn& msnbc and these others out there that are just literally have nothing positive to say about him will
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not cover him honestly and positivively. and the democratic party has just become a permanent obstruction campaign. they can't come up with one policy that the american people want but president trump is leading through his actions. brian: by the way, nobody is talking about this, but it looked as though they were set up to eviscerate trump. and instead he has gotten people to pay up. put more emphasis, money, and troops into europe than any time since world war ii. and he also says you don't need to bring up article 5 because it has insinuated if you're part of nato, it's all for one and one for all. no one brings that up. but when had seen you own ambassador in england is not his ambassador, does it come back again, david bossie that the president has to get quicker in hiring people in place?
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>> i know that the president is getting peek in place, and i urge the cabinet secretaries to really pick up the pace on their part because i know the white house can send names over to departments, and it really is -- we've seen this over the last several months. they are a little slow because they're trying to stand up their agencies, and i would urge them to really help the white house in filling these roles out and taking a much more aggressive role. >> but the ambassadorship comes from the president. >> absolutely. but the state departments always wants you to allow people, especially these nonpolitical types to stay in these roles. whether it's the number two role or the number three role. during the transition of power. which is usually -- when it comes to ambassadors, the first six months of an administration it's not just by january 20th. it really takes a long time because they all need senate confirmation. ainsley: david, the president is tweeting the supreme court needs to expedite the travel ban. what's the latest there? have you heard anything? >> look, the department of
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justice needs to move expeditiously toward the supreme court to get a ruling to give the president of the united states his constitutional authority back. something that these left wing liberal groups have try to take away and handcuff the president, we need a travel ban. we must have our borders secure. at every place that they can enter, we need to have it and i don't understand -- how many attacks does it take before the left will get their heads out of the sand? steve: david, i get the feeling you don't want to talk about this. but your name has been talked about as expanding the role outside the white house to a rapid response spokesperson, et cetera, for. is there anything to that? >> well, look, i'm honored and humbled by the president and his team wanting to talk to me about helping them out.
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and i've been, you know, at the president's side since he was a candidate long before he was a candidate. so i -- am wanting to help him through these tough times with all of the -- when i say tough times, it's just the media constant grinding, the democrats being obstructionists so that we can lead and bring back homes and abroad. i want to help him do that whatever way that works out, you know, it's yet to be seen. brian: so if he offers you the job, you'll take it. >> i don't know what the job will be but, guys, i think you know that i'm here to help him, and i'm here to -- and i'm certainly open to whatever he wants me to do. ainsley: david, you'll be glad to know this interview is now over. you're free. [laughter] >> thank you. ainsley: thank you. good luck with everything. brian: ultimately you have to sign off on it. to release him. ainsley: is that right?
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brian: yes. ainsley: we've heard from our president from the latest terror attack. but who in congress is ready to step up and fight radical islam with him? utah congressman jason chaffetz joins us next. steve: come on in. and former vice president al gore facing an inconvenient question on climate change. watch this. >> a true planetary emergency where 11 years later weren't you wrong? steve: his response to that burning question coming up next. live from studio in the heart of midtown manhattan it's ok that everybody ignores me when i drive. it's fine. because i get a safe driving bonus check every six months i'm accident free. because i don't use my cellphone when i'm driving. even though my family does, and leaves me all alone. here's something else... i don't share it with mom.
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brian: this was the song that he requested to be brought in by. this is the chairman for a few more days. >> this is one of them. that's why i'm here. brian: i mean, derrick had his own music. all the players when they go up to bat and you do. ainsley: and you wouldn't -- and you would be dancing if you want had foot surgery. >> they put 14 screws in my foot and put me back together. brian: phillips head? >> yeah. you get them at home depot. they're fantastic. brian: okay. good. let's talk about what happened yesterday. teresa may says that's it. this has got to stop. she indicated that she think so social media is the issue. there has to be some constraints. is she right or wrong? >> the oversight committee -- by the way, our hearts go out to the people in london. brian: they were brutalized. >> i just can't even imagine.
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but let's remember over the last several years in the oversight committee alone, which i happen to chair, we have begged the administration to look at social media when people apply. we have begged them to look at federal employees. this is social media and yet we've had a hains as a federal government to even look at that material. but it's social. that's -- it's totally counter to privacy. when you put it out there and you're going to get a visa, shouldn't you look at the social media accounts whether you decide that person come to the united states? steve: absolutely. this administration is now essentially super vetting people coming into the country because of just that. the san bernardino people, the last administration would not look at social media. >> look, the obama administration for eight years was just saying, look, we have to be nicer. we have to be sort of. remember, this is the administration that said -- the obama administration said this is the just hav jv team. there's basically nothing to worry about. the obama administration was trying to give libyans visas
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to come to the united states to study nuclear sciences and aviation. and we had to fight that back. so the attitude, the shift within our federal government. i think america gets it. that's why donald trump is the president of the united states. that's. ainsley: he's saying heck with political correctness. so what is congress doing to annihilate isis? >> well, look, i've been proud of the fact that we did plus up the homeland security billions of dollars in addition to what had been there in the past. the obama administration has a major shift within the organization. but i also think that the major problem right now is in the judicial branch because he not only has constitutional authority but the president has statutory authority in order to make sure that the people that come to this country are properly vetted. a handful of people are holding them back. brian: remember james comey said there are investigations
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in all 50 states when fbi director wasn't a politician or a prosecutor. and he said that it bothers him. we had the secretary of homeland security say if you know what i knew, you wouldn't be able to sleep at night. and then we see what happened in london. why haven't there been more attacks here? >> well, there is a lot of good work that our intelligence community, homeland security, and others do and our local law enforcement. i think part of the role of congress is to make sure that they're connecting those dots. what we found, for instance, in boston is that the federal government have a lot of information that they didn't share it with the local cops. and a lot of times it's going to be boston and new york and philly and l.a. it's going to be those law enforcement agencies that have the boots on the ground. ainsley: that's scary that they weren't working together. >> well, we hope so. it's very difficult. there are lots of issues out there and there are literally tens of thousands of people that they're watching to one degree or another. that was the situation in the uk.
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and so you hope they are, but you have to give them the tools and the -- brian: am i right you talked to james comey since he was fired? >> i did. i did have a conversation with him. i encouraged him to come testify before the oversight reform committee. he's taking i think the path of least resistance. i hope they pepper him with some very tough questions. brian: what do you think it will be like? >> it's hard to do this hearing without seeing the documents. so there's new question now with muller involved. is the department of justice actually going to share those documents? but you have former director comey and his -- the acting director both have said there have been no impediments, no political influence. so it's pretty hard for them to come back now and say, well, there was political influence by the president when they previously testified under oath saying that there had been. ainsley: did comey say he takes those memos of the notes? >> no. i asked him very specifically where are those notes? at the department of justice, in your home?
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and he wouldn't comment on that. brian: he didn't say if he had them or didn't have them? >> he wouldn't talk about it at all. >> leaving the house to the people at the end of the month. do you have a job yet? are you on monster.com all day long? >> i'm working on it. julie, my wife, who is standing right over there, she's worried i'm going to be home fixing things. steve: stay off the ladder. brian: on my radio show with we have zip recruiter. ainsley: that way you can't retire. home together. wish you all the best. >> thank you. steve: all right. time now for some news, jillian. >> you can use linke linked in as well. a oklahoma man is shot dead by a neighbor as he tries to drown his three-month old twins a boy and a girl in a bathtub. shot twice in the back as police say he held the babies under water and threatened their mother with a knife.
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a neighbor running for help. he was questioned by police but released. the twins will be okay. al gore getting inconvenient troops of our own chris wallis. >> you said unless we took quote drastic measures, the world would reach a point of no return in ten years, and you called it a true planetary emergency where 11 years later, weren't you wrong? ainsley: so how did he respond? take a look. >> unfortunately, and regrettably a lot of serious damage has been done. we are going to suffer some of these consequences, but we can limit and avoid the most catastrophic consequences if we accelerate the pace of change that's now beginning. >> a new segment is being added to gore's up coming film to account for president trump's withdrawal from the paris agreement. you've got to take a look at this video. it's an incredible moment caught on camera. an illinois man dives head first into a moving car to save a stranger's life. suffering a seizure at the
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wheel. now, you can see the car run a red light and continue to slowly move into on coming traffic right there. you can see his feet. driver going the opposite way, he noticed, gets out of his car and jumps into the window. that is absolutely incredible when you see a video like that, guys. steve: thank you very much. ainsley: jason chaffetz beautiful, lovely wife. >> my better half. brian: he's going to drive you crazy for a while. >> that's okay. i'm going to put him to work. brian: he should be in one city at a time. ainsley: we're really proud of you. we wish you all the best. >> thank you. brian: and we'll talk to you guys on radio. and coming up, teresa may changing her tone on the war on terror. kind of. >> there is to be frank far too much tolerance of extremism in our country. brian: but is it too little too late? ainsley: and having breakfast with friends in connecticut.
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hey, pete. >> that's right. we're at the old american diner here. president trump is up early tweeting. we're reading them. we're going to ask a veteran of vietnam. we've been talking about president trump what's really going on in this country right now and also i've got a big ol' prime rib. who here has had the prime rib? we've got some fans. i'm telling you it's solid. i'm going to eat it and talk to these great folks coming up.
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buttrust angie's list to help., [ barks ] visit angieslist.com today. yet up 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more. add one a day women's complete with key nutrients we may need. plus it supports bone health with calcium and vitamin d. one a day women's in gummies and tablets. steve: once upon a time i referred to him as pancake pete. well, today he's prime
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rib pete and at the old american diner in plane field, connecticut. good morning. >> good morning, guys, i love that fancy new studio, but we love the people here. a county that first time went republican for george h.w. bush in 1988, and it went overwhelmingly so for the support of a lot of independents and democrats. you describe yourself as a vietnam veteran yourself. why did you initially support president trump and how do you think he's doing? >> because of the way he was going to take care of the military and the country. >> and how is he doing so far? >> he's doing great. he has a lot of rough roads >> why do you feel he faces so much opposition from the swamp? >> because of the way they've been all the years for themselves. >> more for themselves than the rest of the country. >> exactly. >> absolutely. gloria, i want to ask you a quick question. good morning. he's been up tweeting, the president's been up tweeting this morning. and you mention you like his tweets. he tweeted the people and the lawyers and the courts can
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call it whatever they want, but i'm calling it what we need. a travel ban. do you like it especially in light of lobbed? >> yes, i do and i feel it should have been done long ago. we have just let anybody and everybody come in. and i'm not against immigrants coming in. my great grandparents are immigrants from germany. but the thing is we have to know who's coming in to keep our country and our family safe. pete: the president also tweeting this morning about political correctness that he doesn't want the watered down politically correct version. he said it yesterday as well. how dangerous has political correctness been? >> it has put such a shall i say dent in our country. people are -- unfortunately, i'm not one of them but so many people are afraid of saying what they think because they'll be criticized. i say what i think with diplomacy. pete: with diplomacy. well said. well, here at the old american diner. anna, how are you doing? she's the owner of the old american diner.
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it happens to be her 40th birthday this morning; is that right. >> 39. pete: i went high. but old american diner is amazing. and happy birthday to you. i know brian, ainsley, and steve in the studio want to wish you happy birthday as well. >> thank you very much. really appreciate it. pete: great small business here. wonderful community that is hoping that jobs and everything that this country needs are coming back. brian: well, happy birthday. ainsley: happy birthday. we're glad that you were born. working hard for her family. brian: that's right and pete is so smart. knows if he mentions our name he gets free breakfast. steve: he would anyway. ainsley: teresa may changing her tone on the war on terror. but is it too little too late? our experts are going to weigh in on that. brian: but first, bill did a great job. >> beautiful studio. we'll be by to steal the.
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also, what will james comey say this week? is there a smoking gun? take that on. the media had a bad weekend. we'll tell you who was apologizing now. get ready for a whole new week. we start in ten minutes, guys, we'll see you then top of the hour right here ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ sfx: engine revving ♪ (silence) ♪ ♪ it's not just a car, it's your daily treat. ♪ go ahead, spoil yourself. the es and es hybrid.
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>> there is to be frank far too much tolerance of extremism in our country. steve: there you've got british prime minister teresa may seemingly take a tougher stance on islamic extremism after the third attack on the united kingdom in the last ten weeks. but is it too little too late? our panel is back with us. we have new york assemblyman and marine core veteran far left screen wise. we've got former cia operative
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mike baker in the middle and former u.s. diplomat morgan. good morning to all of you. >> good morning. steve: so what do you make of teresa may saying okay. now we need to be less tolerance of extremism. >> i definitely think it's too little too late, but it doesn't mean it's not a positive step in the right direction, you know? there has to be policies that go with her stronger words now. for example, we've talked about lone wolfs over the years. usually they're known wolfs. and what we've done and our law enforcement agencies have gone back on cold cases and said is there any development in this case and tried to reopen any cases that are hot again? those are the kinds of policies that have to follow up those tough words. steve: mike, all they would have to do is turn on their television because one of these jihad ease was in a tove
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show called the jihadis next door. >> what the public is willing to put up with in terms of security is a pendulum that swings back and forth between security and civil liberties and privacy issues. and typically that thing is always being calibrated based on the public's perception of the threat. after an attack or after a series of attacks, that pendulum swings over to security, and they're willing to put up with a bit more. now, frankly we're all like rat coons. we don't have that much patience. so the pendulum goes back to its civil liberties after a short period of time. she said the right thing. she said what she needed to say in terms of enough is enough. and also absolutely right in the sense that now it has to be backed up. because they can only work within the confines of the laws. just like the bureau here. steve: absolutely. morgan, final word. >> when it comes to teresa may, we learned in november that you have a binary choice option. jeremy has been on record saying that isis supporters should not be prosecuted for
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their speech in the uk. we were just talking about civil liberties and what that means, but i think u.s., nato, all of our allies have to take a hard look at what's put on television, what's put on cyber space, what's put on social media. i don't think we're attacking it as i said earlier today as if there were a battle that we would have in iraq or afghanistan or syria. we need to look at cyber space that way. if we continue to allow these young millennial social media savvy terrorists to recruit people online, we're going to continue to play whack-a-mole. steve: you think you're right about that. mike and morgan, thank you very much. we're going to step aside.k back in the new studio in two ms x months i'm accident free. because i don't use my cellphone when i'm driving. even though my family does, and leaves me all alone. here's something else... i don't share it with mom. i don't. right, mom? i have a brand new putter you don't even know about! it's awesome. safe driving bonus checks, only from allstate.
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