tv FOX Friends FOX News July 18, 2017 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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levers to stop that train, thankfully. >> hockey fan attempted to wear a pair of free tickets stanley cup. he never checked his messages finding out he won the stanley cup. what a shame. heather: "fox & friends" starts right now. bye. >> another set back for the effort to repeal and replace obamacare. >> for now it is dead. >> this is a blow to the president but they are still hopeful they can pick up the pieces. >> if you can't pass the gigantic bill but tell me what you can pass but get something done. >> fox news confirming former national security advisor susan rice is expected to appear before the senate intelligence committee behind closed doors. >> i'm angry that these testimonies are in secret because the american public is entitled to know what susan rice and the obama people did. >> doctor examined the terminally ill infant says there is a chance that is he reverse the 11-month-old's brain damage. >> we will protect our workers, promote our industry
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and be proud of our history because we will put america first. [applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ everything just falls in line ♪ all fired up brian: pat benatar probably sang that on our remember van da on our stage. steve: absolutely. a couple years ago. live from new york city, mezzanine level. today is july 18th, where were we one year ago today? ainsley: were we at a convention? steve: we were at the public national convention in cleveland where, as you remember, one of the rallying
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cries was repeal and replace obamacare. brian: everyone agreed. they were all singing from the same hymn book. suddenly they won and they close that hymn book and they all sang differently off tune, out of tune and now they are left without a song. steve: they have a song. they have to figure out if they are on the same page as of yesterday they were not and now we start from scratch. ainsley: brian, what's happening? brian: republican healthcare plan is dead for now. now that two more republican senators join two other republican senators and withdrew their support. ainsley: so now the president is pushing for senators to start from a clean slate. steve: all right. >> kristin fisher is live in washington with the latest plan and this latest plarntion kristin, is actually a plan from 2015. >> yeah, they are trying to revive an old plan, turn it in to something new. make no mistake, this is a major blow for president trump and for republicans on capitol hill. they have been trying to repeal and replace obamacare
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for nearly seven years now. and president trump, this has been at the very top of his agenda for almost six months now. now that effort has essentially flat lined after two more republican senators said they simply could not vote for this senate bill. senators like lee and jerry moran, two more than senator mitch mcconnell could afford. that mental the bill was dead. he pulled it last night. in a statement senate majority leader mitch mcconnell regretfully it is clear that the effort to repeal and replace obamacare will not be successful. shortly after, president trump weighed in on twitter, quote: republicans should just repeal failing obamacare now and work on a new healthcare plan that will start from a clean slate. dems will join in. now, all of this went down right around the same time that president trump was hosting several other republican senators for dinner at the white house.
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the plan now as you guy referenced, repeal now and replace later. mcconnell is pushing to repeal with a two year phase out. a plan that was first floated back in 2015. but senator john mccain who, remember, this is why this whole vote was delayed to begin with, senator john mccain is weighing in and says whatever happens, there needs to be bipartisan support. the congress must now return to regular order, hold hearings, receive input from members of both parties and heed the recommendations of our nation's governors so we can produce a bill that finally provides americans with access to quality and affordable healthcare. so, guys, two failed attempts but, hey, hopefully third is the charm, right? steve: that's right. kristin thank you very much. second failure for mitch mcconnell. remember he had to cancel the vote in june when it was clear he didn't have the vote. and yesterday as a number of republicans said we can't go behind this. ultimately, this is a chance for many republicans who year
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ago at the cleveland convention said let's get a clean repeal and some sort of a replacement. this is a chance to do that. under the 2015 bill, which passed the house and passed the senate, wound up on president obama's desk where he did not sign it, obviously. i think it was 47 republicans voted for it then. so it would be hard for them now to say you know what? not so much. because they voted for it then. ainsley: jerry moran said it's not the end of the world. we need more time to start fresh, make this better for you, the american people. i have to vote no on the current plan. it fails to repeal the rising costs. it's a bad policy. eventually it will increase the federal spending it will devolve into a single pair system. what we have on the table now is bad for the american people. that's why he has to vote no. we will start fresh and provide greater personal choice with those with preexisting conditions access and lower costs overall.
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brian: i thought they were going to come together and understand like the house did what was at stake and come together with the best plan possible under the parliamentary rules of not needing 60 votes. i spent a lot of my life not being perfect. this just adds to that i lost a couple of things. number one, of the process that they did, having mitch mcconnell with all his experience having nine people get together and say here's the plan and now we will put it out to everyone, make some changes and i'm putting it forward obviously in a way john mccain was right. they have wanted to see the old fashioned process it would have taken a long time and they felt as though democrats go out of their way to delay it instead of having the amendment process and having hearings and us covering it live during the day, they didn't do that. for democrats, they know this, and i can tell by senator schumer's remarks they can recelebrate for nine seconds. it's not as if they are taking obamacare, which is working and republicans just taking it out because they didn't like it. it's not working. it's failing. it's hurting businesses.
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it's hurting individuals. the private market. we know about the premiums. we know about the pharmaceutical costs. democrats are not going to be gloating today because they know they turn around and go uh-oh now you will start blaming me again for the other one. steve: democrats are saying hey, this is good for us because republicans look like they can't get on the same page, which is true. ultimately what undid this bill is the one they are not going to vote on now it was a lousy bill. it still had big taxes. it still had a lot of regulations. it had that insurance company slush fund that rand paul was talking about. it's not what the americans. brian: moderates did want it. what you named made moderates happy. they wanted to keep the taxes and medicaid expansion. steve: they got elected on a clean repeal. get rid of all that stuff and come up with something new. instead they had a cobbled together mess. ainsley: it is frustrating but at the same time they have to look out for the american people and what's best for their constituents. it was alarming.
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it was a red flag when they all couldn't get on board. okay, maybe this bill isn't right for the american people. now, i think newt gingrich, who used to be the speaker of the house. you know him well. he was on with sean hannity last night. i think he has been sitting down with larry the cable guy. his message last night was git-r-done. >> we had six months of patience. it's time to perform: first of all, had you six months to work didn't. like a football game at halftime. military operation in the middle. you have to take steps. you have to learn lessons. i think they've got to figure out how to do things faster, more simply. frankly about healthcare. if you can't pass the gigantic bill, tell me what you can pass. but get something done that starts to move us away from obamacare. i think on each of these things, whether it's infrastructure or controlling spending or reforming the bureaucracy. brian: how do you do that? how do you do that when rand paul would not agree with
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almost anything that senator portman wants? and senator collins came back with that bill and she was blistered, besieged by emails. you better not sign. this conservatives said you better not sign this for the exact opposite reason. so i don't know what they can agree on except the theory of repealing a bill and the theory of replacing it. because replacing it means your bad bill is your good bill. so, you can't do this unless people give in. steve: they have got to have a bill that they promised the american people. if they put up the clean repeal. brian: promises. maine promised one thing. ohio promised a different thing. and texas has a different thing. steve: when you look, when you peel back the cover and look at the bill that mitch mcconnell put together and he had all these payoff deals for all these people in all these other states, it was not great. what do yo do you think about i? are you happy or are you sad that this particular piece of legislation -- are they going to work out let us know.
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heather: oh that congress playing politics. president talking about made in america products. he had them on the south lawn. he had them in the white house. signatures on the steps in cowboy hats. i went on the website to see what companies he highlighted yesterday. i'm curious to see south carolina. it was a cushion company. and that one was called casual cushion company. every state has a, obviously, made in america companies. he highlighted them all. there is ping golf, tervis tumblers. chick-fil-a. campbell soup. >> stetsonnen from texas on the side said el presente. it was personalized. president back on message monday talking about how things are made in america once again. >> theodore roosevelt declared in his first message to congress that reciprocity. my favorite word. reciprocity because we have countries that charge us 100 percent tax on a product.
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and when that product is sold by them to us, we brilliantly charge them nothing. and people say oh, that's free trade. no, that's stupid trade. that's really stupid trade. [applause] we will celebrate craftsman, producers, innovators like the incredible men and women in this room today. we will protect our workers, promote our industry, and be proud of our history because we will put america first, america will be first again. we will make america great again. remember that. and we will meet in this same room in a year and in two years and you'll see what happens. brian: a lot of people criticizing him. well, president trump makes a lot of his stuff, whether it's clothing or anything else, out of the country. that's part of the reason he became president. he is in to this thing called capitalism to maximize profit. he knows with incentives for him to do manufacturing elsewhere.
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that's why he said when i become president this stuff changes. he knows the minds of the business person. it's amazing people can't go okay i like that theme. what about your ties? what about this? that's part of the reason he is there. steve: to change the rules. ainsley: cheaper to do business overseas. we have to change these rules. i went online and courts.com has an article about harley-davidson facing 100 percent tariff when they sell their motorcycles in india. the tariff on motorcycles from india to the u.s. zero percent. that's what he is talking about. steve: that came from the that marucci. ainsley: my dad said if you can buy made america. go on the white house website. look at those companies highlighted and try if you are going to buy those products buy american made. brian: my grandfather who said who needs a drink here?
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he was a bartender. steve: connecticut helicopters. the president says i have five of those. great to be rich. brian: still ahead, a terrorist who killed an american soldier gets $8 million as a payday from canada. and now we know that soldier's widow may never get it done. how could that happen? steve: plus, hillary clinton's email coming back to haunt her again. this time bill ties to russia. wait a minute, haven't heard from that. judicial watch tom fitton is going to spill those beans coming up next. ♪ bp engineered a fleet of 32 brand new ships with advanced technology, so we can make sure oil and gas get where they need to go safely.
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clinton to a $500,000 speech that bill clinton gave in moscow. here to react judicial watch tom fitton. now we all know the imagine ma magdalenenitski bill. >> >> connections between all this russian connected money, $145 million generally, $500,000 specifically to bill clinton from a russian connected firm that was pushing uranium one. and evidently someone in the media not only connected it to uranium one but saw other russian interests being advanced by mrs. clinton, such as this really hard core opposition to any new sanctions against russia over its alleged murder of a human rights related lawyer. brian: this is a series of examples of hillary clinton and john kerry going out of
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their way to get rid of this act. everything -- and ben cardin a democrat pushed from the senate to crack down on 44 oligarchs and their investments and money overseas that vladimir putin brutally wanted, desperately wanted repealed. hillary clinton and vladimir putin were on the same side. but if this was linked to a $500,000 speech how would that look to hillary clinton's candidacy? >> well, it would look tough. you have to wonder how many other donations were made by russian connection entities we don't know about. you may recall the clinton foundation had to fix its 990s to expose or highlight contributions that it had promise to do so publicize but it hadn't publicized. i can't overemphasize, difficult to state the nature of the conflict of hillary clinton, her husband getting a half a million dollars directly from the russians while she was secretary of state. we were astonished when we saw that the state department, we got the document, approved
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this ethics process that allowed this speech and the money, evidently, to take -- money transfer to take place. so why would the clinton state department allow hillary clinton's husband to get a half a million dollars from the russian connected entity renaissance capital, i don't understand. imagine, for instance, if the spowls of rex tillerson or the spowls of any other cabinet official got a half a million dollars from a foreign government while that official was in office. and then that same official like hillary clinton was was advocating on behalf of russian interests not only uranium one which saw the russians get 20% of our uranium operations but then pushed hard for the russians against the sanctions. brian: we have got to have you back. what you said to me before is something to think about before we go to break. if wikileaks is russia and these are examples of hillary clinton being easy on russia. why would russia not want hillary clinton to win this election? her and john kerry were
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conspiring to level out all these types of acts and make sure that trade was -- everything was just free and easy between countries? tom fitton, thank you so much. just think about that when you think about russian collusion to get donald trump elected. back in a moment. ...my 3-month old business... plus...what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i made a point to talk to my doctor. he told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots 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.
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and you can only stream on two devices at once. this is fun, we're having fun. yeah, we are. no, you're not jimmy. don't let directv now limit your entertainment. xfinity gives you more to stream to more screens. jillian: good tuesday morning to you. back with headlines right now. starting with extreme weather. the frantic search intensifying this morning for a missing father caught in a massive flash flood in arizona. more cadaver dogs will be back on the scene to look for hector. his wife maria, three children and five other family members did not survive. the youngest just 2 years old. heavy rains triggering the flood sending avalanche of muddy water, rocks and logs crashing down on the family.
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a fox news alert right now. the white house informing congress will t. will uphold the iran nuclear deal for the time being. they will be ratcheting up pressure on tehran slapping them with sanctions for breaching the spirit of the agreement. this as iranian military leaders threaten new attacks on forces and bases in the middle east. ainsley? ainsley: in hawaii pro-life pregnancy centers are now being forced to tell their patients about free abortions provided by the state. a new law is now requiring a sign go up that says hawaii has public programs that provide immediate, free, oral low cost access to comprehensive family planningselveses, including but not limited to all f.d.a. approved methods of contraception and pregnancy-related services for eligible women. radiologist dr. nicole saphier joins us now with more. good morning, dr. saphier. >> good morning, ainsley. ainsley: what do you think about this? >> this is an interesting bill. in my opinion it's egregious
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infraction on religious freedom based on our constitution of certain groups in hawaii. this is not pro-choice vs. pro-life. abortion is legal and especially in hawaii. and they have a lot of state-funded programs where taxpayer dollars do pay for abortion. what this bill is actually saying is every place that offers prenatal ultrasound or pregnancy testing has to actually advertise these free abortion services. and in hawaii have you five pro-life centers that are christian-run and funded that do not have any taxpayer dollars going to these centers. but now they are being told, against their religious beliefs, that they have to advertise for free abortion in their services. ainsley: even if they don't take government money. if they get money from churches or pro-life groups, they still have to put up a sign and tell patients that they do have the option of having an abortion. dolls this infringe on the rights of small businesses? >> absolutely. these centers are small organizations. as i mentioned they are not
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publicly funded. they are by christian donations. and, therefore it, a small business in itself. so you are now saying throw religious freedom out the window. that you have to promote abortion. now, being hidden in the bill is pennies on the dollar. they are saying that this is going to save taxpayer dollars by promoting abortion instead of unplanned pregnancies, there are 16,000 unplanned pregnancies in hawaii about every year. which cost upwards of $115 million. however, this isn't what that is about. this is not about saving money. this is about advertising free abortion services, specifically in pro-prif centers. ainsley: so do abortion clinics have to tell them they have the option of having the baby, they should go to one of these other centers and talk to a specialist. >> that is not. there is a bill that they have to counsel on abortion services. it mirrors the california one passed a couple years ago that says they have to have this disclaimer on a poster large enough for people to read in their waiting areas.
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and on it actually gives the website where people can sign up for free abortion services. ainsley: the nint circuit of appeals is behind. this california recently passed a similar law. pro-life groups appealed it and they were appealing saying it violated their religious beliefs. the ninth circuit of appeals ruled against them. this is the same court that has the jurisdiction over hawaii, too. so we have to continue to follow this. >> you have a similar outcome. we already see lawsuits coming on with the groups but same appellate court. ainsley: thank you so much, dr. saphier. a tears who kills an american soldier gets 8-million-dollar payday from canada. now we know that soldier's widow may never get a dime. how could that happen? then oj simple's big parole hearing is two days away. it almost got derailed because of a cookie? but, first, happy birthday to richard branson, he is 67 years old today. ♪ sweet emotion
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brian: all right. an american soldier is killed when when a terrorist throw as grenade during a fire fight in afghanistan. ainsley: the canadian government now paying millions of dollars to the convicted terrorist that is responsible. but, that soldier's widow, and two children, the one here in the united states might never see a dime from their lawsuit. steve: rob schmitt joins us now with this story. rob, get this straight, they are paying the terrorist who killed the guy? rob: it's one of those makes you wonder kind of stories. americans and canadians, people on both sides of the
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aisle can't understand why a convicted terrorist was awarded $8 million years after killing a u.s. soldier on the battlefield in afghanistan baffling as it may be, the fact remains that canada agreed to pay former guantanamo prison omar carter 8 million bucks and apologized saying his civil rights were violated for time they'll spent in guantanamo. trudeau supports. in cotter was just 15 years old. that's part of why this lawsuit came about. he was al qaeda follower and interpreter there. he threw a grenade in a fight in afghanistan. explosion from that killed medic christopher spears seen on the left and blinded soldier layne morris that grenade did a lot of damage. people from across the political spectrum are fearous over that 8-million-dollar payout. >> voters on the left don't like it.
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voters on the right. across the country. support never goes below 58% of this cash payment. people are furious with this. i would say that it's more a tale of what happens when you have a naive politician who was elected for his good looks and his hair and the socks that he talks about when he goes on with kelly and ryan than it is what happens with the justice system. rob: tabitha sphere the widow of sergeant speer won a default judgment against cotter two years ago in the state of utah. but she and her kids won't be seeing a dime of that money because a judge in canada is refusing to freeze cotter's assets. that's where cotter lives. the two sides expected back in the court in the fall to begin working toward a trial on the utah judgment. their side of the judgment was he was 15 years old. he was charged with murder. the youngest guantanamo bay had ever seen.
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he was tortured for 10 years. at the end of the day, he killed somebody answered blinded another man. brian: nobody does torture for few years. he might have had a few incidents of enhanced interrogation. they were playing basketball under the lights. >> by and kids of a soldier who was killed have no money. he gets 8 million. he is an millionaire. brian: we interviewed ellayna lastalked to layne lastweek he . rob: both went together to put him in guantanamo. ainsley: canadians are outraged about justin trudeau. rob: across the political spectrum. ainsley: you asked a good question i wonder did that terrorist will share any money with the family in america. rob: if he is such a sweetheart will he send some of that 8 million bucks over to tabitha speer.
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steve: over to jillian. jillian: little charlie gard's parents are optimistic after a brand new brain scan. a u.s. doctor who examined the terminally i will british infant now saying there is a chance he can reverse the 11-month-old's brain damage caused by a rare genetic disorder. the u.k.'s high court will decide next week whether charlie can have the treatment or if he will be danny off life support. still looking good for o.j. simpson to become a free man by the fall. no one opposes his release not even his victim. his freedom was almost derailed by a cookie. retired correctional officer says simpson was nearly eaten up for eating cookie stolen by another inmate. a violation that could have hurt his chances for parole. the 70-year-old has spent over 8 years in nevada prison for armed robbery and kidnapping. if paroled, he could be out as early as october. i tried to find out what kind. oatmeal. there you have it.
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reebok sparking outrage for mocking our commander-in-chief. he called france's first lady beautiful. posting this tweet writing, quote: when it's appropriate to say you're in such good shape, beautiful. this poster gives six scenarios all taking shots at the president for complimenting the french president wife. comedian calling out reebok for being hypocritical posting this ad for the sneaker company which many called sexist. this is my favorite story of the week it's only tuesday. a dog becomes a four legged fearless hero leaping into the water to save a baby deer from drowning. watch. >> good boy, storm, bring him in. good boy, storm, bring him in. jillian: watch storm the dog drag a struggling fawn back to the shores of long island, new york. then laying next to the deer. you will see it here in the second. nudging it, making sure it was okay. storm's owner shocked at the save since he says that usually won't even play fetch. they are going to join us live
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in the next hour of "fox & friends." when i say they, i mean the owner and the dog are going to be joining us. pretty awesome. ainsley: sweet. steve: thank you very much. christopher nolan's explosive world war ii film is about to hit theaters, watch this. >> how does that work when you are shooting a scene like that in the movie world? >> i think it was, you know, it was like filming and in between takes you would come up. i think it was -- they were like short bursts. the action was so intense and quick. chris creates these worlds around you where you don't really feel like you have to act that much. he makes it really instinctive. you never feel like you are in this massive maybe. super intimate and view and camera. he is right next to the camera. it kind of carries you, you know, you get a little carried away a little bit. steve: look at that that is the world famous harry styles, the singer from one direction.
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is he a fantastic actor in this new movie called did you knodunkirk.new movie directed by christopher nolan. he did films like inception. dark knight. based on the true story of the evacuation of dunkirk operation dynamo. over 330,000 british and allied troops were evacuated after being pushed back onto the beaches of dunkirk by the german forces. these civilian boats came to get these men. it is. >> channel. >> they could see home from the beach they couldn't get there over 330,000 of them were evacuated. it's a masterful story, one of the most emembersive experiences ever. what harry stiles was talking about in that sound bite he plays one of the soldiers in the film immersive experience because christopher nolan actual does things in camera. actual effects and actual explosions.
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shot over 75% of the film on i max. you have to see it. steve: it was not done by a computer. they were real explosions. they were really in the water. >> scwacketsly. harry stiles as we know from one direction, major singer. first major acting role. as he was mentioning these sets were so immersive. he didn't have to act actually real reactions. the beauty in the movie is the leading character. the movie has very little dialogue. steve: does he sing? >> he does not sing. it's 1 hour and 47 minutes. generally war films based on wod war ii are over three hours long. the music is brilliant. lead you through the film. my favorite film of the year. steve: wow. >> christopher nolan filmmaker still bringing people toe a cinema. don't stay home. don't watch films on ipad go to a movie theater if you find a 70-millimeter i max theater.
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ainsley: a man without babies. >> i will find you a list of theaters. if you want to tweet me i will tell you which one is the best one to go to at your city. brian: don't be surprised if he offers to pick you up. >> i will. steve: don't go. ainsley: when i was expecting my little girl people said go sees a many movies as can you because your life is over. are you all having fun? you got married. >> we got married in october. she is a film critic. so we go to the movies together. brian: by the way on our card steve it says the last question ask kevin if is he having fun. steve: the message today one direction, go to the movie. >> thank you for having me. beautiful new set. i'm honored to be here. ainsley: most positive man. >> dunkirk, go see it. steve: president trump highlighting items at the white house yesterday. one of the most popular guitar companies in the world. rocking out with gibson coming up next. brian: susan rice best line on capitol hill this week.
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we just learned about the unmasking scandal and it's growing. judge napolitano is here to react. this is behind closed doors. it's outrageous. ♪ private eyes ♪ they're watching you ♪ they see your every move ♪ private eyes ♪ they're watching you ♪ private eyes ♪ they're watching you ♪ watching you ♪ watching you ♪ for adults with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy,
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ainsley: this former senior president obama official famously denied unmasking intel on the trump campaign. >> i know nothing about this. absolutely not for any political purposes to spy, expose, anything. steve: okay. that's what she said then. former national security advisor susan rice is set to testify this week on congress as we learn more than half a dozen senior obama officials
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are reportedly going to be interviewed during this investigation. brian: yesterday was clapper. we're going to have dennis mcdonough and susan rice. here to weigh in judge senior judicial analyst judge napolitano. you are upset this is behind doors. >> absolutely. the congress hired to work for us, president obama hired susan rice. we have a right to know what she did and what congress knows and we have the right to know what congress is going to do about it look, there is good unmasking and bad unmasking. good unmasking is when a transcript of a conversation to a russian ambassador an x and they need to know who the x is so they can find out whether or not the conversation is harmful. if the x is unmavericked and you the name is kept within the cadre of those who have national security secrets, that's their job. but when the name of x is sent to the "the washington post," with selected. steve: or the "new york times." >> or any publication with selected parts of the
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conversation, to humiliate x or his boss, the president-elect of the united states, that's wrong. that's a felony. we have the right to know if she did it we have the right to know if she admitted it. we have the right to know if she is going to be prosecuted for it we have the right to know what congress will do about it when all of this is behind doors. we don't know what happened. brian: we know what james comey thinks and senator sessions thinks. >> democracy dies in darkness. this is democracy in darkness. ainsley: who decides if it's going to be held in secret? >> the chair of the committee. these were republican chairs. steve: it was probably a request her attorney. she doesn't want to be on camera saying stuff. >> she has not been subpoenaed. she has been invited. she could stand up and leave any time she wants. they should slap her with a subpoena which changes the rules dramatically. brian: does she take the oath? >> yes she takes the oath. if even if she doesn't take the oath. misleading the roger clemmons case they forgot to give him the oath. you could still be tried for misleading congress. you are not under oath.
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ainsley: james comey we heard him speak and it was in front of all of them. now he wants to write a book. all the major publishing houses are interested? >> he is entitled to write the book under the first amendment like any of us would. but, he signed an agreement when he became the director of the fbi that he would not reveal classified materials and he would submit the book to an fbi censor. somebody who used to work for him to review it. brian: maybe they should have the columbia professor to write the book. he is the guy that knows everything. >> we don't know what he knows. i'm dying to see exactly what james comey gave him. i would be shocked if there is classified material in there if there is, it's a whole new level. steve: does some government entity review it before it goes to publication as somebody who were formerly in the pentagon? >> absolutely. absolutely. don't forget, there is an intelligence branch of the fbi. he was entitled to know all of their secrets and he can't reveal it. ainsley: if you want to see the memos, you have to buy the
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book,. >> judge: apparently, no, no, no. steve: thank you very much. one network so outraged about white house press briefings going off camera they have just announced their own post briefing show online. are reporters really just trying to become tv stars? we'll talk to press secretary ari fleischer. he has an opinion about that in about 10 minutes. brian: rocking out one of the companies featured at the white house in made in america week gibson guitars ♪ living the dream ♪ and never giving up ♪ what we believe in ♪ we're all-american ♪ and we work real hard ♪
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♪ >> we want to build, create more products in our country using american labor, american goods, and american grit. when we purchase products made in the u.s.a., the profits stay here. the revenue stays here, and the jobs may be most importantly of all, they stay right here in the u.s.a. steve: president trump launching his made in america initiative this week to highlight and promote products made right here in the united states of america. gibson brands is one of the companies showcased at the white house yesterday and alex is the global director of entertainment relations for gibson brands joins us live now from d.c. alex, good morning to you. >> good morning. thank you for having me. steve: my, what a difference an administration makes. in the obama years they were going after gibson guitar for the wood you guys used once
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upon a time, weren't they? >> i suppose they were. but no charges were filed. steve: that's right. >> no implied wrongdoing that had to do with any conservation of any kind. we never have used illegal wood and we never will. steve: absolutely not. you were exonerated. fast forward to the trump administration, and what was the message you took away from yesterday? >> you know, really what i took away from the room, it was, first of all, it was very humbling experience to be there with so many great and skilled american companies and brands, all who are just as passionate and dedicated to making american products and with an american workforce as we are at gibson brand. there was a great energy in the room. it's a fantastic cause to be a part of and it was very honored to be a part of it. steve: absolutely.
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how big a difference does it make when you have got the chief executive officer for the united states of america actually being somebody who has made a payroll, has been in business, understands what you are going through? >> well, you know, frankly speaking, you know, i think that as many people can support this initiative, the better. so, certainly, i appreciate the president's commitment to increasing opportunities for americans at gibson brands and gibson guitars. we have been making the gibson guitars in the united states since our company's founding and exclusively in the united states since 1894. steve: sure, absolutely. am election, you know, as we have heard some times, big manufacturers, it's cheaper to do stuff overseas. why has it been so important for your family to keep gibson in tennessee? >> well, so actually we're all over the country.
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so to say we're just in tennessee, i think is a little bit of a disservice to our great team members who are in california and massachusetts and montana and everywhere in between. but, we certainly do have manufacturing in tennessee as well as our global headquarters. you know, to us, it's important. i don't know how much experience anyone here has product. when you pick it up and you look at it and can you feel it, i mean, you know, the exceptional craftsmanship from our dedicated american workforce, i think, really comes through. and i think that you know, that's something that's recognized around the world. steve: absolutely. no better guitar in the entire world. alex, thank you very much for joining us live. i'm sure it was quite an honor to have your products featured yesterday at the white house. thank you, sir. >> thanks so much. steve: coming up on this tuesday, president trump calling on republicans to repeal obamacare after their latest replacement plan has inflamed out.
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what county white house do to make sure it gets done? ari fleischer here to talk about that coming up next. ♪ ♪ mom, i have to tell you something. dad, one second i was driving and then the next... they just didn't stop and then... i'm really sorry. i wrecked the subaru. i wrecked it. you're ok. that's all that matters. (vo) a lifetime commitment to getting them home safely. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru.
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we send our kids out into the world, full of hope. and we don't want something like meningitis b getting in their way. meningococcal group b disease, or meningitis b, is real. bexsero is a vaccine to help prevent meningitis b in 10 to 25 year olds. even if meningitis b is uncommon, that's not a chance we're willing to take. meningitis b is different from the meningitis most teens were probably vaccinated against when younger. we're getting the word out against meningitis b. our teens are getting bexsero. bexsero should not be given if you had a severe allergic reaction after a previous dose. most common side effects are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you're pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines. ask your healthcare professional about the risks and benefits of bexsero and if vaccination with bexsero is right for your teen. moms, we can't wait.
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brian: the republican healthcare plan is dead. ainsley: now the president is pushing for senators to start from a clean slate. the plan now repeal now and replace later. >> you can't pass the gigantic bill, tell me what you can pass, get something done. >> we will protect our workers, promote our industry, and be proud of our history because we will put america first. >> frantic search intensifying this morning for a missing father caught in a massive flash flood in arizona. >> fox news confirming the former national security advisor susan rice is scheduled to appear before the senate intelligence committee behind closed doors. >> we have the right -- ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ let me do the walk ♪ do the walk o of life ♪ walk of life. steve: somebody was walking by our studios at 48th and sixth avenue said hey you are famous come on in. once upon a time he worked at the white house and now he is on the white couch. >> i like this couch. steve: thank you very much. brian: we are glad you are here. official fox news contributor. ari fleischer. the president had about six senators he was meeting with yesterday. word came out he lost another two. four overall. no reason for john mccain to rush back. the healthcare bill as it looks is dead in the senate. who is to blame? >> first, this is a dismal day for republicans.
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this is an abandonment of the heart of what the republicans promised people for eight years and not to be able to deliver on it, this is the senate's job. the senators needed to have looked each other in the eye and said it is our responsibility to figure out how to replace. their failure should not go unnoted. it should be remember wanted in the polls because they promised us this i take these things seriously encore ideology. look, i think it's the failure of the myriad. i don't blame president trump. president trump tried and you have to give credit for house republicans for fulfilling their promise. senate republicans didn't. ainsley: isn't their sphawns tobility deliver a good bill. something affordable. can't they start from a clean slate. >> this bill didn't repeal it. it did something republicans have been trying to do. replace medicaid as open-ended federal entitlement and make it more workable health grant that delivers for people on the state level. i remember in 1986 when
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congress passed that vetoed by bill clinton. this is a long established republican entitlement reform. it repealed all the obamacare tax heights put wet blanket on economic growth. if you want to help people who are struggling grow the economy. the obama years were lien. thalean.hurt people. steve: battle cry was repeal and replace. it was not repeal it still kept some taxes it had a lot of regulations. rand paul said there was great big insurance company subsidy slush fund thing. >> which is actually a tax. steve: it was a flawed bill. a lot of people are probably going good, let's not get that if premiums went down 12% in a year, would that have been worth all that we have gone through? >> well, if people could buy policies because their premiums went down of course that's helpful. steve: cut in half. >> free market. there is nothing the federal government can do to cut it in
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half. it's too big an economy for the government to have that powerful of hand. it was improvement. i didn't like the fact that they left two tax hikes in there it still was improvement over the status quo. brian: i don't have to explain this to you. you lived it have you rand paul extreme conservative/libertarian. ted cruz. i'm going to make my hands dirty and make it work somehow. moderates. and have you senator collins who said i got huge blow back when i went back. these people being true to their school and maybe not party and true to their country. the president said before he knew he had these two defectors reported according to politico. he says if the senate republicans don't get this thing done, they will look like dopes. do they look like dopes? >> he's right. it's not a question of being true to your party or true to your country. it's a question of being true to your word. they should not have elevated the issue eight years first thing we will do is repeal and replace if they weren't capable of doing it. ainsley: all right. let's focus on the positives.
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moving forward, what happens next. we can all sit here and dwell on what went wrong. what they should have and could have done. obviously it is what it is. it's already done. what can we do in the future what's it going to look like in the future. >> repeal and replace. ainsley: will we get brand new bill. >> in 96 it took three times to get that president clinton finally signed it which we took the medicaid out. perhaps it will come back no time soon. brian: not now. >> humpty dump at this -- brian: how do you feel about takes vote out. >> repeal vote. brian: takes it out and says two years we place it with something? i think that's personally a disaster. ainsley: isn't that what they did? brian: going to vote to see if they get the repeal part out. >> here's the problem it's not a full repeal. they dual it filibuster proof. they only want to do it with 50 votes. you are spending the spending as speculation of the obamacare. you are leaving all obamacare rules in place because you need 60 votes to do that.
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so it's not -- it's false advertising. it's not a full repeal if they do that. steve: maybe it's time to nuclear option things and people have been talking about it and you know the president has even suggested nuclear option. >> everything. steve: certain options. >> nuclear option 50 votes for everything? i was long for that when president obama was in office and the senate was controlled by democrats. brian: there is nothing in the constitution that says it should be 60 votes. >> worse thing we have in washington is nothing ever gets done. republicans think they have solutions. democrats think they have solutions. i'm for empowering people in power to get their job done. that means 50 votes. in this instance republicans can't even muster the 50 votes on the repeal. that's why i call it a dismal day for republicans because they gave their word and didn't keep it. steve: it sounds like mitch mcconnell is going to bring up this bill that passed the house in 2015. >> right. steve: and passed the senate? 2015 with 49 u.s. senators voting yes. it would be hard for them to
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vote yes two years ago and no now. >> that's my point. that would be a partial repeal. only repeal of the spending. it's not a repeal of the obamacare rules. here's the problem. if you actually did repeal obamacare in its entirety, to a future date with nothing to replace it, i think that's bad government. you should replace it. should be known for our ideas and improve the lives of people. that's why they are -- steve: you need some democrats. brian: ari, the thing is, what you are saying is if i'm an insurance ceo or pharmaceutical industry, all i know is i don't know what the future is. you talk about uncertainty, that's the definition of uncertainty. i'm repealing it i'm not telling you what i'm replacing it with. go deal with it republican do to have to deal with the fact that the democrats changed the rules of the game preexisting. we accepted as a country if you have auto a preexisting condition you shouldn't get down to insurance company. if you go back to status quo preobamacare you are allowing people to turn down on
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preexisting conditions. that's cruel. that's why replace was so important to get a new system so market oriented that protected against insurance companies doing that. ainsley: we wanted to get your opinion about what abc is doing now. we know press briefings at the white house are televised some are not. some are audio only. they are having online show after all the press briefings so you can go online and watch it. if they happen to have one in the middle of a soap opera abc,can you go online and watch them what we just heard. >> i think the abc reporters are bored and looking for air time. really in the middle of the day like that when you don't have a cable station attached to your network like abc. they don't have a place. ainsley: actually see a show live on tv. >> they could do that i'm for toning down washington, d.c. too much fighting. not enough getting done for the country and part of that is why i'm supporting taking the briefing off of live tv. former bill clinton press secretary mike mccurrie argues the same thing.
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it should be a serious briefing instead of red hot tv show. abc is coming along trying to piggy back to get web ratings. they don't have anything in the middle of the day. i just think tone it all down, take the briefing off live tv let it be embargoed so it's a piece of news you use in the evening news. snippets later. the briefing itself is too red hot. brian: it is so argumentative and tough being the communication department. steve: better now. brian: president sometimes shoots from the hip. i get that but, when you listen to sean spicer or sanders, i also see the rudeness, i still hear, even though i don't see at this hear the rudeness and disdain they have for each other. it's unbelievable. >> that's another reason why i'm saying tone it down. the american people are sick of all the fighting. we reached the point all this russia and everything. american people have gotten to the point we have been there for years, when you people in washington get something done, wake me up. until then i'm really tuning
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you out. that's the probable we have in washington. so i'm for doing things that takes that pressure away so the american people can actually learn to have faith in their government again. and all this clash gets in the way of people having better faith in the government. steve: let's see what happens. all right, ari, always a pleasure. brian: you toned us down. we were screaming before you got here. thank you very much. i appreciate it we were. he is just mellowing us out. great job, ari. ainsley: thanks, ari. brian: have you met jillian. jillian: brian, tell the truth i can't hear anything because they were screaming so loud. brian, why don't you scream our names. jillian: extreme weather, the frantic search intensifying this morning for a missing father caught in a massive flash flood in arizona. more cadaver dogs will be back on the scene to help look for hector. his wife marie a three children and five other family members did not survive. the youngest just 2 years old. heavy rains triggering the flood sending avalanche of muddy water, rocks and logs crashes down on the family.
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the schizophrenic drug dealer who ghiftd to murdering four young men now claiming he killed two other people. 20-year-old cosmo did i northward dough has already confessed to shooting the men and burying the bodies on their family's pennsylvania farm. now is he reportedly telling police he killed two others when he was just 15 years old. you are looking at the four victims right now. police are looking into those claims. president trump's travel ban back in the hands of the supreme court this morning. the state of hawaii has until today to respond to the motion filed by the white house blocking with its latest ruling. the doj slamming a court for overstepping by allowing virtually all family members into the u.s. it comes as the trump administration expands the list to include grandparents, as well as aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins. all right. so a 101-year-old woman shatters a 100-meter dash record running it in just over 40 seconds. julia hurricane hopkins making history for her age group
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during the u.s.a. track and field outdoors masters championship. >> i broke a record and that was my -- i did it. i did it. [laughter] jillian: wow. hawkins credits healthy eating, exercising and her family. the secret to living a long and prosperous life. there is no surprise why she has the nickname hurricane. isn't that incredible? steve: that's awesome. jillian: so much inspiration there. ainsley: i know. brian: 12 minutes after the hour. straight ahead on our show, fugitive cop killer hiding out in cuba. why is she being honored by a women's group here in america? steve: great question, brian. james lankford had surf with the president at the white house to talk healthcare. so what's next for reform now that the bill that they had been thinking about is dead? he joins us live next. ♪ all this aggravation ♪ satisfaction in me
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senators to start on a new healthcare bill from a clean slate hashing out that plan over dinner with a few selected senators invited to the white house last night. so what did they accomplish? let's talk to oklahoma senator james lankford. he was at the dinner where he is reporting that had you a delicious u.s. steak last night, right, sir. >> we did beef from oklahoma. steve: indeed. i was hoping from kansas. it looks like what had been on the agenda yesterday has now inflamed out. what -- where do you go from here? because it sounds like the mitch mcconnell may bring up a 2015 bill that was passed in the senate, passed by the house, wound up on president obama's desk and he never signed it. >> right. that was a little more of a repeal but it wasn't total repeal either. again, we are dealing with a budget bill here. it's called reconciliation, steve. get sick of hearing that term. we have to have 60 votes to do a full repeal of obamacare. we have to deal what can we
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get done and how far can we go to protect people. i don't want to lose track of the fact this is something that has to be done. just in my state in oklahoma insurance rates went up last year 76%. 76% in one year. we have thousands of people that used to have insurance that can no longer afford healthcare insurance anymore. we have some new people in the safety net, that's true. but we have thousands who used to have insurance and pay for it and no longer can this has to be fixed. steve: absolutely. the big question, senator, is can the republican party, its many factions in the u.s. senate. can you so consolidate around ay single idea and get that passed? >> yes. i'm still optimistic that we can and because we must. this is kind of a no fail moment that you have to be able to resolve all these issues. my focus for weeks has been let's get all the people that disagreen in one room and let's hammer this out in one moment. for whatever reason we have not been allowed to do that to get all the different factions into one room at one time. we have all been negotiating one at a time.
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if we can get everybody together at one time and finish this, i think we can get it done. steve: last night when you were having dinner with the president and some other u.s. senators, this was not on rush r radar. you didn't realize that jerry moran and mike lee were nos, did you. >> no. we were talking about next step. we have to finish this. tweak out things in this bill and how to bring down the cost of prescription drugs and buying insurance across state lines. it can't go in this bill because it's not budget-related but needs to be resolved. steve: senator, if you had to be a betting man and i'm putting you on the spot right now on television, what do you think the senate is going to winds up passing if you say you have got to do something? all right, you do have to do something, otherwise you are going to get punished in the polls next time. what are we going to wind up with? >> i think we will wind one a skinny down version of what we couldn't vote on this time. focus what can be eliminated from this that people would say we will put that on the next bill but we have got to be able to repeal as much as possible. my hope is we have to repeal as much as possible.
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weave need to get started on replacement as soon as possible. no reason to start on some of it right now and be able to move on it quickly. steve: all right. well, have you got a busy day. senator, thank you very much for joining us today. good luck to you. >> thank you. steve: it's now 7:20 here in new york city. still ahead, do you have student loan debt? you may not have to pay up. we will tell you why coming up. the trump administration has new plans to build up the nation's cyber security. our next guest calls cyber terrorism is the new suicide bomber. what needs to be done now? ♪ come on ♪ hey, hey, hey ♪ nd-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee.
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your news by the numbers. first, 8%, that's how many environmental protection agency employees will be laid off over the next months that's according to a&e news. the move part of president trump's budget plan to ramp up military spending and impose steep cuts on nonmilitary agencies. next e $225,000. that's nearly how much the national institute of health is spending on video games that aims to teach kids about clean water. and finally, $5 billion, that's how many student loans might be wiped clean because critical paperwork is missing, according to the "new york times." the troubled private loans are currently at the center of a legal dispute. brian, down to you. brian: all right. thanks, ainsley. hey, the military is revamping strategy. split cyber commands from the nsa. will this give us a strategic advantage in cyberspace? joining us now former special
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ops intelligence analyst bret velkovich. best selling book drone warrior and the hunt for america's most dangerous enemies. bret, is this a good move? >> i think it's a smart move by the administration, definitely. look, for the truth is we have been losing the cyber war. it's not because of the lack of our capabilities, it's actually quite the contrary. we have far greater cyber capabilities than our adversaries ever do. the fact of the matter is that the people that are behind these capabilities, they are hamstrung by red tape. what this new move does is actually gives the military greater aton know conduct offensive actions against groups like isis. conduct attacks against social networks. hit their financial institutions and collecting intelligence. in the intelligence community there is this battle when do we conduct information versus when do we conduct action. this will give the military greater aton know conduct
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action against our enemies. brian: yet, the way you understand it would the collection ability act as a resource or be wawld off from each other? >> they will act as resource, the one thing that's important here is they are not duplicating efforts. we need the nsa to focus on larger strategic efforts. iran, china russian meddling. hunt down isis, degrade them to the ability that they can't conduct attacks against us. brian: bret, i want to switch to another topic. disturbed by the fact as mosul comes back and iraqis have been trained and forces have given them great courage and the ability and confidence, they have taken back their country. however, it seems as though iran has got their ten nickel tn nickels everywhere. using sections of iran as a corridor into syria. can this be stopped, curtailed, ended? >> there is a bunch of different actions we can take against. this the problem is right now
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that we have got a war to win against isis. the fact is the returnian influence iiranian issue. exerted military economic control over countries in the region while we've really done their job for them and gone after these sunni backed groupings like the islamic state of iraq. and all the while the iranians they tend to think very long term. that's the danger of them. as a government, the americans, you know, we think five to 10 years out. how can we degrade isis and stop these other attacks. the iranians think centuries out. they are very dangerous when it comes to nuclear agreements, especially, and influence that they are exerting in the region. there is a couple different things i think we can do against them if we want to be more aggressive. we could actually look at, you know, increasing our regional isolation of them by going after iranian backed militias, going after these groups in syria and yemen that the yawnians are providing support to. and at the same time, we could
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even designate the iranian revolutionary guard core as he a terrorist organization. but the problem that again is, that it could potentially cause a, you know, a destabilizing effect in the region that could work against us. brian: first off, we have to make sure that this iraqi government has a deal with the sunnies to let them have their own police force or at least integrated with she a. the thing that made mosul ripe for overthrow is that they fired all the sunni law enforcement people and they brought in she a. and they have no interest in being run by another section of the muslim faith. >> no. you are absolutely right. one of the recent things that actually happened the parliament allowed she a backed militias to be officially parity of their government. it's a dangerous game they are playing there and the iranians know what they are doing. we have to be careful about this going forward. brian: thanks so much. we covered a lot of ground. hopefully we will be smarter this time and leave some troop
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presence there and don't leave so the jv team doesn't go back in there and take portions of iraq back. thanks so much, bret. >> thanks, brian. brian: coming up straight ahead, al gore calls global warming the most serious challenge facing our country right now. really in the american people just told him an inconvenient truth. and, sorry tom perez, donations to the dnc just hit a record low. eric bolling here to discuss. did he give to the dnc? ♪ i don't have ♪ you always pay
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steve: here's something about studio f which is our new home. downstairs, which i just saw a moment ago, is actually where they do the tv show the specialists. so you are down in our basement. >> eric: down there. steve: we are up in your attic. [laughter] ainsley: we're the crazies in the attic. >> eric: bats. bats in the attic. steve: we are in the belfry. >> eric: i'm trying to figure out how we get sound outside to so people watching right now. brian: that would be a great idea. ainsley: that is a good idea. brian: i have it in my backyard now. i have speakers. i'm thinking about doing it. should i lend my speakers to the show. steve: we could probably do that but probably would probably stee steal them overni. eric bolling has the book called "the swamp" good to have you. >> this whole healthcare debate we talk. steve: you talk about the swamp? >> eric: for seven years republicans have had opportunity to come up with replacement bill.
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they talk about repeal and replace. you guys have been talking about it all morning perfectly. they came up with nothing. what they came up with was something that looked a lot like obamacare. i point out in the book that the swamp isn't just democrats. they are republicans in the swamp. a little story. for a long time i have been against this new bill that the republican -- the house members first put together and now the senate put together. it didn't feel right it didn't hit the things that were important to us as republicans, as conservatives for the past seven years. it didn't talk about competition across state lines. it didn't talk about bringing drug prices -- why is it cheaper to buy the same drug that's manufactured here in the united states. it's cheaper to buy it in canada. didn't effect that it didn't talk about competition between hospitals. hospitals could post prices online of what they charge for a procedure or a drug. and compete that way. it didn't bring the cost of healthcare down. it just attacked the cost of health insurance and the only way they attacked it walls by adding suck is i did is. so, since day one, i have been
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against the bill. but my question is, why is that only thing i can come up with the most powerful lobby in d.c. is the drug lobby, the pharmaceutical lobbies. they are massive. there is hundreds of billions of dollars, literally hundreds of billions of dollars. steve: they help write these bills. >> republicans the last seven years putting together ideas and putting a bill together, you think they are not being wined and dined by these groups hey we like that provision that was in obamacare. we want to change and we know you have to do it but, you know, maybe you just keep -- step away from that. the things that we have talked, tort reform. we have talked about tort reform for seven years. it wasn't in obamacare. it's not in this bill, either. we really need to do back -- go back to the drawing board. if that means taking it on the chin for a while, politically, i think you have to do it. so there is politics and policy. the policy stinks. you have to work around the politics.
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brian: just what you know what you are describing would need 60 votes. republicans don't agree on a lot of the stuff you just. >> unless you go nuclear. ari fleischer said maybe it's time. you think it's a good idea, too. bine brian susan collins does not want that i don't think senator portman wants it either. i don't think a lot of republican governors want the things that you say the swamp is preventing from happening. >> i'm not saying you -- brian: republican vs. republican. >> let's say they do go ahead and somehow figure out a way to pass this bill, right? cbo has already told us premiums are going to rise for people over 50, low income going through 2018, the election. how in the world and then come down. how in the world are did you going to go to the voting booth in 2018 and hold the house, which you need to hold with premiums rising than obamacare? ainsley: this thing is out. it's dead. >> good. ainsley: they are saying they are going to repeal it do they repeal itsy bitsy pieces of it, because then you only need
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50 votes if it effects revenue. you need 60 votes to repeal the entire thing. brian: republicans look like dopes if they. >> they do. they already look like dopes. it's their only option. it's better than the alternative of passing a bill that's going to ruin the lives of americans and they are going to say i'm done with the republican party. brian: better than obamacare? steve: a better. >> i don't know if it is. brian: better than obamacare? >> that's because you think everything they promise on the back side of this bill, law is -- ainsley: bottom line is. brian: a lot of rules. ainsley: they have a lot of pressure on them. if they get it wrong, then they will get accused of the same thing obamacare did. >> people have very short memories. let's say this thing fails and put it off to the side. do what we have to do to shore up the individual insurance markets. it's going to cost money. brian: yep. >> they screwed up. they failed. you put it off to the side. take up something that i think every single american, whether
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you are democrat, independent, or republican can wrap their brain around, tax reform. steve: of course. >> your tax bill is going to go down. watching tv right now. your tax bill is going to go down. corporate taxes are going to bring us down and more in line and off to the races. things get better. tax reform is a republican strong, pat on the back. you couple that with infrastructure, you're going in to 2018 electioning with a little bit of bipartisan support but with -- and then have you time to work on healthcare. steve: americans have short memories, you are absolutely right. they will remember envelope next time they vote that if they elected a party to go to washington, d.c. and do something, okay, we're going to repeal it and then we are going to replace it, and they didn't really repeal it. >> hell to pay. >> yes, there is going to be hell to pay. but guess what that's the promise of promising something you couldn't deliver on. the alternative is putting up something that's worse or perceived to be worse or more
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expensive. and, brian, i get you, down the road have you got to say hey, i hope down the road these premiums are going to go down. that's what the democrats told us, too. ainsley: we will be talking about it all day. i know you are going to be talking about it tonight. this is his book the swamp. second week in a row on the "new york times" best selling list. >> day we debuted showed up here and talked about the book it went off to the races. >> specialist. >> radio. >> i think it was the kilmeade radio audience that actually made that book. ainsley: yeah it had nothing to do with the president's tweet about it. had everything to do with brian's show. brian: he has a lot of followers. >> on the g.o.p. side. put the healthcare bill together it was leadership that put together that bill it wasn't president trump. on the senate side it wasn't president trump's healthcare bill. these are leadership responsibilities.
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they have got to get their act together. brian: my leadership says why should at all times to jillian. >> thank you. jillian: eric, you north going to talk to me. >> jillian for the headlines. jillian: thank you very much. get you caught up on what you need to know. remember when susan rice talked about her unalleged unmasking. >> i know nothing about this. >> absolutely not for any political purposes to spy, expose, anything. jillian: this week the former national security advisor will face questions about it on capitol hill. rice's testimony before the house intelligence committee will be behind closed doors. fox news contributor judge andrew napolitano doesn't agree with that move. he told us earlier the american people have the right to know. >> we have the right to know what she knows, what she did. we have the right to know what congress knows. and we have the right to know what the heck congress is going to do about it. jillian: the testimony comes as we learn half a dozen senior obama officials are apparently of interest in the unmasking investigation.
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a women's march organization under fire for honoring a cop killer. the organization tweeting this birthday greeting to joanne chechez march who now calls herselherself assata shakur. she was serving a life sentence for her role in the murders of a new jersey state trooper. former president al gore calling climate change a really important issue. >> we have never had a president who has deliberately made decisions, the effect of which is to tear down america's standing in the world. climate crisis is by far the most serious challenge we face. jillian: but a new poll shows that 90% of americans disagree. just one in ten americans saying global warming is the most important issue facing the u.s. that's a quick look at your headlines on this tuesday morning. i will send it back to you guys. brian: one of thinks quotes was every day i look at the weather report it's like the book of revelations. no it isn't. the weather changes.
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we have clouds and we have sun. thank you. jillian: and we have rain. steve: thank you very much. who needs al roker when we have brian doing the weather. brian: book of revelations, sometimes it's windy. ainsley: incredible video gone viral. dog swimming into a lake and rescuing a baby deer. that dog and owner is going to join us live. brian: this picture also viral pastors praying with the president in the oval office. the left is crying foul. really? >> it borders on heresy. when can you p-r-a-y when theyd: are p-r-e-y. preying on the most vulnerable. ♪ taking care of business ♪
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-- ainsley: hatred for president trump reaching a new low after this picture of evangelical pastors praying with our president in the oval office goes viral. here to weigh in on this is host of the blaze tv lawrence jones. hey, lawrence, good to see you again. >> thanks for having me. ainsley: you are welcome. we just watched reverend william barber president of the naacp. one of the branches. >> you are right. north carolina. ainsley: he was saying -- kronckecorrect me if i am wrongs he saying that the president is so bad we shouldn't pray for him because is he preying on poor people. >> not just poor people but president trump's agenda he doesn't feel like preachers should be in the white house praying for the president because of this. ainsley: what do you think? >> well, i think it's antiscripture. i mean, has he had read i timothy 2 where it encourages us to pray for our leaders. listen, i disagree with pretty much everything president obama did. but i say the same prayer i said for him for president trump. i pray for wisdom. a hedge of protection over his
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life and his family ohio thank god puts agenda that advocates for the american people. no matter what president is in office, i think they all need prayer. i think that's what's part of the problem with this nation right now that we have turned away from god. as a result we have a lot of tragedies happen across this country. so for a preacher, a minister to say this i think is a poor example of what the gospel actually represents. we're supposed to pray for our enemies as well. ainsley: right. i wonder what it would be like if president obama were in the white house still, would he have a problem with that picture? what do you think? >> i don't think he would. and this guy is political. i'm so sick of seeing people with reverend at the beginning of their name spill out so much hate. that's antiscripture. we wouldn't get this push back if it was president obama. and i don't think we should condemn praying for presidents at the end of the day. like i said, they need all the prayer that they can get. this nation needs all the
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prayer that it can get. ainsley: i think we all need prayer. we need to be praying for him, too. reverend william barber president of the naacp. >> his agenda is to get the promotion of the national president, to be the chairman of the naacp. ainsley: he is over a local branch in north carolina. >> local state right now. they ousted brooks. cornell brooks and they didn't think he was active enough. they didn't think he was getting result. this is a guy getting arrested and part of resistance. now have you brooks also get spoke at the dnc convention in 2016. for hillary clinton supporting her candidacy. he has been making this national media rounds. so he is the new leader of the resistance. he has the young people's support. so what you are seeing is this rhetoric all so he can get this new position. ainsley: okay. what's the naacp saying about this? what do you expect them to do. >> i lost faith in the naacp when they started to take this political route.
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this is the naacp that is against school choice and other issues that benefit minorities. so i think the naacp is about money right now. and who invests in the naacp and not the issues. ainsley: is there a way we can all work together? is there a message have you for the naacp what would you like to see improved. >> can we pray together? can we start there? a nation that turns its back against president and god i think is a poor example. so can we just sit down and pray and talk about the issues? i'm not suggesting that they should agree with president trump on all of his policies. but we can at least agree on prayer. i think that's what part of the problem in this country. we can't even pray together right now. ainsley: my grand mother said don't go to bed angry. we all need to say a prayer and go to bed happy. >> i agree. ainsley: lawrence jones, thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. ainsley: a soldier gets $8 million. the widow will not get a dime. a dog that swims into the lake and rescues a baby deer.
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that dog and his owner and we'll show you the whole video. they're going to join us live. it's like nothing you've seen. the power of nexium 24hr protection from frequent heartburn. all day, and all night. now packed into a pill so small, we call it mini. new clearminis from nexium 24hr. see heartburn differently.
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♪ >> good boy, storm. bring him in. good boy, storm, bring him in. brian: how did he bring him in. ainsley: we're going to show you. you will see the rest of that video right now. this is caught on camera, a dog -- this dog, storm, in the water rescue ago drowning baby deemplet dragging the deer back onto the shores of long island. steve: joining us now that four legged hero fearless storm and the guy taking the pictures mark freely. good morning, mark. >> good morning, guys. brian: set the scene for us. >> okay, well, it was a normal
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sunday morning for storm and my other dog sarah, we love to walk the beach down in port jefferson village. and we usually walk out to pirate's cove. we're about three quarters of the way there he has been swimming on and off the whole trip. want to come up? and we get to a bend in the shoreline. and i can't see what's around the bend. is he off leash, swimming, playing. and he runs ahead of me. sarah and i try to catch up to him. i see him just charging in to the water. which he likes to do. but it looks like is he going after something. then i see a small head. >> bob: ing in the water. i guess closer i realize it looks like a small deer. and he is trying to get to it. steve: unbelievable. >> he is about 100 feet out. is he getting closer and closer. i don't really know what he is going to do when he gets there and you see is he going like this. and then i see the head of the deer going under a few times. he just reaches his neck out,
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his head and he clamps onto the baby deer's neck and just like a lifeguard would go like this to a person, turns around and faces me and starts swimming back to shore. ainsley: how did you think about -- what made you pull out your phone and record all of this? >> i'm big into dog rescue and i'm always taking pictures of him and sarah on the beach and posting them on facebook. steve: absolutely. your dog is a retriever. this is just what the dogs do. has your dog ever retrieved another live animal from the long island sound before? >> never. ainsley: that's sarah? sarah is the black dog? brian: brought him to safety off the shore? >> he originally brings him to shore and she is laying down, all of a sudden she jumps up and she runs. he follows her. and he lays down next to her. he starts nudging her ear and just trying to get her to get up. ainsley: how do you feel. brian: what would like be like without humans? animals would be saving each other. they don't need us.
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steve: deer jumps up and eventually wound up in the water again. and didn't you rescue the deer? >> what happens is that i made it back to the village, after i made sure the deer looked okay. she sat up. i called wildlife rehab rescue. i met them. led them back out to the fawn. it was near the water. when we approached, it went back in the water. ainsley: how is the deer doing now. >> the deer is doing great. i'm told. i saw pictures and video. it was dehydrated. exhausted. tick infested. star life rehab is taking care of the deer. ainsley: how do you feel as the dog's owner. >> he has a great gentle dog since we got him as a pickupy. always carrying and nurturing. it doesn't prize me that he went after the deer. i didn't know he was going to bring it back. steve: video has gone super viral. lots and lots of people have seen it mark, thank you for bringing storm into new york city today. >> it's a pleasure. brian: next time have you a rescue call us and we will putting you back on. >> thank you very much. ainsley: dogs are just the
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best. steve: we have a final big hour today. interior secretary ryan zinke and ann coulter. she wants to talk about a trip smokin ainsley: uh-oh. brian: i heard a little bitci about it ♪ proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced my urge to smoke. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. some people had changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, agitation, depressed mood or suicidal thoughts or actions with chantix. serious side effects may include seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking or allergic and skin reactions which can be life-threatening. stop chantix and get help right away if you have any of these. tell your healthcare provider if you've had depression or other mental health problems. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery.
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>> the republican health care plan is dead. >> this is an abandonment of what the republicans promised people for eight years. >> now to start from a clean slate. >> let's get all the people that disagree in one room and hammer this out. trump: we will protect our workers, promote our industry, and be proud of our history. >> this is a fantastic cause to be a part of. i was very honored to be a part of it. >> a frantic search intensifying this morning for a missing father caught in a massive flash flood in arizona. >> fox news confirming the former national security adviser susan rice is scheduled to appear behind closed doors. >> we have the right to know if she did it, we have the right to know if she was
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prosecuted. >> when all of this was behind doors, we don't know what happened. democracy dies in darkness. >> 101-year-old woman shatters a 100-meter dash record. >> i broke a record. i did it. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: if you're just waking up, mike lee saying they're not going to support the senate health care bill. so this thing is dead. steve: yesterday we were talking about how soon john mccain could get back for the
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vote. mr. mccain, take your time because it doesn't look like it's going to be any time soon. and, in fact, the president has been in the last ten minutes tweeting. he sent out two tweets. brian: all right. here's one. we were let down by all of the democrats and a few republicans. most republicans were loyal, terrific, and work really hard. we will return. next. steve: as i always said, let obamacare fail and then come together and do a great health care plan. stay tuned. well, you know what? it's getting close because there are all sorts of insurers saying we're going to go ahead and do another year because it's just too costly. ainsley: we had the white house press secretary on, and they were explaining to us if you repeal the whole thing, you need 60 votes. if you repeal portions of it if it has to do with revenue, you only need 50 votes. steve: the reconciliation. ainsley: that's just repealing little blips of it. so if you want to repeal the
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whole thing, they have to get the 60 votes, unless mitch mcconnell stands up and says we want the nuclear option. the problem with that is -- you would only need 50 votes. but going forward, that changes the rules in the senate. if democrats take power, then republicans would have a problem with that because they would make things a lot more liberal for the country. brian: no one should be surprised they didn't take part because no one took part in obamacare. but you can have a nuclear option. you could agree to the nuclear options. the problem is republicans don't agree. and that's why they don't agree because you have moderates, republicans, conservatives, borderline libertarians, and for some reason no one feels compelled to work with each other. i to give ted cruz a lot of credit. he had this reputation well earned of doing things on his own. instead, he said i want to make this better. here's how i'm going to try to make it better, rather than sit back and just say it's not for me. ainsley: but aren't they all doing that?
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aren't all senators saying i have a better version? brian: senator mike lee, saying it's not for me. rand paul saying there's nothing in here i can support. essentially there's nothing. he hated it. steve: so here's wher where we stand today. going to go forward with this bill that was passed in the house and the senate a couple of years ago. and 49 republicans in the u.s. senate passed it. so it would be hard for this 49 to say now two years later i can't go for that now, even though i went for it then. the big thing is whether or not they have the votes -- i was reading in the wall street journal today. they don't know whether or not this particular measure would pass either. but we had -- as you mentioned -- james langford, who was actually having dinner with the president of the united states last night, along with a number of other u.s. senators. they were trying to strategize what needed to happen with health care. anyway, he said they've got to do something because nothing is not an option.
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>> we don't have enough votes. we need to have 60 votes to do a full repeal of obamacare. so we need to figure out how far we can go. this is something that has to be done. just in my state in oklahoma, interest rates went up last year 76%. 76% in one year. we have thousands of people that used to have insurance that can no longer afford health care insurance anymore. this has to be fixed. brian: i just think they're doing tax reform next. and i think mitch mcconnell was blindsided. obviously, was blindsided. he sat around that table figuring out how to do it. so it blew everything up. so i think that's embarrassing. but for the president, you cannot take this personal if you're the president. you could be let down and disappointed, but this is not you. for seven years, they were talking about the details of the obamacare health care plan and five presidents tried to pass it.
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the last one did without any republican support, and now they're trying to fix it, and they can't do it. ainsley: you know, they're saying it's going to be a fresh start. they're going to provide greater personal choice. you know, and you think about this, there was a -- when you couldn't get them to unity, that was a red flag; right? i mean, it's -- they all have so many different problems. okay. hold on. is this going to cost the american people a lot of money? is this really going to cause more of a problem? is it going to be more of an obamacare situation where insurance companies are going to be pulling out? if that's the case, then we can't afford that. steve: sure because for the last number of years, republicans are saying, look, obamacare is very expensive for the people who have it. we're going to come up with some -- we're going to repeal and replace it and come up with something better. as it turns out, this particular bill last night, it kept some of the taxes, a lot of the regulations, and all sorts of other stuff. ainsley: but if it's going to focus on tax reform now, they're going to take a break, talk a breather. brian: that's what a lot of
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people said. 3.8% on taxes because republicans getting labeled as, look, giving tax breaks for the rich. even though it was a tax increase for those horrible people who make $200,000 under president obama. they said we'll do it in tax reform. a lot of it was going to be done with tom price. and when you talk about money, the moderates and all the ohio senators said you've got to leave the medicaid money that was given to these states. and governor kasich, a republican, said i'm keeping this. steve: you know who's caught in the middle? the people who actually have to buy obamacare. most of them don't like it. some it has changed their lives, been great to them. but they were looking for the u.s. congress to get something done and make sure that the premiums that were way up there, come way down here. newt gingrich says it's time to do something. watch this. >> we've had six months of patience, it's time to perform.
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i think that they have to go to -- first of all, you've had six months to look what happened. what worked, what didn't. it's like a football team at halftime. a military operation in the middle. you have to take steps, you have to learn lessons. i think they've got to figure out how to do things faster, more simply, frankly about health care. you can't pass the gigantic bill, tell me what you can pass. but get something done that starts to move us away from obamacare. and i think on each of these things, whether it's infrastructure or it's controlling spending, or it's reforming the bureaucracy. brian: i just don't think democrats can celebrate more than a second because they know they're stuck with a plan that was unworkable that destroyed them. they lost 1,000 seats because of it. and now it's there. well, congratulations, republicans. you couldn't get a better plan. but now we're stuck with this plan. what are you going to do about it? steve: but a bad plan would haunt the republicans going forward. ainsley: it would. we asked you on this. and on facebook said there's clearly no intelligence in the leadership in the senate.
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any business major having completed one course of business 101 would know how to pull these together and get a consensus. it's sad. steve: mark on facebook wrote if i was trump, i would call the press conference and tell the people that he has done all he can do but your representatives has tied his hands and refuse to send him a bill. tell them if they want it repealed and replaced, they are going to need to get involved with calls, e-mail, letter, faxes, marches, et cetera. lay every bit of this monumental failure in their lap. brian: but is that leadership? will on facebook says if there's going to be health care reform bill, there needs to be bipartisan. the democrats still have a sizable minority. and unless they appear to work with democrats, republicans are looking at harsh senate losses next year, even though they're favored to increase their. ainsley: he brings up a good point because don't you think there's going to come a point in our country when people get so sick of all of the fighting, and they're, like, come on, democrats and republicans.
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you've got to work together. it's not about just voting party lines straight ticket anymore because these people aren't getting it done, and it's affecting the people. steve: you know the big fight is going to be today? today at noon. senate leadership is having lunch with everybody. a party in the u.s. senate. ainsley: all of the republicans? steve: yeah, it's the republican caucus in the senate. so i imagine that would be the place to be today. brian: did mike lee tell leadership, at least? ainsley: i'm sure they did. brian: evidently the president finds out about it, calls mitch mcconnell and says let's just go for a straight repeal bill. we'll do that next, so it looks like they were in the reaction phase. steve: well,& the president liked a clean repeal, as clean as you can get, and then worked out the details. what's going to happen next? stay tuned, folks. ainsley: does this mean what happens for the august recess now? are they going to now do their four-week vacation? brian: no, they better not. they ever health care, a debt
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ceiling to raise, tax reform. ainsley: this is one of the things. steve: i think they saw the possibility that they would not have a win on the board by the time they went back in the second week of august, so they've got to do something. and at this point, there's a possibility that the only win they're going to have on the board could be the confirmation of the new fbi director. ainsley: right. brian: congratulations. steve: when is that? ainsley: gosh, jillian doesn't just show you all the red tape? he ran on this, repeal and replace, and it's not getting done? >> it's not getting done, but so much to be updated. let's get you caught up on the extreme weather in our country. the search intensifying this morning for a missing father caught in a flash flood in arizona. more cadaver dogs will be on the scene. his wife maria and three children and five other family members did not survive. the youngest just 2 years old. an avalanche of heavy water,
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rocks and logs crashing down on the family. 20-year-old has already confessed to shooting the men that you see on your screen right there and burying the bodies on his family's farm in pennsylvania. now he's reportedly telling police he killed two others when he was just 15 years old. police are looking into those claims. president trump's travel ban back in the hands of the supreme court this morning. the state of hawaii has until today to respond to that motion filed by the white house blocking its latest ruling. the doj slamming a court for overstepping by allowing virtually all family members into the u.s. it comes as the trump administration expands a list to include grandparents, as well as aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, and cousins. and apple unveiling new emojis. everyone get excited. the 12 characters include a yoga emoji, a woman breast-feeding, a mind blown emoji, a job-wearing, and even a t-rex.
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is that what i'm seeing up there? yeah, they'll be available later this year. steve: i'm going to do mind-blowing, like, five times a day. brian: i have no idea why we use them? >> really? it just adds to the conversation. brian: we have these things called letters and words. >> and emojis. ainsley: he's antifriends. changed his radio show. now he's antiemoji. steve: there's actually a university naturally. and they realize when you think in emojis, you think a different way, so it's actually beneficial. brian: right. and i guess i think in a different way because i like the old way. by the way, my prompter, all symbols. all emojis. a terrorist who killed an american soldier gets an 8 million-dollar payday fill canada. but that soldier's widow may never get a dime. how could that happen? rob schmidt on deck. steve: and it's the feud everyone is talking about this morning. ann coulter versus american airlines. so what really happened on that plane?
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ann coulter joins us live from florida coming up courtship then. courtship now. even though courtship has become less strict, we remain strict as ever when it comes to our standards. made with premium cuts of 100% kosher beef. hebrew national. we remain strict. the toothpaste that helps new parodontax. prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try new parodontax toothpaste. ♪ dad: flash drives? yup. that's dad taking care of business. laptop setup? yup. but who takes care of dad? office depot, office max. this week, all hp ink, buy one get one 30% off. ♪ taking care of business
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buy one get one 30% off. we asked people to just go about their day to try a new feature from match. so sara, what did you do today? i grabbed a coffee... yes, you have to do that.. and then i checked out a new art exhibit. so now, you have the match app up open up the missed connections tab for me. okay. it shows you people you've crossed paths with in real life. oo, i crossed paths with josh near pine street. maybe he was at the gallery? maybe he loves art? imagine what else you have in common. he's cute. i'd like to find out! i'm on the edge of my seat.
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grenade in the firefight in the country of afghanistan. brian: the canadian government now pays millions of dollars to the convicted terrorist responsible. but that soldier's widow and two children may never seen a dime from their lawsuit. ainsley: rob schmidt joins us now with their story. rob. >> yeah, this is a story that has two sides to it, but americans fall on one side. most cannot understand why a convicted terrorist was awarded 8 million bucks years after killing an american soldier in afghanistan. canada has agreed to pay former guantanamo prisoner a reported $8 million and then apologized to him saying his civil rights were violated when he was held at guantanamo bay, even though that's a military installation owned by the united states. canada's leftist prime minister supports this settlement. in 2002, he was just 15 years old an al-qaeda follower that through a grenade in afghanistan. the explosion killed special
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forces medic sergeant christopher and blinded soldier lane morris who was on fox and friends recently. >> i don't know what kind of sick, twisted ivory to youer mr. trudeau lives in that this makes any kind of sense. but to those of us down here on the street who were walking around, this totally sucks. there's -- it's just crazy that you would give somebody like that $8 million because his feelings got hurt. >> a man blinded by that grenade right there. the widow of sergeant spear won a $134 million wrongful death default judgment against cotter two years ago in utah. but she's not going to see a dime. neither will the kids because the judge in canada refuses to release his assets. they begin working toward a trial on the utah judgment. so maybe we'll see some room
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there obviously doesn't have 134 bucks, but now he has 8 million. steve: maybe the family should sue canada. is that possible? >> yeah. that's actually a great question. can you sue another nation? in 9/11, we were trying to sue saudi arabia. brian: rob, you know, this is from a terror family. they used to like a mobster family. so the word is if he gets that $8 million, it's going to go right to the terror community. >> and you wonder what he's going to do now. now he's living in canada. we saw a lot of people in guantanamo go right back to the battlefield. ainsley: where is the justice? it doesn't seem fair. steve: meanwhile, oj simpson's parole hearing just two days away, but it almost got derailed because of a cookie. wait until you hear this. it's coming up. brian: plus, you saw the president highlighting those all american products at the white house. up next, the secretary of interior ryan is here with how we can vacation american style. ainsley: let's go. as moms,
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we send our kids out into the world, full of hope. and we don't want something like meningitis b getting in their way. meningococcal group b disease, or meningitis b, is real. bexsero is a vaccine to help prevent meningitis b in 10 to 25 year olds. even if meningitis b is uncommon, that's not a chance we're willing to take. meningitis b is different from the meningitis most teens were probably vaccinated against when younger. we're getting the word out against meningitis b. our teens are getting bexsero. bexsero should not be given if you had a severe allergic reaction after a previous dose. most common side effects are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you're pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines. ask your healthcare professional about the risks and benefits of bexsero and if vaccination with bexsero is right for your teen. moms, we can't wait.
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brian: all right. everybody, some quick headlines, and then we're going downstairs. don't call the police. that's how a rider is advising readers on how to avoid unexpected police violence. writing in part what if instead of calling men and women with guns to settle routine problems by those with mental health crises, we remediated these crisis alone. and snoop dogg this time encouraging violence against cops. posting this disgusting video on instagram showing who men attacking an officer at
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mcdonald's. the caption? tables turned. one for us. it's about time. earlier this year, snoop dogg appeared in a music video pretending to assassinate trump with a toy gun. he's desperate for attention. downstairs. steve: all right. brian, president trump announcing this week made in america week, on supporting american businesses and american workers. ainsley: secretary of the interior ryan joins us now with how we can also vacation american. good morning to you, mr. secretary. >> good morning. great to be with you. ainsley: good to see you. how do we vacation here in america. what's the best way? >> well, certainly get out there. there's nothing more made in america than our national park system. it's summer. get out there with the kids. we're looking at public, private partnerships to expand our campgrounds. a lot of our campgrounds are still in the eisenhower era. so we're looking to expand
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opportunity in and around our parks, improving trail systems, looking at public private partnerships, to utilize innovation in the private market, and then bring it to make sure we have a great experience in our national parks. steve: absolutely. mr. secretary, we've been lucky enough to have traveled around the country, and we've been to many of the national monuments. i know you're not supposed to have a favorite, but give us five places where people watching right now might think what you know? i didn't think about that. maybe i should go to moun mount rushmore this summer. >> well, certainly in the west, i would say glacier park, yellowstone, olympic national forest. on the east side, our battlefield remain magnificent, gettysburg, the smokies. and then if you're further down south, visit the everglades. but i think our nation should stand proud. our park system is the envy of the world. our greatest legacy. come out and visit our parks.
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ainsley: you know about this message, though? we're talking -- he ran on jobs. jobs, jobs. so if we buy american, if we travel in america, it means more people are going to be at work. it medians more money in all of our pockets, which is a good thing. i love that he had all of these companies represented at the white house. i was looking through the list. ping golf clubs made in arizona, tumblers made down in georgia, chick-fil-a, caterpillar, and the list goes and on. you can find this list on the white house website. how did it go yesterday? >> well, it went magnificent. you see a lot of support. you know, made in america. and on our side, we have rvs, campers, the recreation industry i think we figured was $39 billion of the economic impact on our parks. and the recreation side across the nation is far greater than that. made in america also means recreation experience, getting out there, enjoying our public and private lands. but made in america includes
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our national parks, our monuments, and our public land. steve: sure. visit the white house where it is national monument and of course sometimes it's very noisy on tuesday mornings about 8:30 in the morning. you know, mr. secretary, yesterday i heard somebody say, you know, it was great to see the president of the united states who once upon a time ran a great, big company because he understands what so many of the manufacturers and what so many of the businesses across this country go through in making a payroll and trying to create jobs and trying to if you will forgive me, make america great again business-wise. >> well, if you look at the department of interior, in 2008, we made $18 billion a year in just offshore oil and gas. last year we made 2.6 billion. we dropped $15 billion a year in revenue. and when you look at our national parks $11.5 billion behind on infrastructure, maintenance.
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in comparison, we would have made it our entire backlog up and had $3 billion to reinvest on what we lost in revenue. and there's a consequence was not putting 94% of our offshore offlimits not harvesting timber, not using our resources. it comes in the form of not having resources to maintain, preserve, and protect our park system. ainsley: mr. secretary, you have said that you work for the best boss ever. why do you say that? >> he does not -- and i have worked for a lot of bosses. was a former commander at seal team six. i've had enormous, great leaders that i've worked for. but the president does not micromanage. he expects results. we talk, how is it going? what do you need? when? that's pretty clear guidance. now, kidding. ainsley: so, no, micromanaging. just expecting results. >> just expecting results. and you know what? i expect results from my team of leaders. and i have to tell you, i am
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so happy. i was never the best jumper, diver, explosive effort, but i always knew who was. and i am bringing a new set of rough riders to the interior. and the leadership team we have is exceptional. steve: that's fantastic. well, you will win this summer if americans say what you know? we will vacation somewhere in america's famous parks and national monuments. ryan, secretary of the interior. thank you very much for joining us from the exterior of the white house. ainsley: and thank you for continuing to serve our great country. >> come on and explore our parks. steve: will do. ainsley: it's the feud everyone is talking about this morning. ann coulter and airlines. what really happened on that plane? ann coulter is going to tell us live next. steve: and kid rock what looked like a senate rock, he's unveiling his platform for kid rock for senate.com in a tweet. we'll be right back
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i did active duty 11 years.my in july of '98. and two in the reserves. our 18 year old was in an accident. when i call usaa it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. it actually helped to know that somebody else cared and wanted make sure that i was okay. that was really great. we're the rivera family, and we will be with usaa for life.
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usaa. we know what it means to serve. call today to talk about your insurance needs. steve: our stage manager has been telling brian kilmeade for the last three minutes -- ainsley: can we zoom out right now? brian, nice of you to join us. >> have a seat. steve: anyway, brought you down here. ainsley: a good excuse. he is the second child. remember yesterday? brian: i am hard to corral. steve: good to have you back here. now it's time to turn to jillian who has got the headlines. >> and, steve, like you i'm the first child, so i'm very prompt with everything. good morning to you guys at home as well. little charlie gard's parents optimistic after a brand-new brain scan. the u.s. doctor examined the
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terminally ill infant now saying there's a chance he can reverse the child's brain damage caused by a rare genetic disorder. whether charlie can have the treatment or if he will be taken off life support. a bride to be is shot and killed by police after she had just called 9-1-1 for help. calling to report a possible assault in the alley behind her minneapolis home. the cop in the passenger side opening fire, shooting her in the stomach. her fiancé now making an emotional plea for answers. >> we are desperate for information. she touched so many people with her loving and generous heart. >> both officers are on administrative leave. their body cameras were not on. oj simpson to become a free man by fall. no one at his parole meeting thursday is expected to oppose police, not even a victim.
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this as a fight for freedom is almost derailed by a cookie. you heard me right. a retired correctional officer said simpson was eating a cookie that was stolen by another inmate. a violation that could have hurt his chance for parole. the 70-year-old has had 30 years in prison. if out, he could be out as early as october. and kid rock senate run, he's already outlining his political platform. ♪ ♪ the singer tweeting quote i believe if you work your butt off and pay your taxes, you should be able to easily understand and navigate the laws, tax code, health care, and anything else the government pits in place that affects us all. he's hoping to replace the michigan democrat currently holding that senate seat. that's a look at your headlines. and if you guys are wondering what type of cookie, by the way, in the oj simpson story. i did a couple different websites oatmeal. so whatever that's worth,
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there you go. steve: a lot of fiber. all right. thank you. 24 minutes before the top of the hour. outside to janice dean, the weather machine. >> good morning. good morning. are you guys happy to be on tv? you love fox and friends? is it hot and sticky here in new york city? >> yes. >> let's take a look at the weather real quick. i just want to show you we are watching tropical storm don. 50-mile an hour sustained winds. it is if we could to travel in towards the caribbean, but we are expecting t also to weaken and not affect the u.s., but we're going to watch it anyway. we have the potential for showers and thunderstorms across the midwest and great lakes, perhaps some severe storms. and then the other big story is going to be the heat across much of the country. let's meet some of our folks. where are you from? >> birmingham, alabama. >> what are your names? >> bill, roy, and jill. >> where are you from? >> tampa, florida. >> and your names. >> darcy. >> ron. >> susan. >> and where are you from? >> iowa. >> wave inside to ainsley,
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steve, and brian. we love you. ainsley: we love them. tell them thank you so much. steve: thank you. all right. now let's dial in ann coulter. you know her. conservative columnist, and she's been in the news a lot the last couple of days. anne, good morning. thank you for joining us today from florida. tell us what happened onboard this delta flight. >> well, it was before boding i had picked out the seat i wanted. i was in the waiting area, boarding area for 90 minutes. and then as i was boarding, the ticket agent snatched the ticket out of my hand and said, no, we've given you a different seat, and i said why? and she said emergency. and i took the seat that was originally mine because it was empty, and then the seat filled up. a woman came back, stewardess asked for my tickets and i said, well, this is a seat i booked, but they moved to to
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another seat i don't want. and she said you have to move. and i said why? and she said i don't know. and it was not an elderly person, a sickly person, a very tall person. i wasn't asked, and it's been three days now, and delta still hasn't gotten -- given an explanation, much less an apology. moreover, they are snarky and being very syntheticky on twitter. i was tweeting about it on the way home. i couldn't do it on the plane because there was no wi-fi on delta. but they o.j., say why. they say it was inadvertently given away. no, you have to go into a computer and change the ticket and print two new ones. that's not a person. ainsley: and you paid $30 to have that extra leg room? that's what the articles are saying. that's false? >> no. i know. this is the only reason i don't like doing satellite tv.
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it's so much more fun when i'm in studio. with people, it's much easier. but they're lying so much about this, and that was one of the snarky tweets they sent out. oh, we're refunding your $30. no, it's not about the $30. you gave me a more cramped seat. apparently delta isn't familiar with its aircraft. as a frequent flier, i am. and on the right side of aisle 15, you have a lot more leg room. it's a good seat. there's a reason i went on and at delta's invitation picked this particular seat. they won't explain why i picked the seat. steve: you had the extra leg room seat, and they gave you another seat. was it an extra leg room seat or was it the -- >> it was but not as much. that's what i'm telling you. aisle 15, i hate to be giving away frequent flier secret, but i know on this particular airbus, less leg room, a window seat, not an aisle seat and the snippiness of, oh, we're roughening your $30.
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no, that's not the point. why won't you explain what happened? why didn't anyone explain to me at the time? why didn't you ask me to move? as i say, i would be perfectly happy to move for an old person for an air marble. very clearly, that wasn't this. that's why i took a picture of the passenger because i knew delta would lie about it. and of the stewardess because i knew they would say we have no idea what you're talking about. they've been unbelievably arrogant. brian: here's the tweet storm that's been going back and forth. you said this, originally. delta didn't give me my extra room seat to an air marble or tall person. here's the woman giving my prebooked seat and there of course you took a picture of her. and then you added this tweet. just when you think it's safe to fly again, the worst airline in america is still delta. and then. ainsley: delta employee questionnaire. what is your ideal job? prison guard? animal handler, policemen, all
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of the above? hired. steve: anne, i've got a feeling -- here's delta. we are sorry you did not receive the preferred seat you paid for, and we'll refund your $30. your insults about our other customers and employees are sun acceptable and unnecessary. delta tweeted back. so obviously, there are some hurt feelings here. it doesn't sound like you're ever going to be flying on delta again. >> well, i don't know if they're going to be flying much longer. did you see their stock collapse yesterday? look, they may think this is very witty to be firing back at me on twitter after behaving rudely. again, no explanation, no apology, just here, you have to move for this other person. what is the reason for that? i mean, they've had four days to investigate. why did they do this? it's not like -- yes, it's not the worst thing in the world. but is it that hard for delta employees to simply be polite
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and give the passengers the seat they want. is that such a high hurdle that, oh, we can't be expected to do this. i admit i did insult the airline, but i insulted them really by describing what they did. that was the big insulting thing. no, you should be -- you shouldn't describe how you were treated on our airline. that's an outrage. steve: well, after appearing today and the tweets as well, maybe delta will get back to you today. and if they do, let us know what they say, would you? >> absolutely. steve: anne, thank you very much for joining us today from florida. >> no. health care? steve: sorry. we were talking all about the delta seat. ainsley: thanks, anne. we'll have you back on. >> it was no good. steve: thanks. that's what you said. next up, you saw president trump promote american businesses at the white house, our next guest says he's appearing also the helping by
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brian: the what's your highest level of education stepping up their illegal immigration crack down. now facing criminal charges the first time they're caught crossing the border. our next guest is enforcing these laws. here to explain fox news contributor and trump hispanic advisory counsel member steve cortez. steve, welcome back. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> so these rules and the word got out about this administration's philosophy has resulted in what? >> well, brian, it's amazing what leadership does after decades of having a dangerous, lawless, and largely open border. in just six months, and the wall hasn't even begun constructed yet. but through better enforcement and clear rhetoric of this president telling people don't come. you will be returned. enforcement is going to matter. ice tells us that illegal border crossings are down year over year over 70%. i think that's amazing. and the benefits are going to
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be to the american people and the american worker, more specifically. brian: give general kelly a job, and he gets it done. ice arrests last month were 13,914. clearly, the word is out. stopping a lot of these would be confrontations. >> right. and here's the thing too, brian. i say this as a hispanic, as a son of an immigrant. we're not antiimmigrant or hispanic. as a matter of fact, quite the opposite out of respect for the people who follow our process. it's not an easy process. it's expensive, time-consuming. brian: which has to be part of immigration reform. it has to be easier. >> totally agreed. and i think we haven't had real immigration reform in this country since 1960s. so we do need that. and donald trump was very clear about this on the campaign trail. first, we have to prove to the american people that we can control the border. and then secondly, we have to get to immigration control. in terms of protecting the american worker, number one, they need to be safe. so sanctuary cities where i live in chicago.
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chicago is probably the most dangerous place in the western world, and our mayor is worried about protecting known, dangerous illegal grins? i mean, that's an outrage. brian: right. i think that's happening in a lot of major cities. put pressure on all of these different areas, and get immediate results. so many other things going on right now, it's not getting enough attention. but that's why it's good you came down, steve. >> thank you. brian: great to see you. coming up straight ahead, this minister turned his uber car into a church on wheels. and going on a ride around new york city with the scriptures. but first, let's check with bill who's praying i tossed in cleanly. >> yes, brian, good day to you. what now; right? that's a real question of the health care vote, what it means. full analysis of what that means coming up momentarily. and susan rice will testify, what a leading senator wants to know from her today. and jack keane on what this means for the nuclear deal. and why this mystery of the woman shot by police in minneapolis. we'll investigate.
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ainsley: he's a minister who moonlights as an uber driver. brian: turned his 2009 mercury grand marquis into a confessional. ainsley: and he is driving around midtown with steve and janice. hey, guys. steve: that's right. good morning to both of you. we are inside reverend kenneth -- what kind of car are we in? >> a mercury grand marquis. steve: well, it's luxurious, and it's great. brian: put your seat belt on. steve: let me ask you this, reverend. if someone winds up calling
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uber, and you're they're driver. in addition to a ride, do they wind up to a sermon? >> well, not necessarily with a sermon. they wind up with a genuine, practical conversation of goodness. steve: really? >> yeah. brian: how does the dialogue start does. >> well, it starts by good afternoon or good morning or how is your day going? my day's going fine. and from that point, it's a warm upbeat conversation. steve: reverend, what about our message for today? people are looking to washington to get stuff done, that health care thing last night. some people are wondering if there's going to be something new. what's your message? >> well, my message to that is basically their common focus should be to be practical and to live life one day at a time. brian: how long have you been
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doing this for? the ministry thing? >> i've been in ministry over 20 years. >> and uber. >> this coming august will be one year. >> how do they both come together? >> well, they came together as far as being a minister of the gospel and ready at any time to interpret and bring god's goodness to them. bring them good news. steve: so this is your side hustle. i know they're riding. they run commercials here in new york city. if you look for a side hustle, in other words, making money on the side, this is a good way to make some money and meet some people; right? >> that is absolutely corrects. >> i have a question. so if steve and i were single, and we wanted to get married, would you be able to marry us in this uber? >> well, if that's the choice that you prefer, sure. why not. steve: here's the thing, reverend. her husband and my wife are pretty sure that is not a good idea for today.
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>> hypothetically speaking. have you ever married someone in your uber? >> no. i haven't. steve: we could pull over and find somebody, if you've got a hanker in. >> people are frustrated sometimes. you're just so calm at the wheel. this is new york city. i mean, traffic is kind of crazy, reverend. >> well, you know, i look at it as a responsibility to get people from point a to point b and to make a good impact. >> jesus is at the wheel. steve: reverend kenneth, we thank you very much for driving us in your uber today. >> 48th and 6. >> my pleasure. copd makes it hard to breathe. so to breathe better, i go with anoro. ♪go your own way copd tries to say, "go this way." i say, "i'll go my own way" with anoro.
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♪go your own way once-daily anoro contains two medicines called bronchodilators, that work together to significantly improve lung function all day and all night. anoro is not for asthma . it contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. the risk is unknown in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, high blood pressure, glaucoma, prostate, bladder, or urinary problems. these may worsen with anoro. call your doctor if you have worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain while taking anoro. ask your doctor about anoro. ♪go your own way get your first prescription free at anoro.com.
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i have to tell you something. dad, one second i was driving and then the next... they just didn't stop and then... i'm really sorry. i wrecked the subaru. i wrecked it. you're ok. that's all that matters. (vo) a lifetime commitment to getting them home safely. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. >> they send steve and janice into the confession car.
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not bill. >> we have not heard anything. not even the air conditioner. >> have a great day. we will see you tomorrow. doing good morning everybody on fox news alert, repeal is in for now. senator mitch mcconnell pulling the plug on the revised senate health care bill promising the votes on repealing obamacare instead. president trump has this message. let obamacare fail. they morning here, nine bill hemmer. welcome to "america's newsroom" and what it means for you at home. shannon continues her vacation. how are you? do we have a big hour. a lot expected, especially at the 10:00 hour. i am sandra smith informed ms. shannon bream. the senate bill is following part after senator joined in
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