tv Americas News HQ FOX News June 10, 2017 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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it's just -- it absolutely melts my heart. thank you so much. thank you for watching today, we greatly appreciate. we appreciate all of the support for all those here in detroit, we wish them the very best, we will be back from dc tomorrow. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> fox news alert, two u.s. soldiers are killed and two more wounded after afghan soldier goes on shooting rampage, the afghan soldier opened fire on u.s. service members in eastern afghanistan in the district of mangahar. hello and welcome to a brand new hour, i'm kelly wright. julie: and i'm julie banderas. one of their own had infiltrated the afghan army. john is live from the middle east bureau with the very latest, hi, john. >> this is being called a quote,
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unquote, insider attack as you mengted an afghan soldier, taliban claiming responsibility, this afghan soldier insurgent and operative for the taliban opening fire on u.s. troops inside this base. now take a look at the map. it happened in eastern afghanistan. east of kabul. very close to the pakistan border and that's where the afghan official started spraying the u.s. soldiers with machine gunfire, kill two and wounding two others before that afghan soldier was killed by returned fire. this isn't the first time there's been a so-called green on blue attack. the taliban again claiming responsibility. we will have much more on this later. kelly: all right, john, thank you so much. reporting from israel. right now we go to a live event where former congressman gabriel survived assassination attempt is speaking at the commissioning of the uss gabriel, let's listen
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in. >> just like her crew. i thought of you in my darkest days, the soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines of the united states of america. we ask so much of you despite danger you say, yes, you make me proud, you make america proud. i will never forget the day or the crew of the ussgabrielle giffords. fair winds and following sea. thank you very much. [cheers and applause]
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kelly: quite a crowd there in response to former congressman gabrielle giffords, a ship by the u.s. navy and dedicated in her honor, named as a uss gabrielle gifford, the entire world was shot when gabrielle -- let's listen before i go into the background. >> as the responsor of the uss gabrielle giffords, we are happy of the years ahead where gabi and i will support the crew and officers of the amazing navy ship and what a great day it is in the state of texas and in
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galveston county where i lived for 15 years. [cheers and applause] >> i'm so happy to be here. it's so close to nasa. where i worked i got nasa buddies, gabby's former member that is she served in congress, her colleagues in the state senate and the state house and i think even some el campo tire people are here. so good morning, everybody, you know, i've got to say that i hope the rest of the lcs ships have an easier time following the uss gabrielle f giffords that i'm going to follow my amazing wife in giving a speech. this is hard for me. and thank you to the u.s. navy for this fabulous commissioning ceremony and thank you to usa for building such a great and worthy ship, thank you very much
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. [applause] >> you know this morning we heard how appropriate it is to name a ship after a woman possessing the courage and grit of my wife, former congressman gabrielle giffords, the characteristics that she exemplifies, toughness and resilience are after all the same attributes that you'd seek in a warship, like gabby this ship will face down some lethal threats, but it will persevere through adversity and will leave our lessor adversaries in her great giant wake out of the back of the ship. however, those of you know who know gabby best knows this, what
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connects her most to the uss gabrielle giffords is not 418 feet, 50 knots, maybe more than that but we can't admit it it's not her shallow draft, nor the four engines that let this ship turn on a dime, it's not even back by's -- gabby's name. it's simply this, it's the crew, the crew, the men and women and their shared commitment to a value more american than any other. you know what that is? that is service. it is their service the men and women behind the stage, it's
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their service that keep us strong and it's their service that let's us all sleep safely at night. it was service that led gabby to congress. it was service that let her to seek a role on the armed services committee where she spent countless hours working on behalf of the men and women of our military, service guided her as a proud navy spouse. i think the only navy spouse in congress at the time and it was service at a navy spouse when she supported me from the moment she married me until the day i left the navy. the value of service connected her to the people of arizona and to the citizens of our great nation. it's what lies at the heart of our marriage and our commitment to each other. today it is what grounds our
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appreciation for the men and women of the uss gabrielle giffords for the crew and on behalf everybody assembled here today, thank you for your service and know that as long as gabby and i live, we will be here to support and serve you. thank you very much, everybody. [applause] >> thank you congressman giffords s and captain kelly. kelly: there we have it, captain mark kelly giving his wife a very fitting tribute thanking her for her service to this country and thanking her for the service to his marriage as a spouse of a navy captain, and, of course, we thank her as well to her service and you recall that it was in january of 2011 that gabby was serving her third
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term, was a victim of assassination attempt near tucson at a safeway super market where she was publicly greeting people and was shot in that. she survived those injuries, but ultimately because of those injuries had to resign from her office as united states congresswoman and today they're dedicating the u.s. navy vessel in her honor, gabby giffords, we thank them both for their service to their country. back now to what's going on today. president trump spending weekend in new jersey after comey's damaging testimony on capitol hill. the president accuses comey to lie to go congress about their private conversations. christian fisher with all the latest, christian. >> first a quick update on something happening. president trump has been briefed by his national security council about what's been going on in afghanistan, two u.s. soldiers
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killed by an afghan army soldier. the president has been briefed on that and the vice president is actually speaking momentarily in wisconsin and he may address this as well, so something to watch out for and the other big news kind of on the president's horizon this weekend are two big trips that were just announced. on friday he's going to be heading to miami and he'll be going to poland in july ahead of g-20 summit, more on that in a minute. all of washington and president's legal team is fixated on what was said during the rose garden ceremony yesterday, the big outstanding question is, of course, are there tapes, are there recordings of president trump's private conversations with his then fbi director james comey, here is what he said yesterday. >> well, i will tell you about that maybe sometime in the very near future. >> you seem to be hinting that there are recordings of the conversations. >> ly tell you about it over a very short period of time. okay. do you have a question here?
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>> when will you tell us about the recordings? >> fairly short period of time. >> tomorrow, now? >> are there tapes, sir? >> you're going to be very disappointed when you hear the answer. >> now, at that press conference president trump also said that he was 100% willing to testify under oath to counter what comey said on thursday so the white house clearly gearing up for a fight while the president surrogates outside the white house are continuing to make very pointed attacks against comey calling him a liar and a leaker, listen. >> the question that these republicans should be asking in demand of jim comey under oath is how many times did you leak information, we know publicly now he said he didn't have the courage to leak it directly so he leaked it to a law professor, but how many other times did he ever leak information when he was the director of the fbi? >> so the other big news out of the white house this weekend is that president trump will be travel to go miami next friday to unveil his administration's
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policy about cuba, so the white house really continuing to push forward with some new policies initiatives despite everything that's been going on in washington. kelly. kelly: kristin fisher reporting live from new jersey, thank you, chris -- kristin. julie: for more on this, oh, boy, what a week this has been. first of all, let's talk about the complaint. here is what's going to take issue with, comey's revelation that he asked a friend to pass along to a reporter notes that he actually took of his private conversations with the president. any merit to that? >> well, it's going to be a question of executive privilege which is what trump's lawyers have indicated that they're going to be looking into and -- that's and a fair question but the question is did the president invoke executive privilege and also does it still apply because he's been talking about this, he's been tweeting about it, so it's a little bit of a gray area right now. julie: what do you make of president trump's decision to
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bring in his personal attorney in the very first place? >> yeah, that was interesting. we know the president really values loyalty and so maybe he wanted someone whose known him for years and has been through him with various lawsuits and that he trusted and has a better stronger relationship with. >> you know, we have to talk about the trump team asking for a hearing on the comey leak. it could go to court. but then you look back at the history of lawsuits before the president became president because trump has threatened tos followed through, of course, but legal action taken by both the president and by his -- his company, his businesses have been involved as of 2016, i believe in october in 3500 different state and federal lawsuits which was unprecedented. the most amount of lawsuits that any presidential candidate at the time had ever been involved in. the question is how far will
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trump go with this and will it actually reach the courts? >> yeah, that's a great question and i think this is where the existence of those tapes come into question because there are tapes and they're released it'll depend on what they say if we hear them but if there aren't tapes it becomes a he said, he said and that makes a court case a little more likable. julie: i would think that if i was the lawyer representing the president, the personal attorney when he was sitting there addressing questions from reporters, he would not answer that question, is there a tape, do you have a tape, obviously his lawyer said not to say anything. of course the report internal revenue service had a field say that he said you'll know soon enough, when are you going to tell us there's a tape, you'll find out soon but i'm not going to tell you when. that's advice obviously he's getting getting from his lawyer, right? >> absolutely and whether he answers in a short time or not will soon to be determined. one thing that the white house has to think about is, you know, democrats are eyeing the 2018
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elections and they're hope to go take back the house and i've had democrats tell me if they're win they're going to subpoena the heck out of this white house. >> as far as we know, trump didn't exert executive privilege. now, if trump does actually bring legal action, how hard is it going to be for president trump to claim executive privilege? >> it could be really hard, when james comey released emails he was a former employee, he wasn't actually directly working for the president at the time and believe it or not, that changes things and also case where executive privilege has been waved when there's a question of legality when the president indicate to james comey that he should back off the flynn investigation. i think there's still a question mark. julie: how strong is this case because let's say there are no tapes hypotheticalically speaking, does that weaken the case because it's a he said, he said obviously. there needs to be some kind of
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evidence. if there was no one else in that room and it was just james comey repeating the information verbally to another person and it was never recorded, there's really no way possible to find out whether this conversation really took place or not so how critical are these tapes then to the legal case? >> thait could be critical because you have to keep in mind these memos that james comey wrote while fbi director, the fbi memos are considered to be allowed in court cases, so that's also something the trump team has to think about. julie: president trump did hint at the tweet let's hope that there aren't any audio recordings. it seems that perhaps they do have them in their back pocket, james comey should be frightened by that potential if that is indeed what happened in that conversation. we will find out. >> we will find out. julie: as the world turns. >> exactly. julie: the days of our lives. i don't know, it reminds me of the soap op acer growing up. thank you. kelly. kelly: and we are following
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breaking development, vice president mike pence in milwaukee, wisconsin expect today address the deadly attack in afghanistan on u.s. soldiers at least two dead as soon as vice president pence speaks we will be breaking into that live right now. you're watching wisconsin governor scott walker addressing the crowd. we will have more in a moment 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! it's awesome. safe driving bonus checks, only from allstate. sometimes i leave the seat up on purpose. switching to allstate is worth it. and i quit smoking with chantix. i was very grateful to have chantix. at times when i would normally go smoke, i just didn't it's kind of like "wait a minute,
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julie: and we are watching the vice president mike pence there who is about to speak. he's meeting with wisconsin governor walker talking to direct supply bob walker and business owners in milwaukee and also intends on addressing the two soldiers, soldiers killed and two injured in afghanistan. let's listen. [applause] >> hello, wisconsin. it is great to be back. great to be back with you all and back with my friend governor scott walker, more on him in a moment. [laughter] >> before i begin, though, allow me to take a moment to acknowledge what i learned about on my way here to wisconsin today, the loss of american service members that took place in afghanistan.
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on my way here i was informed the u.s. service members were killed and wounded in an attack in afghanistan. the president and i have been briefed, the details of this attack will be forthcoming but busy -- suffice it to say, when heros fall, families grieve and thoughts and prayers are with the families of american heros. it is great to be back in the badger state. thank you all for the warm welcome and i bring greetings from my friend, the man that wisconsin voted overwhelming to make the 45th president of the united states of america, president donald trump. [applause] >> the president me to be here today, thank the good people of wisconsin not only for that
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decisive victory but also to assure you that the badger state has a friend in the white house. you'll hear that firsthand when president trump comes to wisconsin on this coming tuesday and i know you're all looking forward to it. folks, in president trump, you elected a fighter and a winner and he will never stop fighting for the american people and his agenda to make america great again. i promise you that. [applause] >> but you all know about fighters because it's a good description for the man who gave neglect that kind introduction. i've met quite a few governors over the year and i've had a privilege to be one myself in the state of indiana, so let me just say, i mean it from my heart when i tell you, governor scott walker is one of the best governors in the history of this
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state and in the history of this country. would you all getting on your feet and give a rosing round of applause for governor scott walker for the leadership he provides every day. [applause] >> let me also think two distinguished public servants, i had the opportunity to serve with the first one in washington, d.c. for my years in congress and i know full well that in washington, d.c. there's no greater start for conservative principles and values than congressman jim, congressman, thank you so much for being with us today. [applause]
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>> thank you for that, so well deserved and i'm so honored to be joined by another principled leader who fights for wisconsin and fights for conservative values every day. congressman glenn, thank you so much. [applause] >> you know, president trump and i couldn't be more grateful for the support of these leaders in the congress of the united states. let me also thank our host today bob and the whole team here at direct supply for welcoming us to this extraordinary campus and this extraordinary american success story. [applause] >> 30 plus years you've built everything that matters, bob, good name, strong, prosperous country that has made the community and state better for it, direct supply is a true american success story and that round of applause is so well deserved. you know, i like to say that
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president trump has three-party agenda. julie: there you have the vice president mike pence, three weekends in a row, in fact, coming out and speaking to hear employees but, of course, addressing the very important and breaking news and very sad news today, news in fact, that the vice president said he actually received on his way to this event there in milwaukee that two u.s. soldiers were killed by two afghan soldiers and two other soldiers injured. our hearts, prayers go out to their families as they receive the most heartbreaking news of their life today. we will, of course, continue to watch this and monitor the situation in afghanistan right here on fox. kelly: all right, julie, fallout from the uk election continues with two top aides for british prime minister theresa may stepping down. may's conservative party taking a huge hit in the election on thursday and losing its majority and parliament, what does that
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mean? just days before the started negotiations joining me now joe. thanks for joining us, joe. what do you make of this? it's a shock for theresa may, shock to the majority of the parliament, what happens now? >> well, no one is really sure what happens now and that's the reason for the uncertainty. theresa may called this election seven weeks ago now in order to achieve a larger majority, to strengthen her position when going into the brexit negotiation. the start in only nine day's time, unfortunately things didn't work out for her. her campaign was not particularly strong and he focused on a number of key issues. kelly: i'm going to ask you -- i'm sorry, i don't want to interrupt you, but i want to make sure we get this as much as we can. where do you think she went wrong during her campaign? >> well, we are still crunching
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the numbers on that, what's clear from the early indication that she never really was able to maybe taken momentum. she concentrated on the idea of strong and stable, that was her phrase repeated again and again and unfortunately during campaign he had to make a u-turn, change mind of a specific policy which is unheard of a british election campaign and she never really convinced the public to the degree that was needed and so strong and stable became weak and wobbly as the papers in the country dubbed it. in contrast to that, jeremy corbyn, opponent from the labour party, among his supporters presented himself as hope, representing change, representing positivity. theresa may never really had a positive message to put across. kelly: joe, one thing i want to ask, how does that impact brexit and i asked you earlier and you said no one knows at this point, is it really an uncertainty at this point?
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>> well, first we are not really sure who would be the leader of the government and conservative party to take these brexit negotiations forward. theresa may is staying on for now but her authority within her own party and also more widely within the whole country has really been compromised and so precisely how she moves forward is unclear, does she resign sooner rather than later ahead of conference in the fall and in someone new take over how would europe respond to that given that they have a very, very small margin of error when it comes to negotiating with their own party on a deal. kelly: before i let you go, throughout the campaign no one had been talking about terror and the possible of terror attacks, we saw what happened in manchester and more recently in london last week, so did any of this have an effect or impact on the elections particularly since the candidates themselves had not really discussed this?
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>> well, on may 30, estimates on data signs we have been working on that indicated ha a hung parliament was likely. that wasn't very widely believed at the time. more people is believing this now. what's interesting about that is dated every single day after that including through the period when the second attack took place in london. it didn't change and so the data that we have indicates that no, this did not have an impact on the end result. kelly: all right, joe, we have to go, thank you, sir. >> thank you. julie: former fbi director james comey admitting he helped leak memos to the media after being fired and now congressional investigators are looking to get their hands on those memos and what they hope to uncover next. >> i was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting and i thought really
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investigators now demanding former fbi director james comey turn over memos recounting private conversations with president donald trump. lawmakers requesting the white house produce any tapes of those talks, a prospect that president hinted at after comey ice -- comey's firing last month. >> we know about the memos almost a month ago now. so far congressional investigators have not been able to get copies to look at for themselves and they are not happy about it. here is republican senator susan collins who sits on the senate intelligence committee. >> in his private journal at home at night he produced the
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memos on fbi computers, in an fbi car, he started riding one and their fbi documents and thus government work product. they are not his private papers. >> question by collins in thursday's hearing, we learned that comey shared with a friend in order for it to be leak today a reporter and that he may still have a copy of that memo. the heads of the senate judiciary committee have now reached out to rich monday to request copies of all the memos that he has and in a statement the committee also layed out its own frustration saying in part the senators had previously requested copies of the memos from the fbi and from comey directly. comey refused to cooperate at the time and yesterday he testified that he no longer has copies of the memos. the fbi has thus far not provided memos to the committee and comey deny today testify
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before senate judiciary committee. the heads of intelligence committee have reached out to both james comey for copies of his memos and to the white house council for any records the white house has of the meetings including any recordings of those conversations that is, of course, if they exist. kelly. kelly: all right, garrett tenney reporting live from washington. julie: let's bring in bill gavin and former chief executive for the fbi in new york miami and denver, bell, thank you so much for talking to us. all right. >> my pleasure. julie: let's talk about the case because now that the president hired personal attorney, something that you don't often see in the white house, it brings it to a whole new level and you know his lawyers are sitting back while he's holding news conferences talking about this legal matter and typically when you're involved in a legal case as a client you don't hold news conferences, what do you think is going through the minds
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of the president trump's attorneys? >> after news conference when the president in fact, said he would 100% stand up and be sworn and testify under oath, the news you heard in the background was his attorney sucking the oxygen in the air. they were never going to let that happen if he listens to them and that's a big if, julie, that hasn't been the history of what's going on. people try to counsel him, we all voted for him for some great reasons, immigration, tax reform, for health care reform but infrastructure. he needs to get to that and stop getting by the theater that goes on in some of the hearings. julie: yeah. >> one thing i would say too, you have to be real careful. if you said you'll be sworn in, you better be careful nobody subpoenas you to do that because then you kind of in a bind too. and remember, there's only one person so far in this whole odyssey that has put hands in
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the air and told -- sworn to tell the truth and nothing but the truth so help you god. it's a real difficult situation that everybody is in right now. julie: what are lawmakers looking to find in these memos? >> i think the lawmakers are looking to find if there's any more information other than what came out in the newspapers but i want to say that if there was additional information in these memos, they'd be there. now, i heard one of the senators say that, you know, the memos belong to the federal government because he used federal -- if he used a federal pen if he wrote on piece of paper, i think that's a bit of nonsense. if he doesn't have anything classified in those memos, they belong to him and he can do whatever he wants with them. the other side of the coin is, you know, i hear the president's
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attorney saying they are going to bring this to the united states government, they are going to bring it to the inspector general. james comey is a civilian. he's no longer bound by anything within the federal government. they can't do anything to him in terms of the inspector general looking at what he's done since he's been a civilian. i just wish we could get back to normalcy and address concerns of the country that the president was -- was voted to do. everybody voted for him to do it. i wish we could get back to that and stop the nonsense. julie: i think a lot of americans agree with you. bill gavin, thank you very much, appreciate it. >> julie, always a pleasure. thank you. julie: thank you. kelly: fox news alert right now and it's grim, fox news confirming that three army rangers were killed today in afghanistan, that worldcoming from a senior u.s. military official, fourth ranger was wounded, military officials are expected to issue a statement soon.
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there have been report that is afghan soldiers were behind the attack but so far that is unconfirmed, we are following the story and we will bring you breaking developments as they unfold. julie: very sad news today. former fbi director james comey dramatic sparking outcry but how did the media handle all the coverage? we will discuss fair and balance straight ahead this lovely lady has a typical airline credit card. so she only earns double miles on purchases she makes from that airline. what'd you earn double miles on, please? ugh. that's unfortunate. there's a better option. the capital one venture card. with venture, you earn unlimited double miles on every purchase, everywhere, every day. not just airline purchases. seems like a no-brainer. what's in your wallet? could be preventedrrent with the right steps. and take it from me, every step counts.
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julie: times for headlines, antisharia protests held in more than two dozen cities, islamic law pose threat but critics say they are antimuslim. driver in florida catching a moment that a tanker truck exploded. as you can see taken on a cell phone on a busy highway near tampa. the 69-year-old driver of the truck is in critical condition.
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it's not clear what caused the crash and tv's batman adam west has died. his family issuing a statement earlier today saying he died after a fight with leukemia. he was 88 year's old. kelly: washington still reeling from james comey's testimony on capitol hill and so is the media. fox sean hannity pointing out that comey testified many recent stories about the trump and russia are dead wrong, meaning the mainstream media is facing a massive credibility crisis over this. joining us now to discuss it alona, political writer for the daily banter and also with us tammy, radio talk show host and fox news contributor. tammy and alona, this has gotten
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so out of control that many people are saying, what the heck is going on, who do we trust, is it fake news or is et relate news, -- is it fake news? alona, we will start with you. >> no matter what the news organization is that's supporting any news if it's based on anonymous sourcing you always have to take it with a grain of salt and that's standard rule that apply ifs you're a news consumer. i think that we also need to realize that jim comey knows how to play to a specific audience, right, he's somebody who is a smooth operator and he knew how to give everybody a little bit of something that they we wanted to hear yesterday and so people are latching onto whatever it is that they want. we can be talking about the media and credibility crisis here or we can be talking about president trump and whether or not he is somebody who has the credibility crisis in the eyes of the former fbi director as the president who has integrity
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and whether or not he has the trust of those people who work for him. kelly: tammy, as you know those who support donald trump are infuriated at the media right now so much so that they are attacking anybody that has anything to say that might be true in terms of asking legitimate a question about the presidency and how he should or should not respond and react to jim comey, what are you hearing from trump supporters? >> the problem is not recent, it's not new, this has been for years whether or not you can trust the media. a few years ago the media approval rating via gallup was that bellow of cockroaches. we remember an age where you could trust a report when watergate when you had anonymous sources and you believe that they had people's best interest in mind. the report that he said was dead
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wrong and mostly false was a foundational report from "the new york times" that set the message and set the foundation about rush -- russian-trump collusion. when everyone is using the report that it is wrong, that becomes an issue. the other issue with cnn days before saying that comey was going to deny that he told trump that he was not under investigation and that sources told him that. they had an issue of correction because the opposite was true. this is happening in realtime confirming individuals distrust of the agenda of the media. >> all right, real quickly, how do we repair the breach, all of us in the media, alona? >> ic that we need to slow down and cool our engines as someone russian american i have been writing a lot about this and saying that people are getting carried away in zeal to try the find something on president trump. we also tend to not wait until we get all of the facts and people tend to jump into
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>> with the exception, i worked for this network and for a reason. we manage to get it right here at fox news, you have katherine, kevin, what you guys are doing here. you know that you're going to at least have a conversation of the issues based on what we know, you're not going to have people jumping the gun. it's a professional decision that you make or as many assert about the legacy media that they've deliberately set their lot in with one party, has an agenda that's separate from informing the american people because they believe they have self-possession of the truth and that's a problem each individual has to deal with it. >> we need transparency from this administration. kelly: very good. that's very good on all sides. let's continue to do that. tammy and aalona, thank you very much on your perspective. julie: putting him at odds with some american politicians and now one state in particular is going head to head with the white house.
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with the very latest there, hi, anita. >> hi, there, julie, no secret that governor jerry brown and president trump are on opposite ends of the spectrum on just about every issue and when it comes to climate jerry brown is taking resistance global. just yesterday in san francisco governor brown met with germany's minister of the environment to announce a joint goal to cut emissions by at least 80% below 1990 levels by the year 2050. they both say it's a direct response to the president trump's decision to withdraw from the paris climate accord. >> it's a clear signal this broad alliance shows that the paris agreement was a decision of the administration and not of the whole american society. >> and just last week governor brown was in china to focus on climate change and spoke at a clean energy conference and had a rare meeting with china's president xi jinping to talk
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about climate, fostering a push for zero emission vehicles and lowering greenhouse emissions. now, 12 states and puerto rico have become members of the u.s. climate alliance and remain committed to achieving existence co2 emission reduction goals, 10 other states are vow to go continue the agreement. the paris deal will cost thousands of jobs and hope to enter into a better deal for the u.s. at some point. julie: anita, that's going to do it for us, thank you very much. kelly: that will do it. we will be back at 4:00 for more.at bas julie: what are you doing at 7:00? kelly: watching you.
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and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis had both... ...and that turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you.
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paul: welcome to the journal editorial report i'm paul gigot, fired fbi director jamesy made appearance before intelligent senate committee. comey described interactions with the president specifically a february meeting with mr. trump in the oval office as disturbing and concerning but stopped short of accusing the president of obstructing justice. >> i don't think it's for me to say whether the conversation i had with the president was an effort to obstruct. i took it as a very disturbing thing, very concerning but that's the conclusion i'm sure the special counsel will work
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