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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  September 14, 2017 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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hand. todd: finally the ugly, the arkansas state employee using government to buy tuxedo for her pug. buying a diamond bracelet adding up to 200,000 bucks. the pugs are cute but you can't do that "fox & friends" now. heather: yep, bye. >> we should be able to come together to make government work for the people. >> he won on an agenda of make america great again not the republican party. >> this is why he met with schumer and pelosi. >> this president has done more for bipartisan in last 8 days than obama it did in 8 years. >> president trump and melania are heading to naples. >> bernie sanders is introducing a bill to establish a single pair healthcare system. >> our job is to lead the world on healthcare, not to be woefully behind. >> do you think the electoral college. >> i said that in 2,000. i think it needs to be
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eliminated. >> tito sent this letter last month asking president trump if he could mow the west wing's yard. frank will cut the grass in the rose garden tomorrow. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ this is how we roll ♪ we hanging around ♪ singing everything on the radio ♪ this is how we roll. brian: hope to keep rolling. ainsley: has been thursday. one more alarm clock. we love our jobs but we love our weekends, too. steve: what's not to love. we love the fact that you have tuned in today to find out what's going on. and our first political
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story is something we touched on a little bit yesterday. the president of the last week when he met with chuck schumer and nancy pelosi on the debt deal and run the government and that -- the flood funding invited them over to the white house. they showed up last night. they wound up having dinner for round of table for 11 in the blue room. the first topic was china and china trade. so they had chinese food. ainsley: how appropriate. they talked about tax reform, immigration, infrastructure, trade and healthcare. brian: but the big news to emerge from this is on daca when it comes to immigration and the so-called dreamers that came here younger, now a young adult in many cases. what's going to happen over the next six months to work out a deal. i was a little surprised to see evidently they were friendly to come out but they weren't together when it came to their closing statements. steve: they disputed it. brian: they disputed it which kind of bothers me. i think these leaders know better.
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trying to get a spirit of bipartisan and president showing sincerity in doing so. i'm sure progress was made. why would you come out and say, this nancy pelosi on the meeting. leader schumer and i had a meeting with the president where we agreed on a plan to work out an agreement to protect our nation's dreamers from deportation. hopefully we can get this done in a matter weeks. they went on to say think are going to work out a package on border security including the wall that's acceptable to both sides. why would you say excluding the wall, which you know a few years ago you okayed for george bush? ainsley: i think she is saying that because last week he was saying he was alluding to the fact that if we take care of the dreamers and we don't send them back to their parents original country, then i will take care of them but in return democrats have to help me build this wall. brian: but they are saying no. ainsley: we came to an agreement on the dreamers but it's excluding the wall. steve: they did agree to work on the dreamer deal next change for new border security.
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in fact, the democrats say yeah, we talked about border security. however, the wall was not a part of that. but sarah huckabee sanders came out an hour later and wanted to clarify. she said daca and border security were both discussed, exincluding the wall was certainly not agreed to. chuck schumer's communications director came out and said the president at this particular meeting made clear he would continue pushing the wall just not part of this agreement. keep in mind, donald trump is out for the long haul. the long deal. and so if the wall isn't in this, maybe it's going to be in 90 days when funding comes up again. we just know that the president would like to come to a solution regarding the dealers and it looks like, in principle, the democrats and the republican president have agreed on one. ainsley: this the is second time in two weeks that the president has gone to the democrats to help him work out a deal. he is saying. brian: he also at lunch. ainsley: at lunch yesterday. jump on the trump chain we
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are leaving the station. chuck and nancy are in the first class cabin. come on ryan and mitch because i'm leaving. brian: you don't have to get eric and don jr.'s approval. you have to get hundreds of people on the same page. bureaucracy moving in the right direction. the president rewrote the rules in saying that i gave you seven months. i watched you do what you said you can do. you were unable to do that. regardless of my conservative principles what i have i'm about accomplishment. and i believe on some level when he saw what happened in texas, black, white, hispanic people teaming up together with government to save thousands of people and now help rebuild thousands of lives confounded by florida, helped them help people help themselves with $15 billion. and number two come together and get something done. ego aside, start accomplishing things. bush and obama all we did was stare each other down. it doesn't work.
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steve: well, regarding the floods in texas and the hurricanes down in florida, some things are just not political. and when it comes to a political item like daca, like all sorts of things, those are where the two sides don't agree. so donald trump, who is a hybrid kind of candidate. i mean, he certainly is nonconventional, we were asking this poll question and we are going to share this with you, this is from rasmussen. is it good or bad for the country if president trump works with the democrats to advance his agenda if the republican party won't act? and two thirds of you said it's good for the country. only about 13% say it's bad for the country. 21% haven't figured it out yet. brian: a lot of people in washington haven't figured out what the president is up to. they are scratching their heads. steve: it's the swamp. washington is the swamp. ainsley: a lot of republicans are glad he is sticking it to. strong guy. if republicans aren't going to let him pass border security and the tax reform
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and obamacare repeal and replace, guess what? he is going to start working with the democrats. it honestly brings the country together more, too. i think the hurricane relief package. that was the momentum that he needed. people are getting more and more on board with him, i believe. steve: there is always common ground on certain issues. republicans are over here. democrats are over here. donald trump is trying to give both sides a little something. ainsley: right. steve: dr. sebastian gorka was on the channel last night and he sees it this way. >> look, the president won the election. of the rank outside of the -- the man who was antiestablishment as far as the right is concerned and the left is concerned, he won on an agenda of make america great again, not make the republican party great again. this is why he met with schumer and pelosi last week. the g.o.p. doesn't understand, it is a new york real estate billionaire who won. and there's a reason for that because they haven't served the nation's interests for more than a decade.
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they didn't invite themselves to the oval office. the president of the united states invited them. donald j. trump fired a tornado into the hull of the g.o.p. to say guys, wake up. i'm serious about what i want to do. brian: -only worry about this is leadership on the left has only been on the left. can you possibly tell me an example of what nancy pelosi and chuck schumer have met people on the right halfway? so the president's is calling their bluff. steve: right has met with the left. brian: that's why when the president goes and meets with joe manchin and senator thune and others he is saying okay, i need this done. he didn't necessarily -- he had paul ryan in last week. he said i need this done, i'm talking past leadership. i just worry about the statements that came out of that meeting that maybe nancy pelosi and chuck schumer are playing by the rules that got them there not the rules of the person that is there. steve: see, i see what has come out, you know, the public accounts of last
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night's meeting as it looks like they are actually trying to do a deal rather than the republicans are way over here and the democrats are way over here and he this are never going to meet in a million years in the middle it sounds like the president is bringing them together. is there going to be a deal with the daca deal? maybe, maybe not. the president has made it very clear the wall is one of his top priorities. and, in fact -- brian: they made it clear, senator schumer made it clear he is not going to fund the wall and nancy pelosi put it in her statement which makes me indicate that only one person, perhaps, is dealing. ainsley: where do the republicans stand on the wall the republicans in congress? brian: mitch mcconnell is ambivalent. paul ryan at least says that he is for it there are some republican lawmakers even in texas that aren't on the same page. ainsley: are there? so are there enough to get it through? we have to see. steve: donald trump is the leading republican that wants the wall. hillary clinton wants to you buy her book. however, when you look at amazon apparently there were so many one star reviews they looked at them and just
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hateful. people who didn't actually read the book. they just wanted to say bad things about her. ainsley: she doesn't care. as long as you are buying them. steve: she was asked on the other channel the whole thing of the electoral college. keep in mind she won the popular vote, but donald trump won the electoral college. how does she feel about that today? she feels like this. >> do you think the electoral college should be abolished? >> i said that in 2,000 after what happened to the 2,000 election with al gore. we have moved toward one person, one vote. that he was how we select winners. i think it needs to be eliminated. i would like to see us move beyond it, yes. ainsley: says the loser, after she lost. brian: just keep in mind, too. when people say i want to get rid of the electoral college. that's just changing the rules. what you would have is these candidates, for example, go to upstate new york rather than avoid new york if you are a republican. you would have donald trump going to orange county, california. you would have george bush
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maximize the vote in texas. but what would happen is you tell middle america you don't matter, they would go to the heavy population areas. and that of course, would provide a whole bunch -- ainsley: prevents california and new york and texas from choosing who is going to be president. steve: that's the various excuses why mrs. clinton is saying why she didn't win the presidency. delicious eye ron any when she tells anderson cooper they should abolish the electoral college and accept the results when it was a year ago when she was badgering donald trump when donald trump asked will you accept the results of the election? and he said i don't know. and she said this: >> that's horrifying. you know, every time donald thinks things are not going in his direction, he claims whatever it is rigged against him. that is not the way our democracy works. that is a direct threat to our democracy.
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i'm not gonna try to call it anything else bus that's what it is. all this talk about the election being rigged, trying to stir up people who are supporting him at his rallies. that is a direct threat to our democracy. brian: this is getting sad at this point. that's why president obama had to pick up the phone the night of the election and basically make her understand that she lost. steve: she is mad at president obama. she is mad at bernie sanders, the bernie bros. i have a three hour show. ainsley: joe biden. steve: matt lauer. ainsley: now she is saying everything is rigged against her. in october when that happened during the debate during the summer she thought she was going to win. i thought we were going to do some headlines. we will give you those headlines later. steve: wee have a lot of headlines. ainsley: we have a three hour show. steve: no kidding. 12 minutes after the hour. she is a trader and stole american secrets now chelsea
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manning has a new job. teaching your children. steve: and senator bernie sanders wants to go to a single pair plan but can there really be a healthcare golden ticket? one size fits all, dr. nicole saphier is here to break down the real cost to you, the taxpayer. good morning, doctor. ainsley: hey, nicole ♪ bad medicine ♪ bad medicine is what i need ♪ oh, you brought butch.
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your eyes. your tears. ask your eye doctor about restasis multidose. ♪ ♪ >> i have no doubt, none whatsoever that this nation sooner than people believe, will, in fact, pass a medicare for all single pair system. brian: and there were 16 people behind him. bernie sanders continuing his campaign promise for a single pair healthcare system. how much would it really cost the american people? is it feasible in america, which is not a socialist country? radiologist dr. nicole saphier is here to break it down for us. there is -- healthcare was back front and center yesterday. lindsey graham and senator cassidy who is a doctor block grant everything to the state. on the opposite side bernie sanders says i finally have
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support for a single pair plan. what's the downside? >> let's start off by saying a single pair plan is absolutely not medicare for all. medicare functions in the united states because it is off set by a very robust private marketplace. if you take away that private marketplace have you medicaid for all. have you cost rationing. he is talking about combining medicare and medicaid. it really will be medicate. is he keeping the v.a. and health services out of it i equate it to watching oprah winfrey. she is like you get a house. you get a house. the difference is she is can pay for it bernie sanders is offering to give everything. the united states cannot afford it. brian: $32 trillion in cost and $15 trillion in revenue. everything goes to the deficit which now has reached $20 trillion. even though people have big hearts and say people should have healthcare for all, in our system right now, it is flat out unaffordable. and isn't the free market part of the success our healthcare system has with the cutting edge drugs,
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experimental drugs and best doctors and surgeons? >> we lead the world in cancer care because we are so inknow available. what we are looking in here is preventative medicine, primary care. we need to focus on getting america healthy again while we are making it great again. that's one thing our healthcare system needs to do. by just giving everybody healthcare coverage that doesn't equate to healthcare. we need to reform our system with tort reform and really focusing on preventative medicine and then we worry about the insurance marketplace. we do need a public option. if you want to combine medicare and medicaid, the v.a. system, indian health services, combine that allow our high risk patients to buy into that public option. but keep this very strong, private marketplace. that's how we are going to continue to be -- to lead the world in innovation. if you get away with that, it stops. brian: the insurance industry would actually be destroyed in a single pair system. an example of how it is going with obamacare, not many people are discussing that because of the
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republican failure to repeal and replace. anthem a private company insurer is about to pull out of 9 of the 14 states they are. in they can't do it? >> they already said they are pulling out of nine. they are saying potentially two more if they don't get cost sharing reductions. that's true they are not making a profit. whether we do a temporary stop gap to fund them to keep it going until we figure out how we are going to fix healthcare? i'm not sure. they will have to deal with that in washington. brian: who is interested in the socialist democrat? who is in the 70's and never accomplished anything legislatively, backing him camella harris, al franken, corey booker and elizabeth warren, the so-called big stars on the democratic side, the party harass gone flying to the left. dr. nicole saphier, thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. brian: coming up straight ahead, firing back an espn host calls the president a white supremacist. the next guest who worked for that network says they
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♪ ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert. 15 marines are hurt. 8 of them in a burn unit following a training exercise at camp pendleton. their amphibious assault vehicle caught fire on a beach in san diego. at this hour six marines remain in critical condition. and training turns deadly at fort hood in texas. a shoulder killed as a black hawk helicopter crew practiced medical evacuations. the soldier's identity is
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still unknown. boast of those in training exercises. and a teenager opened fire at a high school in spokane, washington, killing a classmate and injuring three others. sam strahan tried stopping the suspect before he was shot dead. a school custodian is being credited with finally stopping the rampage, ordering the shoot tore surrender. he warned friends he would, quote, do something stupid this year. he is in police custody now, but they have not named him. brian: all right. 5 minutes before the bottom of the hour. the white house firing back after this espn host attacked the president as a white supremacist and barely gets a slap on the wrist. >> i think that's one of the more outrageous comments that anyone could make and certainly something that i think is a fireable offense by espn. steve: a fire shalaablea fireab. #fact my comments on twitter
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expressed my personal believes. my regret is that my comments and the public way i made them painted espn in an unfair way. my respect for the company and my colleagues remains unconditional. ainsley: here to react is nfl player jason see horn. hey, jason. good to see you. >> good morning. ainsley: what do you think about her i'm sorry i'm not so sorry. was she apologizing this? >> i'm not going to try to thinking out what she is doing. i know from a standpoint when i was working for espn the last six years. i know when i a d. a lot of things with fox and hannity and o'reilly and they came to me and said listen, we would like if you curtailed some of those things from our standpoint we don't want the viewer to have to take side. we want the viewer to tune in to espn for sports not politics. we don't want you to think of political analyst but a sports analyst. i said all right. i will curtail that something very profound to all of. that will do not tweet anything you wouldn't say on
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air. these are two things that were part of the mantra at espn that have now been debunked in one week. steve: yeah, no kidding. jason, that was espn telling to you tone it down. brian: wow. steve: how about the fact that hey she made these comments on twitter it wasn't that long ago that curt schilling who also was working at espn made comments about the north carolina bathroom bill and he got fired for his twitter comments. >> we can sit here and dissect the comments all day long. the problem i have here is espn is a sports and entertainment network. so when you think about it stands for entertainment sports programming network. neither one of these are entertainment or sports. so when i, as a fan and a viewer tune in to espn i don't want politics and i don't want to look at a person and have to think politics. i understood when they asked me to curtail some of my political aspirations. when i see it now it's like whoa, wait a minute, you told me one thing and run a program one way and yet, here you are completely
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contradicting yourself. i want sports when i tune to espn now the lines are getting blurred a little wit. that's what they have to clarify more than anything else. brian: entertainment should be the same way. if you want someone to watch your movie you don't want 50% of the country being told you don't matter or should be diminished. espn came out with this statement: the comments made on twitter from jemele hill regarding the president do no the represent the position of espn. we have addressed this with jemele and she recognizes her action actions were inappropriate. she did not walk anything back and she also got a pat on the back from collin kaepernick. so, in a way, they could be looking at this as something that's going to actually help her show because a lot of people didn't even know it was on. [laughter] well, i mean i'm not going to get into those things. i'm just going to say. this the problem you run is we have free speech. we have to face the repercussions of free speech. sometimes it comes back to bite us in the butt.
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i don't know where this will lead to. as i said, the difficult thing is you are now painting yourself to a certain demographic. i don't think about sports as a certain demographic. i think about sports all people. ainsley: the way it looks to most americans is because curt schilling had conservative views. he gets fired. this girl doesn't and she gets to keep her job. it looks like they are playing sides. i don't know. i don't want anyone to lose their job but it just looks that way to the public like they are choosing a democrat vs. a republican. >> it's definitely hypocritical. i'm not saying it's not. i'm saying they have chosen to back one person's free speech over another person's free speech. i'm not saying it's not hypocritical. hey we have that opportunity to speak our mind when we want to and outside of it we also have to face the repercussions of that speech and right now i don't see any. brian: jason, can you still drive your kids to school or have we blown that up? do you have to get somebody else? >> are you kidding me? i have plenty of time. they are not even awake yet. brian: don't use us as the
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excuse. steve: he will be in the carpool lane before you know it jason sehorn thank you very much. >> absolutely. steve: what do you think about that email us at friends@foxnews.com. coming up in a couple hours the president will witness first hand the path of destruction left by hurricane irma in the state of florida. a live reporter on the ground there. ainsley: plus, superman's new job, protecting illegal immigrants but comic gets political. brian: stand back, everyone. i will handy this. happy birthday to our friend and shark tank star robert. he is 55 years old and, boy, is he rich. ♪ ♪ endless shrimp is back at red lobster. and we went all out to bring you even more incredible shrimp and new flavors. like new nashville hot shrimp,
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brian: the president is up. is he always up early. is he tweeting and reacting to the news that he continues to make and really changing the narrative in washington. for example, here is one. president trump says this: no deal was made last night on daca. massive border security would have to be agreed to in exchange for consent. would be subject to a vote. the wall, which is already under construction, is in the form of a new renovation of old and existing fences and walls but will continue to be built. steve: so what he is talking about there, if you are just joining us, last night the president and nancy and chuck sat down in the blue room. they had chinese food along with a total of 11 people. and as we reported and the president's tweet seems to indicate that this was true. the president and democrats agreed to work toward a deal on daca in exchange for new border security. some democrats have come out and said the wall is not going to be part of it and the white house has pushed back. all we know is the president says no deal done. but as we said earlier, they are working toward a deal.
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ainsley: you know the phrase we agree to disagree. nancy tweet out yesterday we agreed to agree. we agreed to agree on an agreement about the dreamers. brian: that's a lot of agrees. i find this fascinating because the president's critics are now taking full shots at the wind. they can't figure out what he is up to. he is bringing people together. is he changing the narrative. you know what? i actually think he is enjoying him of it is he job for maybe the first time. steve: this is what a negotiation looks like. brian: this is what he said about daca. does anybody want to throw out good, educated accomplished people who have jobs. some serving if the military? really? [laughter] brian: game on. steve: that proves is he sympathetic toward the dreamers. what is he doing is what they should have done in the first place barack obama enacted this by executive action rather than by law. and instead the president has said to congress you have six months, do something about daca. it looks like they could actually wind up doing
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something about it in six weeks. brian: in fairness to president obama, congress did nothing. so they wouldn't even entertain it and bring it forward. so he went and did something john podesta urged him to do and start writing executive orders. ainsley: last night he was working on damascusca. in a few hours donald trump is going to head down to the storm ravaged areas of florida to witness the devastation left behind by hurricane irma. steve: plenty of devastation to view. the investigation comes as the feds launch an investigation into a nursing home where 8 people died in super hot conditions after the storm knocked out their air conditioner. brian: the governor was beside himself yesterday. i'm sure you were, too. blanchard with the latest. >> president trump and the first lady are expected to land here in fort myers a little bit later on today. they are going to meet with first responders and those here on the ground. now this comes just after about two weeks since the president's toured the hurricane ravaged area in
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texas. now today the first couple, as well as the vice president, will be meeting with first responders as well as those who have lost just about everything to irma both here and in naples. this as power outage problems continue. on the southeast side of the state, police are now deaths of 8 elderly patients as a criminal case. more than 100 seniors rushed out of that facility after it lost power and airconditioning. the governor, rick scott, saying he will aggressively demand answers on how this tragedy happened while others are just trying to find their loved ones. >> i want to know -- living. noble they just say to come and find a place for -- >> here in fort myers we would show you just my left here there are cars parked all in front of this national guard building. we are not pointing our lights at them. what we noticed is there
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were service members actually sleeping in their cars. it really shows you, brian, steve, ainsley, how dedicated these guys are. steve: no kidding. lauren blanchard live in fort myers. the president headed your way. thank you very much. ainsley: i can't get over the story. 71 to 99 years old. that's terrible. steve: a lot of people don't have electricity and it could be a week or two in some spots. ainsley: missouri state senator who said she hoped for president trump's assassination formerly condemned. the missouri state senate overwhelmingly voting to screen shurna rhea chapelle nadal for this facebook comment last month which was later deleted. she has apologized but says she will not resign. legislators could still exexpel her down the road in the future. chelsea manning has a new job at harvard. manning will serve as a visiting speaker at the prestigious kennedy school. she was released from prison in may after serving seven
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years. president obama commuted her 35 year sentence. this 11-year-old is bringing his lawn chair business all the way to the white house. he sent this letter to the president asking the president if he could mow the west wing's yard. he not only got the job but his business now is booming. look at that signature at the bottom. how cute. >> i would like to announce that frank from falls church, virginia will be here on fry day. >> people want me to mow their lawn. it's very growing. ainsley: this is a live look at the white house where frank will help crews cut the grass in the rose garden tomorrow. brian: does he know the size of this lawn? steve: it's 11 acres. brian: oh my goodness. steve: i think i heard that the park service is going to assist him and he will do just a portion of it. ainsley: just the rose garden? so adorable. steve: good job. brian: i hope he has an edger. i hate when it looks sloppy
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on the edges by the fence. ainsley: we will tell him that in the movie "the mountain between us" boarded the flight as total strangers but when their plane crashes into the utah wilderness they will need each other to survive. >> look, yopghts to die up here because you are too scared to take a risk. >> someone is looking for us. >> pilot didn't file a flight plan. nobody knows where we are. we are all we got. me and you. steve: it's all about survival. let's step into the fox light. >> just like television u. steve: michael camara who was put to the test at the bear grill survival academy. >> that's right. when you think outdoors, you think of me. with that said, i was paired with a total stranger like out movie and put to the test u in the new movie the mountain between us kate winslet rely on each other to fight their way back to civilization. >> the pilot didn't file a
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flight plan. nobody knows where we are. we are all we got, me and you. >> we are working with the academy right here in the cat skills to pretty much simulate that sort of situation. >> my partner marie and i had to learn the skills to survive. >> we can go three weeks without food. three days without water. and three hours without cell phones. >> with that in mind we sent out to build our shelter from basic supplies like a rope and a tarp. next we had to get our fire started to boil water and cook our food. >> she did it. it takes a woman. >> every day items albeit some odd can be used to gather the most important thing, water. >> surviving safely. don't get me wrong i love a bronzo better than the next guy but a bit much for me. >> tastes like chicken. in times of survival you
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have to congress core many fears and i certainly have one, including heights. when you are strapped in that hannerness with a rope in your hand off the side of a cliff there is only one way to go, down, 100 feet down. now when you are strapped for food, you can find the new -- even the creepiest crawlers, yes, like spiders. [cheers] oh my god. >> as for the overall bear growth experience i'm glad did i it but certainly glad it's behind me. mountain between us appears nationwide on october 6th. >> i'm not going to die. not today. steve: and he survives. >> with a glass of chardonnay. brian: what does he eat? >> whole tarantula. cold, crunchy.
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steve: until you ate the bug it looked a lot like being in the boy scouts. >> i survived that hairstyle. i don't know what the heck i was thinking with that. brian: weren't there any squirrels? [laughter] brian: chipmunk or something? brian: a spider. brian: never going to get o'er that dinesh dues den d'sou. >> that man judge andrew napolitano here to weigh in next. all rise, here comes the judge. ♪ i fought the law ♪ and the law won ♪ when it comes to heartburn, trust the brand doctors trust. nexium 24hr is the number one
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♪ steve: well, our heads are spinning. president trump's refugee travel ban getting another shot as the supreme court temporarily restored travel restrictions on six muslim majority nations until full agreements are heard next arguments that is to say next month. ainsley: what does that mean for the future of this controversial order. here to explain is fox news senior judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano. >> i wish i could predict the future and answer that question but nobody knows. when the travel order came out, this is the second travel order, it absolutely banned anybody from those six countries coming. in a position, that in my view, is constitutionally sound and legally sound. the supreme court said well, we're going to open that up a little bit. we're going to allow people who are bonafide relationships. steve: whatever that is. brian: grandfather. >> good observation, steve. because justices thomas alito and gorsuch said a who are we to rewrite the
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president's executive order and b what does bonafide relationship means the judge expanded it and the ninth district expanded ten go. the supreme court shrunk it down to what the hawaii judge said all blood relatives, job offers, offers to give speeches and lectures, offers of admission to. brian: how many refugees are being slitted to give speeches. >> i don't know the answer to that question. here is the bitter irony of this. the oral argument before the supreme court is on october 10th. the order expires on september 30th. it will be moot. by its own terms it ends on september 30th. after all of this, this has been up and down and up and down to the supreme court three times in the past four months. the supreme court may very well punt and say there is no order anymore so we're not going to hear this. brian: sarah huckabee sanders came out and said james comey and his conduct he should be possibly prosecuted. is there a problem with that? >> yes. if he did everything that the white house has accused
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him of doing, at best he violated justifiable department protocols. i see no criminal. brian: on the memos from the president's meeting? >> since he is not in the justice department anymore. he was famously fired, nothing can happen. brian: it was a private conversation. >> yes, yes. brian: with the president. that's okay. >> yes, it is okay. because he did not reveal. as far as we know. i haven't seen these. i don't know anybody that has except pointing the wrong way of professor at columbia did not reveal anything that was designated by the government as classified. so, look, i don't blame the white house for wanting to throw some mud on comey. he is potentially an adversarial witness against the president and his people, but there is no crime here. brian: hillary is throwing mud. everybody is throwing mud at comey. >> is hillary still around? [laughter] at that book signing. brian: she was an hour late. took 22 seconds. steve: racism is as american as baseball.
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the outrageous liberal banner put on tv. we will tell you about that coming up. ainsley: power of prayer. max lucado on why you should look to the bible to help you calm your anxiety. that's the biggest problem among women, at least, anxiety ♪ i got to have faith, faith, faith ♪ baby ♪ i know you're asking me to stay ♪ say please, please, please don't go away ♪ you
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ainsley: from mother nature's wrath stresses like finances and worrying about your family, americans are dealing with an overwhelming amount of anxiety. steve: tell me about it but our next guest says you can find help in the bible. the author of "anxious for nothing, finding calm in
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chaos," best selling author and pastor max lucado. >> good morning. good to see you both. i think anxiety comes with life. i just don't think it has to dominate our lives. but you know we live in the most anxious generation. anxieties measured and united states is the now the most anxious nation on the planet. ainsley: we're reading the stats this morning. number one issue for women is anxiety. number one issue for men alcohol and drug use. stress related ailments are costing our country $300 million a year people on xanax and valium skyrocketed over the last 15 years. then i read psychologists are reporting now the average high school kid today has the same level of anxiety as the average zit patients back in the 50's. your book, the timing is perfect, especially with all the hurricanes, all this political unrest. so why did you decide to write it now. >> there is a sense that the world is out of control.
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i read another statistic the other day college kids go off to college tighter than egyptian mummies, just wound up. i have sensed a level of anxiety just as a pastor but seeing these statistics made thee think we have got to find a way to help people talk themselves off the ledge and trade their chaos for some calm. steve: well, as it turns out you had in your home the handbook on how to do that, it's called the bible. from philippians it is written do not be anxious about anything but in every situation by prayer and petition with thanksgiving present your requests to god and the peace of god, which transcends all understanding will guard your hearts and your minds in christ jesus. >> isn't that a great promise? it's not just a peace from god but is the peace of god, the very peace that characterizes heaven can be exported i and deposited when our hearts. ainsley: max, have you four tips. what are the four tips?
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>> first i think the apostle paul when he was writing this letter was helping us deal with anxiety. he gives four ideas. first he says to celebrate god, rejoice in the lord always. we make a big deal out of god, rather than focus on our problems we focus on god. steve: notice the first letter in that column calm. aren't you clever. >> ask for help. say lord i need help with this particular problem. we leave it with him. don't take it back. we do this with gratitude and thanksgiving. then he says now meditate on good things. rather than focus on the negative. focus on the positive. celebrate, ask, leave, meditate, c-a-l-m. steve: calm. >> there is a power in specific prayer. it's wonderful to say god i need help today. it's even better to say god i have an appointment at 2:30. i'm really worried about it and get specific about it. steve: new book is called anxious for nothing. max, thank you very much.
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ainsley: if you are in san antonio, go to his church. steve: still ahead on this forecast dinesh durs, jason chaffetz and sarah huckabee sanders ♪ parodontax, the toothpaste that helps prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood
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steve: the president of the united states invited them over to the white house. they ended up having dinner. ainsley: they talked about trade and healthcare. brian: the president is up and he said no deal was made last night on daca. massive security would have to to be agreed to on. would exchange for a consent. >> those who have lost just about everything to irma. >> bernie sanders introducing a bill to introduce a single pair healthcare system. >> i equate it to watching oprah winfrey she is like you get a house. you get a house. the difference is she can pay for it the united states government cannot afford it. >> boiling over in a maryland sanctuary city that just gave illegal immigrants the right to vote.
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>> it was painful to listen to some of the really irrational arguments that were made. >> this idea of fake news the press corps wants to attack republicans, attack conservatives, undermine our attempt to have a constructive dialogue and i think it's a two-way street. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ rocking and a rolling in the u.s.a. steve: you are listening to kiss. we have gene simmons joining us shortly. you can actually own a chris volt. a volt of all their good stuff. brian: is there any bad
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stuff? come on, that's the tease. steve: you tell me, brian. ainsley: what is in the vault? white face payment? steve: all their work. they are coming up. we also have sarah huckabee sanders. we have got the sheriff. we have got you. ainsley: and we have the tweets from the president at the taupe of the hour, if you are just waking up the president last night had dinner with nancy and chuck the minority leaders of the senate. he calls them nancy and chuck. we found humor in that. he sat down with them last night at the white house and they had chinese food. they talked about tax reform, immigration, infrastructure and healthcare. nancy pelosi tweeted she made a deal with him on daca. steve: right. but there was no wall included. the president of the united states wanted to make sure everybody understood that perhaps not accurate and, in fact, he tweeted this out this morning. no deal was made last night on daca. massive border security would have to be agreed to in exchange for consent would be subject to vote.
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the wall, which is already under construction in the form of new renovation of old and existing fences and walls will continue toen built. ainsley: continue to be built. that means the wall is being built right now, according -- brian: absolutely. different places where there is a wall. different places where a fence needs to be tripled or repaired or extended. that's what they are really getting down to. the president has been down at least three separate times to examine different portions of the wall. so it's going forward. i'm just amazed at how things have changed in the last two weeks. steve: why? brian: since the president came back. he was never really away. they were working on the west wing. sings the president was back in washington and congress returned, nothing is the same. the president is moving more in a way in which he ran his company. he is bringing people together. when you do a deal, it doesn't necessarily have to be i win, you lose. and that's what the president has always been about. and this way he is saying, yeah, republicans are in power. they are not able to deliver. and the fact that the
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democrats aren't playing in at all does not play to our best interest as a country. ainsley: you are absolutely right. i think that harvey is helping him, too. because that looks great that he is going down there. is he passing this tax relief bill. giving the folks the help that they need. guess how he did it? he had to go to the democrats. looks good they are working together as a team. makes the republicans in congress look really bad, however. steve: it was a republican plan to begin with. remember, when the president became president he had as his chief of staff reince priebus. reince was there to essentially get stuff done in congress. nothing got done in congress. the creed dough inside the west wing was we don't need the democrats to do anything. we are going to do it with only republican votes. that didn't work on the affordable care act and other things. so the president essentially has said if i can't get deals done with the republicans, i'm going to reach across the aisle and see if i can pull in some democrats as well. and then when he made the determination that they were going to do something about the dreamers and have congress do it, that's when he started to deal in the
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democrats. and, in fact, he looks very sympathetic to the dreamers this morning in another series of tweets. ainsley: he says: does anybody really want to throw out good, educated, and accomplished young people who have jobs? some serving in the military. really? they have been in our country for many years through no fault of their own, brought in by parents at a young age. plus, big border security. brian: and to do that isolated wouldn't make much sense. to do it comprehensively where we almost had a deal of three or four times over the last 15 years i think makes a lot of sense. i think there is a sense that things could get done in congress. what i also think is important, too. is when chuck schumer evidently and nancy pelosi told their constituents, the democrats don't deal with this president, let's just wait it out and make him look bad, that wasn't working for them. so now by them having dinner with the president twice in two weeks, they are freeing up all those people who were scared that the powers that be were going to force them, fundraising wise or primary them not to deal with the president. now they're dealing with the
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president. that free's up people to start trying to get things done. however, i steve mnuchin talking you, who is the treasury secretary talking to bret yesterday says i want to get democrats involved. but, if not, we can also do the 51 vote simple majority. we're not giving up the one party 51, 52 votes. we are giving democrats an opportunity to do what joe manchin said, get 30 and 30. get all buy-in. this way if you are bought in and have you more incentive to make it work rather than blow it up and run against it. steve: they can do legislation through the reckoreconciliation until the ed of this month. and then they have got to have the 60 votes. a top presidential aid told the "new york times" that the president has always been open to passing daca without the wall. it has not moved -- they have not moved from the wall as a priority. and just to prove that with the 11 people around the table last night, who made the case for the wall? it was the chief of staff john s. kelly.
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ainsley: why wouldn't the democrats want the wall, steve? because it's keeping the illegal drugs, illegals out of the country. people climbing that wall, the majority of them are doing things -- they are bringing drugs into the country, correct? brian: ensign sater. i know times you don't need a wall you have the rich or some environmental issue that's legitimate. they were on the same page to build 700 miles of wall. they even had the money for it. it is because the president ran on it and they don't want to see him get a victory. the president is making them play. he keeps rolling the ball back and say i'm not going to let you sit on the sidelines and yell. i'm putting you in the game. get busy and be republican tia because you are not just going to sit there and say this president doesn't want to deal with me anymore because he clearly is remember what he did for lunch yesterday. he was with the problem solvers. he had a bunch of democrats over in the house. and he wanted to hear he wants to hear what they want in tax reform. ainsley: some of the people crossing the border are doing it with ill intentions to bring illegal drugs in
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our country. i don't understand why they wouldn't want the wall to be placed. if you want to come in the country and you want to bring education, you are want to be a knowledge mall person or a good person and then come to the u.s., then do it the right way. steve: sure. but the democrats' point of view is they would like a clean bill regarding daca and the republicans would like increased border security. and the democrats say we can keep the border secure with a lot more money and you look at the fact that over the first six months, something like 70 perlsz of the illegal borde crossings stopped. it's not just the democrats hospital the wall. there are a lot of really powerful republicans who are not making it a priority. i don't think paul ryan really wants to build the wall. i don't think mitch mcconnell really wants to build a wall. but the president has got a core of the people who got him elected who said, look, he promised the wall. and we think we need the wall. could you do it through increased border security? probably, but, you know, a lot of people look at it as a promise is a promise. brian: reagan passed
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comprehensive immigration reform and was promised border security. he gave them amnesty and he never got the border security. so we want to make sure as a country, not a party, as a country that we get it right this time. i'm going to add one other thing to the daca conversation because it's been brought up to me. since i play soccer a lot of people from other countries play soccer and i get a chance to talk to people who do the paperwork right. pay a lot of money and fees and wait patientfully a very broken system to get immigration papers and be able to vote and be an american citizen. they are not sympathetic to the daca kids. ainsley: right. brian: i'm doing it right. it's taking forever and these guys were brought here by their parents illegally. why do i have to get behind them in line? steve: well, it's the plate we have got right now. there are 11 million people who are in the country illegally. what do you do with them? do you send them all back? they would never officially signed the guest book when they came. in somebody has got to figure out how to do it. the vice president would like comprehensive
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immigration law. ainsley: what country are they going to go back to. brian: who is more important the people who did it the right way or the people who did it the wrong way. ainsley: of course the people who did it the right way. these kids their parents made the choices, not them. steve: look, a bunch of laws were broken. we have the system that needs fixing. and ultimately that's what the president of the united states would like to do. come to a solution. president barack obama had a chance when he had a super majority to do something about a comprehensive immigration reform when they controlled the democrats did the senate and the house. and they chose not to. fast forward, here we are today. now what do we do? brian: he went for healthcare instead. steve: he did. and here we are. ainsley: here are more headlines this morning starting with a fox news alert. 15 hurt 8 of them in a burn unit following exercise at camp pendleton. amphibious assault vehicle caught on fire on a beach. six marines remain in critical condition. training turns deadly at fort hood in texas. a soldier killed as black hawk helicopter crew
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practiced medical evacuations. the soldier's identity is still unknown. moments ago president trump tweeting and leaving now for florida to see our great first responders and to thank the u.s. coast guard, fema, et cetera. a real disaster much work to do. vice president pence and the first lady will join the president to meet with victims of hurricane irma. irma knocked out power across that state, including at this nursing home where, listen to, this at least 8 people died because of the blazing heat. they didn't have airconditioning. the facility in hollywood, florida now under criminal investigation. brand new disturbing details about a string of bizarre health attacks on u.s. diplomats in cuba. the a.p. reporting that some americans are waking up in the middle of the night hearing loud grinding or high pitch noises like a sonic boom confined only to their hotel rooms. some victims now have problems concentrating or recalling specific words. their spouses were also affected. racism is as american as
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baseball. those are the words on that banner right there displayed by several protesters on the outfield on the wall during last night's red sox game. escorted out to the booze of surrounding fans. they were inspired by the black lives matter movement. they wanted to remind everyone that racism like baseball is fundamental to american culture and history. brian: that black lives matter also put a tarp over the jefferson statue at the university of virginia statue he founded. so they are on a roll. steve: i wonder, they do have pretty good security at that particular stadium. i wonder hour they got something that big in. ainsley: not sure. brian: they usually pat you down. 20 minutes after the hour. growing trend in cities across america. letting illegal immigrants vote. dinesh d'souza has something to say about that next. ainsley: who doesn't love a pug? got to tell it you was on the taxpayer's time. you got to hear this one.
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steve: david clarke, jason chaffetz and sarah huckabee sanders all coming up. hope you stay with us. ♪ ♪ ♪ your body was made for better things than rheumatoid arthritis. before you and your rheumatologist move to another treatment, ask if xeljanz is right for you. xeljanz is a small pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can reduce joint pain and swelling in as little as two weeks, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz, and monitor certain liver tests.
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what's the story behind green mountain coffee and fair trade? let's take a flight to colombia. this is boris calvo. boris grows mind-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee. a farmer's market.ve what's in this kiester. a fire truck. even a marching band. and if i can get comfortable talking about this kiester, then you can get comfortable using preparation h. for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it.
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steve: now to the state of maryland where an important question is being asked, can you vote if you are not an american citizen? well, in the city of college park, the answer is now yes. this week the city council there voted in favor of allowing undocumented citizens the right to vote in local elections. and it turns out it's not even the first city in this state to allow it here to weigh in is conservative filmmaker and author of the big lyden measure d'souza. good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: this is not unique to college park because there are a number of localities in maryland that have voted to do this. what do you think. >> to me it makes no sense because of what citizenship actually means. citizenship is a kind of bargain citizens of a country. compact with certain rights and responsibilities. for example, why would i fight for my country and die for you if you wouldn't be willing to do the same for me. this is a very reciprocal
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deal. the whole idea of letting noncitizens vote and shape the governmental process that falls outside the social compact. steve: sure, dinesh, you know the argument they make is look these people are in the country illegally. they are paying taxes. they are impacted by the schools and emergency services. they should have a say in it. >> i don't think they should being noncitizens they need to go through the citizen path and get the protections of being a citizen and benefits of being a citizen. essentially what they are claiming is and you can see why the democrats want. this the democrats' interest in these people is their votes. so the democrats are more keen to get their votes than they are to get to send them to school or do any other things for them that's the main political problem. steve: ultimately though, if that's what the people want and the town council voted on it, that's what they get. i have got to ask you about the news of the day. that is there was this big
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dinner last night at the white house. it sounds like they have agreed to go forward to work on a deal toward daca. and the president says it has to include increased security for our nation's border. but there may not be a wall involved in the funding in this particular thing. what do you think about that? >> i think that at the end of the day trump pay be moving to a position in which he says that the wall is symbolic. in other words these are the five ways we are going to be enforcing immigration. these are the ways we are going to be securing the border. steve: we don't need the wall to keep us safe. >> i have electronic wall. i have 10 kay ways to check identities. all kinds of enforcement within the country. it may be there is a way to work this out that doesn't require a wall. steve: are you okay with that? >> i'm okay with that. steve: there a lot of people who voted for him okay, we're going to finally have the wall. >> i think what people voted for is. this they voted for a principle. the principle is we can't fix domestic immigration policy without stopping the
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porous border in which in a sense people keep streaming across. trump has got to demonstrate that he is willing to be firm on that. steve: all right. his new book is called "the big lie" dinesh did you see thank you for joining us. >> thank you. steve: he makes him home in houston. and did you not have damage, right? >> happily not. steve: thank you, dinesh. they have broken some of the biggest stories now the "new york post" page 6 is coming to a tv near you. the hollywood insiders breaking those stories have a breaking baby story. what is it? find out next. ♪ this is our roof ♪ and we can't stop ♪ and we won't stop ♪ dynamic performance,
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brian: all right. time now for news by the numbers. first, 50%. that's how many millennials would give up their right to vote in the next two elections to get their student loan debt erased that according to a survey by the personal finance web site credible. next, number one, how to tie a tie is the most popular how to question that people search on google. wow. the company says searches that start with how to have risen 140% since 2004. that's because we don't talk to each other and ask advice or directions anymore. and 200,000 bucks. that's how much state taxpayer money former arkansas state employee just admitted to embezzling. she used the money to buy personal items, including a tuxedo, just like this one for her pug. at least she admitted it. now for something totally different. here is ainsley. ainsley: thank you, brian. it is the most iconic gossip column in the nation. now the "new york post" page 6 is coming to a tv near
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you. >> well done, from the heart of new york, the city so nice they charge you twice what you pay for rent anywhere else. we have got an amazing cast of contributors all with their own unique inside info or the latest hottest celebrity breaking news. ainsley: page six tv lodges on monday. page six tv contributors. thank you so much for being here for us this morning. carlos, where was your face? left you out. you are all contributors. what will you be doing? going and gathering the stories. >> these fabulous guys are actual real journalists. so carlos is on page six. >> reporter for the column. >> i work for variety. so i'm a reporter for variety i was based in los angeles and moved out here. like buzzy said we are journalists, we have real sources, real stories we're bringing to the show. we are not just reading the
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headlines and taking a deeper dive ms. bevy knows everybody. more importantly everybody knows her. she is bringing some good stuff to the show. >> yeah, i'm queen of the scene as they call me. and i get the chance to really kind of dive deep and give you a little more insider information. ainsley: when we were talking in the break room or green room steve and brian were on air. they were teasing the story about the baby. what's the baby news you are breaking on page six. >> lovely serena williams. she had her baby and debuted the baby in the hospital. there were complications but she sex extremely ecstatic about her new daughter and she revealed the photo. ainsley: that's great. one of the type of topics that you will be talking about on the show. and then also anthony weiner and his wife uma they have been all over the press. headlines because they are in divorce court right now. >> seemingly very friendly divorce court proceedings. smiling. not exactly canoodling which is one of my favorite words
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in page six cross talking and all of that. >> whispering. >> they are asking for everything to be private. they don't want all their mess, their dirty laundry aired because they have a child together. >> because they have had so much of it aired. ainsley: right. >> we have covered this extensively, obviously, and what was interesting about it when they were in court they were sitting there whispering and they seemed like they were kind of reconciling, really. the judge told them this is the best thing for their child. ainsley: all right. well it airs at 7:00 on monday. >> that's right. ainsley: you're also going to have an audience. >> yeah. we have a live study yesterday audience. ainsley: folks at home want to find out to be in the audience is it in new york or l.a. >> it's in new york. >> page six tv.com get tickets to sit in our audience. we are in national syndication. check your local listings. here in new york we are at 7:00 but we are airing everywhere. ainsley: is it an hour show or 30 minutes. >> 30 minutes.
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>> get in and get out, babe. ainsley: i wish you the best. how exciting for your careers. >> make sure to keep your nose clean so we don't have to put you on page six. >> please don't. please don't. all right. coming up next on the rundown, o.j. simpson spent years fighting to get out of prison and he is already missing life behind bars. plus, former sheriff david clarke.
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♪ how you like me now ♪ how you like me now ♪ how you like me now ♪ remember the fire. steve: how do you like him now? he was the milwaukee county sheriff. now he is a spokesman for america first action and author of "cop under fire" sheriff david clarke. good morning to you. ainsley: good morning. steve: what are you doing now? >> a lot of everything. but i'm having fun. and i get to go out and talk
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about the things that are important to me and unencumbered with the elected office thing, certain restrictions that you have. it's going to be good. these things that i'm passionate about. brian: how hard was the decision for you to make to leave. >> oh, it was easy. brian: why? >> nearly 40 years in law enforcement, four decades, and 15 of those as sheriff, you know, at some point you realize that somebody else's turn to do that. you don't observe those seats. and there is more to life. there is life after. steve: um-huh. >> and to so these opportunities presented themselves and i said i can't let this go by. i can't pass. just smiling more these days. [laughter] ainsley: we wanted to talk to you about things going on in the news as well. have you this host on espn who is calling the president a white supremacist, she tweeted about it and kind of came back -- she didn't apologize but basically said she is sorry for putting espn in the middle of all
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of. this that's all she is sorry about. but you know what? i know her first name is jemele. i don't watch. i have seen her before. she is a back bencher. okay. sometimes when you are in that situation, you do or say things to bring attention to yourself to try to lift you up to where the stars are on that show on espn. you know, this term racism is thrown around so much, it doesn't even have any meaning anymore. it's been so diluted. everybody sr. a bigot. everybody is a racist. everybody is a fas fascist. come on now. when sports starts to seep into politics it's disastrous. you can see that because you hear idiotic statements from people in sports. i will tell you a little about espn. when rush limbaugh said something people thought was provocative when he was talking about the quarterback on the philadelphia eagles. brian: donovan mcnabb. >> curt schilling got fired for saying some things. steve: on twitter. >> i'm not saying she should
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be fired. that's a situation for espn. when they start covering for stuff like that and then other people say things that aren't p.c. all of a sudden they get -- ainsley: looks like they are choosing sides. >> sure. brian: i will give you another example. glenn beck was on our couch when he was here and he made a statement about the president and some of the things he did was racist. he has since walked it back. there was an international firestorm with that comment. but, yet, this white supremacist comment comes out and people glaze over it and it took sarah huckabee sanders to bring it up yesterday to say i think it's unacceptable. >> there is former things with former president barack obama said were kind of tamed. you could contort it into something racist or whatever you want to say and everybody from the left came down on that person. and. brian: and they should though. because you shouldn't be calling the president that as you shouldn't be calling this president that. >> well, you know, there is a double standard on the left. we all know that. ainsley: sheriff, you know
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the president well. he is a white supremacist? do you think he is a racist. >> furthest thing from it he is the one of the most generous individuals i know especially when it comes to black community. 1994, don't hold me to the year, he received an award in new york city for contributions to the new york city. he was honored with muhammed ali same night and rosa parks. now is he a bigot? this is nonsense. this is a game that is played to label these individuals to put them on their heels to denying no i'm not a racist. when people say those things you are this or that i go whatever. let's have an intelligent conversation about things that matter. you just push that stuff aside. i think president trump is doing an excellent job. brian: give you high profile sat there with darryl strawberry yesterday. george foreman i got a chance to know him i back him 110%. mike tyson i have known him as a businessman, as a fighter. still friendly to me even when i was down on my luck. i like the guy. does that not matter? >> it doesn't. as a matter of fact, you get
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in trouble if you say things like that you know in support of him. it's one of the things that i'm up against in terms of the left because i do support this president for a lot of reasons. but in terms of his as a person no he is not a racist. it's so far from the truth it's unbelievable. but this is what we have got to do is get out there and defend it. and i think america knows. they know where his heart is at. steve: let's recap sports television just talk about sports. >> that's why people tune. in they want to be entertained by sports. steve: meanwhile let's talk a little bit about this. out at u.k. berkeley tonight, ben shapiro, the conservative speaker is going to be making a speech. you know, some have suggested they cancel classes because they are expecting trouble. that's the guy they are worried about right there. brian: right. he is scary. steve: the worry is, sheriff, that there have been other speakers out in california colleges where it has amped up to the point where there has been
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violence. and in sometimes the cops have just stood by and let them throw stuff. >> you know, and it's a shame. because you put these law enforcement officers out in that situation to defend life and property. this is no -- through no fault of the law enforcement officers but it's through the fault of their. brian: leadership. >> the administration and then the university as well. they won't give them the resources to maintain law and order. when there is talk about suspected trouble, you know, they suspect trouble, it's being brought by the left, all right. and these goons with antifa or whatever, until government shows the will and antifa knows, this they don't have the will to push back on us. steve: government? antifa? >> no, i'm talking about when i say government, i'm talking about the university. steve: okay. >> and i'm talking about law enforcement. they know they don't have the will to push back against us. and as long as they know that they are going to continue to push that line. so at some point these goons
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when they bring the violence, i'm talking, i want to be clear about that, once they bring the violence they need their ass kicked. brian: how about wearing masks. throwing bike racks through starbucks windows. how is that allowed? >> that's a good question. some states have laws that prohibit that type you can't mask yourself. that's done out of cowardice and of course they know they are going to bring trouble. they don't want to be identified. you know what the intent is from the beginning. you have to have those resources and that plan that strategy once the first bottle is thrown. the first bring is thrown. the first officer or citizen who is attending that event is injured. all bets are off and then law enforcement has to use any and all reasonable force to protect life and property. steve: shut it down. all right. sheriff, wide ranging conversation. thank you very much for joining us. brian: great to see you. >> my pleasure. steve: is he smiling again. ainsley: we have more headlines for you. vandals plan who wrote our national anthem a monument
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in baltimore honoring francis scott key covered in spray paint with the words racist anthem and slave owner. calling it unacceptable. vowing to charge whoever is behind the stunt. this comes weeks after a christopher columbus statue was vandalized in baltimore. after nine years behind bars, o.j. simpson might find it really hard to leave the prison. according to tmz simpson's lawyer says his future release will become bit irsweet after becoming good friends with inmates and being commission everywhere of the softball league. o.j. was smoofd to his own cell for safety reasons after being granted parole in july. he is expected to be released early next month. a suspected burglar messes with the wrong grandpa during a stand offwith police in southern california. listen to this. >> i told him i come out because you are going to come off my roof. i'm coming up there. i'm coming to get you. ainsley: i love him. the man wouldn't get off the 83-year-old will ford burgess roof. after five hours he had
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enough. he climbed up there on the roof. pushed the suspect off. cops were waiting. and they put him in handcuffs. ainsley: there he goes. isn't that great? okay, the secret to a long lasting relationship could be as simple as dating? brian: yep. ainsley: a frog instead of a prince. >> look at you. look at me. >> come on. you didn't blow it. i think maybe -- steve: super bad. ainsley: new study finding relationships are likely to succeed when the woman is with a less attractive man. researchers say women who have good-looking husbands are more likely to object says over exercising and dieting to stay looking well. brian: that's an interesting study. ainsley: those had your headlines. steve: who knew they were studying that. good to know. meanwhile janice dean who is happily married joins us from the streets of new york city. janice: thank you for that, steve. hi, sean. let's take a look at the
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maps real quick. we have a storm i know we have been following jose for how long now? jose might actually make an impact on the northeast next week. can we look at those maps real quick? there it is the tropical models. well, you know, it's probably going to stay offshore. a couple of the reliable forecast models are saying, you know what? we need to watch this. mid-atlantic, northeast, new england. wednesday into thursday. that is not going to be fun. listen, where are you from? where are from you. >> texas, big foot. >> and you. >> llenas, texas. >> you weren't affected by harvey. >> no, ma'am. >> you are going on a cruise ship. >> yes. janice: when. >> saturday. >> where. >> new england up the new england states. japan january you are going to be watching my forecast, right? janice: give me your phone number and i promise to keep you up to date. stay tuned because i think we have a special guest coming up. i'm so excited my heart is going thump thump thump thump thump. brian: jason chaffetz. janice: jason chaffetz as steve: gene simmons and
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whoever is in that police car. brian: there he is. steve: that's the special tease. brian: oh my goodness. i was going to surprise you by coming up but no. janice: how are you? do you want to do weather with me. >> there is weather today. usually there is weather. we hope there will be weather tomorrow. janice: you are hired. >> that's right. janice: can i be with the band? >> [inaudible] janice: you don't know me that well. >> all right. settle down. ♪ ♪ heaven's on fire ♪ i got a fever ♪ requent heartburn. requent 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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ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert. one soldier is dead and 15 marines are injured after a series of military training accidents this week. brian: you know now military leaders and lawmakers are calling for change.
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steve: former navy pilot and fox news contributor right there leah gabriel has details. what happened? >> you know, guys, basically what happened is more than a dozen camp pendleton marines were hurt when their amphibious assault vehicle caught fire. it happened on a beach near san diego. 8 of them were taken to the burn unit. officials are still investigating what sparked that fire. and earlier this week one soldier was killed at fort hood. that happened as a black hawk helicopter crew practices tied medical evacuations there. now these are the latest in a growing list of military accidents which many military leaders are now blaming on budget cuts. senior officials have testified military is not receiving proper funding. on the senate floor yesterday senator john mccain said 185 service members have died noncombat accidents in just the past three years and it needs to stop. >> we are killing more of our own people in training than our enemies are in combat. we're not only gambling with
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our ability to fight and win wars, we're also gambling with the very ability of our troops to operate safely during peace time. >> and mccain's comments and the recent training disasters come as president trump declares tomorrow national pow/mia recognition day. that means tomorrow the black and white the powmia flag will be flying over a number of buildings, the white house, the capitol as well as post offices to honor those. brian: i remember when sequester first happened. i was at the super bowl and they were supposed to do a flyover. they said we can't do it now. why? what happened? they said because our budget has been cut, we have to do less and less training and that would be considered a training exercise, bucket cuts stopped the training. that really hurts, right? >> you are talking about the budget control act of 2011 that eventually implemented sequestration in 2013. i remember the myanmar air show was cancelled that year. i remember oh shoot our air
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show has been cancelled. i have had senior members of the military pull me aside and have off-the-record conversations about this. they have been saying on capitol hill that these budget cuts and also the way congress is appropriating money is causing them to not be able to train the way they need to. not be able to modernize the way they need to. and to not be able to give our service members what they need to fight and to do it safely. steve: it's tragic. we have the money for equipment and for the people. we just can't show the people how to run the equipment. >> right. you know a lot of it comes down to the way this money is being appropriated, like i was saying. they are using continuing resolutions. what that means is the military can't plan. it has to run on last year's budget. steve: that's washington now. >> it's washington now. now we are seeing these training incidents and accidents. people are dying. senator mccain said that 42 service members died just this past summer in training. he says in the past three years, four times as many accidents have killed service members in training than in combat. this is a huge number. it's just really out of
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control at this point. we need people to know because we need congress to do something about it. steve: you are getting the word out. >> thank you. steve: meanwhile, coming up president trump making a bipartisan push to actually get something done in washington. former congressman jason chaffetz here to react coming up next. brian: he came here as illegal imgranted and today he is one of the most iconic rock stars in the history of rock and roll. kiss front man gene simmons is here. >> i'm good looking. steve: he is going to sit on our couch. ♪ ♪ shout it ♪ shout it shoat shout it out loud ♪
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♪ i want to rock and roll all night ♪ and party everyday ♪ i want to rock and roll all night. steve: you may not be able to rock and roll all night and party every day with gene simmons but the rock icon is giving fans a chance to spend some one-on-one time with him. ainsley: it is all in celebration of his 50 years in music business. brian: good job. stick with it. has great dental. here to tell us about it is the co-founder of kiss himself gene summons. >> good morning, everybody. i want to personally thank you for getting me at at zero o'clock this morning. brian: we have been up three hours before that. >> i have been around a long time. kiss award winning group of all time in all categories recording industry association. so blah blah blah blah blah. it's time to give back. so because i'm -- i make a good living and stuff and the fans are the ones that put me here, i'm going to do something that's never been done before, ever.
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brian: okay. >> this is literally the largest box set of all time, ever. this weighs almost 40 pounds. it's right under 3 feet. brian: trying to open it before. >> it was empty. >> i see what you did there. steve: you have a bunch of songs nobody has ever heard you get a book. you get a poseable action figure. >> this is a 50-year record that includes 150 songs that i have written over the years and recorded that have never been released, a few songs with bob dylan. bob and i sitting around strumming chords, that's in there three van halen tracks. steve: how much is that set. >> this is $2,000. just take a breath for a second. brian: takes two iphones. >> two iphones. anywhere at any time that's ever done i'm going to pay for own flights. if you are in finland or in moscow, i'm going to get on a plane and deliver your box
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set to you. steve: to everybody who buys it. >> anybody who buys it, i will go to you. now, by the way, pragmatically speaking that means a general area if you live in the north pole let's pick something a little closer. and if there is only one person in zimbabwe. we need a few people in the area. i will fly in at my expense and hand deliver it. brian: how many are you can you sell. >> we are only doing a few thousand. there is a gene simmons vault.com. it's not in stores. not online. not anywhere. steve: greenous. ainsley: i'm fascinated with your story. your parents were immigrants, correct? >> legal ones, yes. ainsley: where were they from? >> my mother and my father were from hung gray. hunhungary.not too long before . steve: there we are right now showing a picture. >> i came here when i was 8
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and a half years old with my mother. and she had only a few years before then been in the concentration camps of nazi, germany. she survived thank god. steve: have you thought so much about immigration reform. what do you make of donald trump's wall. >> first of all it's president trump. steve: thank you. >> some people like him, some people not. but you have to respect the electoral college and the people of america and they duly elected the man. by the way for everybody watching fox news if you have a point of view and you don't agree, that's great. don't fight with each other. let's all be americans. next time there is a vote, vote your conscience. by the way the founding fathers were smart. you can draw the curtain and it's nobody's damn business who you vote for. in the meantime. steve: are you talking to hillary clinton? >> i'm talking to anybody who argues. you can argue all you want, but, remember, the bad guys hate us all. they don't make a distinction between you. brian: thank you. and we are good guys. steve: check out the brand new the vault gene simmons. >> it's gene simmons
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vault.com and i'll bring this to your home. janice: will you come to long island. >> sure. steve: first customer. ladies and gentlemen, jason chaffetz is about to buy the vault. >> i love it
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hey, you every talk to anybody about your money? yeah, i got some financial guidance a while ago. how'd that go? he kept spelling my name with an 'i' but it's bryan with a 'y.' yeah, since birth. that drives me crazy. yes. it's on all your email. yes. they should know this? yeah. the guy was my brother-in-law. that's ridiculous. well, i happen to know some people. do they listen? what? they're amazing listeners. nice. guidance from professionals who take their time to get to know you. the toothpaste that helps 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 parodontax toothpaste. ♪ can we at least analyze can we push the offer online? legacy technology can handcuff any company. but "yes" is here. the new app will go live monday? yeah. with hewlett-packard enterprise, we're transforming the way we work. with the right mix of hybrid it, everything computes.
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brian: the president is up, and he's tweeting. massive border security would have to be agreed to in exchange for consent. steve: as we reported, the president and democrats agreed to work toward a deal on daca. >> this president has done more for bipartisan in eight days than obama did in eight years. >> today the president is going to head down to the storm-ravaged florida to look at the damage left behind by irma. >> marines were hurt when their assault vehicle caught on fire. investigators are still looking to see what sparked that fire. >> a brooklyn, maryland city gave a right to vote.
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>> the democrats want interest in these people is their votes. >> i said that in 2000. i think it needs to be eliminated.
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steve: so swedish. you know what was on the menu last night at the white house, the first topic was china, so they had chinese food. you weren't invited because you're no longer a members of congress. what do you think of the president the pull in let's make a daca deal? >> i think the president is doing a masterful job of triangulating the democrats and the republicans. schumer and pelosi showed they can deliver votes. mitch mcconnell, paul ryan, not so much. the president, you know, wants results. and we need a wall. we've got to be able to lock down that border. we have to deal with the daca situation as well. ainsley: the president tweeted no deal was made last night on daca. border security would have to be agreed to in exchange for consent. would be subject to vote. the wall, which is already under construction in the form of new renovation of old and existing fences and walls will
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continue to be built. >> what you need to understand about this is that the president doesn't need congressional authority to build the wall. it's already there. he needs funding, so it's solely in the camp of the united states congress to fund what he promised to do. he'll build it, but congress has to stand up and build it. dealing with daca, that does require congressional action, and the president is right on this, and that's why he wants to actually get some legislation in place. brian: so a couple of things are happening right now. you know, we have this study that 65% of republicans want to see the president deal with democrats. all right? even though you wouldn't think that, talking to people, that's what the american people want. however, what's the mood when you call up your friends that used to work with? are they nervous about what this president is doing? are they mad about what this president is doing? >> they want results too. i think they're frustrated that they're not voting on these types of issues. but, look, they haven't produced on health care. they haven't produced on tax reform. they haven't produced what
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they said they were going to do and today they leave, and they don't come back for 11 days. it's been exhausting doing nothing. steve: why would you leave a child like that. >> yeah. i got tired of winning. brian: that's leadership; right? that's leadership. leadership is the one that decides to leave town for a week. leadership says it's okay not to get anything done. >> well, look, they put a calendar out a year in advance and people plan around that but there are things on the plate. we still have to deal with the debt ceiling and the budget and everything else. they should be doing that now. steve: congressman, has -- former congressman, has the wall almost become symbolic? i mean, i know the president ran on it. it was a mantra. but at the same time border crossings have gone down dramatically, and you were talking about how the wall exists in certain forms and there's money to go to it, has to come from congress. but do you think we're going to get to the point where maybe they won't build a wall? >> look, what donald trump has done has proven that he has the political will to enforce the current law. i mean, current law says that we should have an entry exit
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system in this country. guess what? we don't have one, but we need one and congress needs to fund that. so it requires congress. so when they punt the budget and the appropriations for 2018 and into the future, then the president can actually execute on that. so it's more than symbolism, it has to be done. he better reject amnesty. he better live up to what he complained on. but i think he also does want to deal with daca. brian: how disappointed are you that the president's attorney general not pursue any investigation into the irs? >> it's one of the greatest frustrations i have. i don't see any prosecutions on irs, not on the "fast and furious," i didn't see the change on hillary's e-mail, i didn't see the change on the learner, i didn't see any of this. i hate to say this, but it's essentially the same, and it's the deep state that didn't change. and my guess is if i sat with president trump, they would be agreement. but when you go talk to senator sessions who is now attorney general sessions, nothing's changed.
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and that's the reality of it. i don't know it's one of the great frustrations. look, there are many reasons i left congress but that was one of them is that they were actually not going to open up what they should be doing and lady justice has its blind fold, why aren't we implementing the law and prosecuting people who have clearly broke the law? ainsley: you brought up hillary clinton, and she released her book on tuesday, she was on a network. last night she was talking about the electoral college. listen to this. >> do you think the electoral college should be abolished? >> i said that in 2000 after what happened to the 2000 election with al gore. we've moved toward one person, one vote. that's how we select winners. i think it needs to be eliminated. i would like to see us move beyond it, yes. steve: somebody who won the popular vote but not the electoral college, that's exactly the answer you would expect to get. >> yeah. it's only been in place a couple hundred years
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and maybe she forgot that. she won california. congratulations. but 30 of the 50 states went for donald trump. it was overwhelming, and that's the system that we have. she also said many times leading up to the election whatever the result is, she was going to live by it and that she was actually campaigning against donald trump accusing him that he was going to have s sour grapes when he lost. didn't turn out that way. brian: speaking of sour grapes, he left with none of it. might be running when senator hatch retires from utah. do you think that's going to happen and do you want that to happen? >> i certainly think that's going to happen. the word on the street senator hatch after an honorable years probably will not run again at the age of 82. mitt romney will clearly win that race. anybody would be crazy to run against mitt romney in that race. but he very well might. i think he wants a national voice and when an accomplishment to be governor of massachusetts and a senator
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of utah. brian: sure. interesting. steve: something else in the news this morning. susan rice told house investigators, and it has already leaked out to a news outlet or two that she unmasked three top trump officials when she was in a position of power in the administration. jared kushner, steve bannon, and also michael flynn because apparently they met with the crown prince of uae, and they did -- the state department didn't know about it. >> this is getting to be a much bigger story than was originally purported by susan rice herself. remember, she went on national television and said nothing to do with this. i don't know what you're talking about. yeah, she knew exactly who jared kushner is. she knew exactly who these people are. you're dealing with the president's son-in-law, and you say that you've never done any of this and now suddenly it's revealed? steve: does it look political? >> it does look political. this happened a few months before the election. this was not something that they would regularly do at their level. and when you also look at the
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secretary or the ambassador of the united nations, she's also got some explaining to do. that's a good way to say it. brian: samantha powers. real quick, bernie sanders had the stars of the democratic party talking single pair yesterday. kamala harris, cory booker, elizabeth warren, al franken all say single pair. even president obama know that wouldn't work. >> let's have the people who run amtrak and tsa run health care. come on. are you kidding me? this is a losing proposition. they'll get 20% of the base and get excited about it but it doesn't work. brian: it's not where the american people are. >> go g show me you can run amtrak and tsa, and we'll have another discussion. it's not going to happen. steve: time to put on the apron. he will be cooking with his wife downstairs in about half an hour. ainsley: i want to know the difference between a regular pancake and a swedish pancake. >> you're going to find out. they're nice and thin.
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steve: julie likes to cook? >> and i like to eat. steve: perfect couple. steve: thank you, congressman. brian: i'll see on radio later. you don't have to dress up like that. you look good. nine minutes after the hour. i would like to talk to ainsley -- ainsley: here's headlines for you. brand-new disturbing details on what what's being called a string of attacks on diplomats in cuba. woke up in the middle of the night hearing loud grinding or high pitch noises. all experiencing a variety of symptoms including hearing loss. speech problems and problems recalling specific words. the problems reported late last year. in charge of setting off bombs in new york and new jersey will make a final court appearance. his name is ahmed, and he is accused of detonating a pressure cooker bomb in new york last year hurting dozens of people. also accused of setting
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several pipe bombs in new jersey, including along the course of a charity bomb. the uc berkeley campus is bracing for speaker, it happens tonight and the university is preparing for the worse by equipping officers with pepper spray. this as administrators are offering free counseling for anyone who feels threatened by shapiro's conservative views. he's the host of the ben shapiro show called out the university for labeling him a white supremacist. >> you feel like you need counseling for me speech, you probably need psychiatric health in some way. antifa calling me a white supremacist. i'm the alt-right project. ainsley: this after other conservative speakers were forced to cancel their event. this 11-year-old is bringing his lawn chair business all the way to the white house. frank sent a letter to the
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oval office. look at his cute signature there. he did this last month if he could mow the west wing's job. he not only got the job, but his business is now booming. >> i would like to announce that frank from a virginia will be here on friday. >> they want me to mow their lawn. it just started growing. ainsley: this is a live look at the white house where frank is going to help the crew cut the grass in the rose garden tomorrow. and those are your headlines. steve: that will be our shot of the morning tomorrow. ainsley: yes, it will. brian: i hope he has a rider tractor. steve: that push mower. that's him at work. ainsley: it's just the rose garden. not the whole white house lawn. brian: do you know how many times you have to empty that bag? steve: he's going to the president. it has to look good. brian: 12 minutes after the hour, president trump about to head-on air force one to see the destruction left behind by irma. we are on the ground there next. steve: and remember the state lawmaker who said she hoped for the president's
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steve: a fox news alert. president trump about to leave the white house for florida to see firsthand the devastation left behind by hurricane irma. brian: all right. the president tweeting a short time ago there and leaving right now for florida to see our great first responders and to thank the u.s. coast guard, fema, et cetera, a real disaster. much work to do. ainsley: lauren is live in fort myers, florida with the latest down there. lauren. >> yeah. good morning, steve, brian, ainsley. we are awaiting for the president and the first lady to head down here and take a look at the damage as well as the damage in naples. now, this state is in recovery mode as people are surveying the damage to their homes and businesses. people in the keys still trying to get their roads back open, despite the lack of power, gas, and other basic he was i necessities.
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now, the guatemala has been helping out local authority and many of the hard-hit places in florida have been getting supplies to those who need it. this as the president approved individual fema aid for 37 counties in florida. >> as i said yesterday, was pleased that members all sides of the aisle came together last week under his leadership to deliver critical relief about those affected by the storms, and he has continued that bipartisan and unity this week. >> and more than 20,000 troops and five navy ships are descending on florida to help with relief efforts and bring fuel, food, and water to residents rebuilding their lives in the wake of hurricane irma. now, along with the first couple, the vice president and first president lady are coming down here to thank all of the first responders working tirelessly to get people's lives back to normal down here in florida.
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steve, brian, ainsley. steve: all right. lauren, thank you very much. i think the president is running a little behind schedule. he was supposed to leave the white house at 8:00. has not left yet. takes about 20 minutes to leave joint base andrews and then two hours down to florida. ainsley: up late last night. steve: i guess so. is an obama-era policy causing chaos in the classroom? our next guest says "yes," and your children could be at risk. brian: plus, she's a trader and stole america's secrets. now chelsea manning has a new job. guess what? teaching.
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ainsley: some quick headlines for you. chelsea manning has a new job at harvard. the transgender former shortage serve as a speaker at the kennedy school. released from prison in may after serving seven years. president obama commuted her 35-year sentence. and martin shkreli is behind bars. a judge declaring him a danger to society and revoking his $5 million bond after the convicted former pharmaceutical ceo offered to pay $5,000 to anyone willing to grab a strand of hillary clinton's hair during her book tour. steve. steve: that's crazy. thank you very much, ainsley. meanwhile, the u.s. education announcing an overhaul for obama-era policy for schools for campus results. >> the era of rule by letter is over.
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through intimidation and coercion, the failed system has clearly pushed schools to overreach. steve: okay. but our next guest says there's another obama-era policy needs to go. this involving disparity and chaos in classrooms. here to explain, fox news contributor and executive director kevin jackson. as you can see right there he's joining us from st. louis. good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: so you say there's another obama-era regulation, and that involves discipline. it's not law, it's just what the president and his white house wanted to institute. tell us about it. >> right. so they call this a civil rights issue and so that's why the obama -- back in i believe 2012 -- 2014 wrote a policy around it, and essentially it said that there's too much discipline being dealt out in schools is
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being disproportionately done so. so, for example, blacks are 300 more times likely to get disciplinary action than whites. so, again, the interesting part is that they make it sound like it's a civil rights issue when, in fact, it's more of a -- you know, it's a societal issue. you know, these kids don't have parents. they go to school undisciplined. because of lack of supervision at home. and there's an instance here in missouri, for example, there's a school called micds who brings -- it's a very prestigious school, predominantly white kids graduate congressman and senators, you know, that's who has attended, and they bring in young, black kids in terms of diversity, and then they let them do things like this, steve. and then they say, oh, you didn't do your homework, it's okay. oh, you showed up late, it's okay. and it's quite insulting to americans that they don't want to discipline. what's happening in chicago, for example, they -- once they reach a certain quota of
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disciplinary action against black kids, they say to the administrators don't suspend or do any discipline to black kids because we've reached the quota in incidents in terms of per capita of how many black students. so it has gone far beyond the pale and of course what happens in the spillover of society kids are being allowed to be disruptive in school and not let kids learn. steve: sure. jason riley wrote an article in the wall street journal similar to your sentiments. let me ask you that. if this is currently because they have sent out this dear colleague letter during the obama administration that essentially the guidance for the land, what should they do? >> well, they need to get to the core problem, which is the lack of parent principally supervision, you know, for these kids at home. now, that's a big, you know, bigger issue to deal with. but you certainly don't address it by saying. okay. you can be a miscreated school. my son was in an inner city
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school here in st. louis, and we're talking 3rd graders who were cursing their teachers and hitting their teachers. one kid i can tell you specifically his mother dropped him off at school and took off to work and the principal just took him up to his office and had him stay there, and then they didn't even continue with the three-day suspension. so they're letting these kids become discipline problems at an early age and the unfortunate problem is once these kids become teenagers and even young adults, they are worse discipline problems. steve: and they're not doing it because they have hit an arbitrary quota. a crazy story, and i'm glad you brought it to us. kevin jackson, thank you for joining us from shrews. thank you very much. >> my pleasure. steve: so what do you think about that? e-mail us. meanwhile, president trump just spoke as he prepared to depart to florida. there you can see marine one and one of the back up choppers heading to joint base andrews in.
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sarah huckabee sanders going to join us live to talk about that and more and so much next as master sergeant. they really appreciate the military family, and it really shows. we've got auto insurance, homeowners insurance. had an accident with a vehicle, i actually called usaa before we called the police. usaa was there hands-on very quick very prompt. i feel like we're being handled as people that actually have a genuine need. we're the webber family and we are usaa members for life. usaa, get your insurance quote today.
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brian: president of the united states as promised is at joint base andrews, and he is going to be heading down to florida to see for himself the damage and what we're up against as we try to rebuild that state as well the keys and the caribbean. but the president did have a chance to speak before he came aboard. ainsley: that's right. he said a few words about daca because last night he had that dinner nancy pelosi and chuck schumer, nancy was saying we agreed to agree on a deal. and he's saying not so fast. we never made a deal. steve: he said close to a deal, perhaps, but he said as we heard from the tweet earlier, massive border security would have to be agreed to for consent, which would be subject to a vote. wall would come later because
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it said the wall, which is already under construction, new renovation of old and existing fences and walls will continue to be built. we're waiting -- there he is right there. indeed. brian: and he's going to be with melania, the first lady, and he's going to be doing exactly what he did in texas. and i think that he's going to find there's certain areas that avoided it, and there's others that are going to need immediate help. steve: sure. he was down in houston what? about ten days ago. but going down to florida, it was personal for him. he owned i believe four houses in florida. he's a floridian. a big resort the mar-a-lago. the plan is this: they're going to take the two-hour flight down to fort myers and then receive a briefing on the relief efforts. the vice president will be there. and then they're going to chopper over to naples where the president is going to meet with people impacted by
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hurricane, the vice president is going to be there along with him as well. and turn around and head back home this afternoon. ainsley: looks like he was talking to someone there about to board air force one now. they traditionally leave the white house in marine one, the helicopter, and then of course go to joint base andrews and get on air force one. brian: we'll see how much money rebuild and how quick they can get that money. steve: hold on. they're going to turn and wave. thank you. brian: okay. and normally, that would be a dinner but what's going on with these monuments, i bet it will be a little bit intense. and joining us now is the press secretary sarah huckabee sanders who has always seemingly busy and taking on challenges, especially after last night. ainsley: including talking loudly over that beeping in the background. brian: which means something is backing up. >> if i answer the wrong question, i can't hear you because they're apparently building a building behind me this morning. ainsley: you know, i've noticed i think melania was wearing flats.
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all the mainstream media is going to be happy about that, sarah. my gosh, that was quite a controversy. >> it's sad the little things that we care about. we have big issues like tax reform, health care, the economy, and instead they're worried a lot more about footwear. i think that's probably one of the big problems that is not being discussed in america today, so i'm glad the mainstream media was pointing that out. brian: sarah, maybe you could help us out. there seemed to be a very cordial meeting last night the bipartisan meeting and the day before was the big six meeting. two days before that. and then the bipartisan meeting with some of the moderate democrats. but last night afterwards it seemed senator schumer and leader pelosi are on separate pages from the president about what was accomplished. were you surprised they came out and said we reached a deal abruptly on daca and there's no border wall decision? >> look, the president is clear about what his priorities are all along. he went into last night specifically wanted to talk a lot about tax reform, which they did.
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schumer and pelosi came in wanting to talk a lot about daca, which they also did. the president has been very clear in what his position is and wants to get a deal done. he wants to do that with daca but also to include massive border security and inferior enforcements. that was the message he relayed last night. steve: okay. so just to be clear, the democrats want daca, there could be a two fer there. but the wall is going to be in something else; right? >> the wall is already going through extensive renovations. they're already building sample walls. that part is already moving forward. that's going to continue. the president's 100% committed to the wall. the deal with daca, they want to include border security. the president wants to make sure that massive border security and interior enforcement is part of any deal on that front. steve: so, sarah, when you're saying the wall is already under construction, there's not going to be any new wall aside from what already
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exists? >> no. again, like i just said, they're already building example walls to determine best places. but there's already extensive renovations taking place. these efforts are going to continue. additional things will continue on the wall front, as well as massive border security and inferior enforcement that will be part of any daca deal as the president tweeted this mornin morning. ainsley: sarah, have you talked to the president about what that girl at espn said he's a white supremacist and then later said she's sorry for putting espn in that position but didn't retract about what she said. >> i haven't had a conversation about that, but i think that espn should probably stick to sports and leave the rest of the news to other networks because that clearly isn't something that i think they're very good at on that front. steve: well, you said yesterday it was a fireable offense. >> and i stand by those comments. i think it was highly inappropriate, and i think espn should take action. but i'll leave that up to them to decide, and i'll stay focused on my day job.
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brian: sarah, some of said that you see the president multiple times on a daily basis that this is more him. he doesn't -- he's a conservative republican, but he likes to do deals. how has -- what happened that makes the president so emphatic about getting democrats involved in this piece of legislation? is it something besides the failure of repeal and replace? >> look, this is a president who wants to do things to help america. that's what he was elected to do, and he wants to work with democrats and republicans to move this country forward. he wants to do massive tax cuts. massive tax reform. that's one of the biggest priorities he has moving into the fall. and that's what he wants to talk about, and he's willing to work with both democrats and republicans to make sure that gets accomplished. brian: but he's doing it in a way he had seven months prior. i'm sure you agree with that. and it seems fundamentally more true to his character than maybe the other way. >> the president is the ultimate deal maker. i think we have seen him in the course of his personal
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life and in business make big deals and be extremely successful in that front. and the american people want to see him continue to be successful in deal making as we move into the fall past this massive tax cut. biggest one in history. huge tax reform. simplifying the system. making it more fair. helping the middle class. growing our economy. that's this president's focus, and that was the reason he was elected and hopefully republicans and democrats can come together and help all push those things forward. steve: sure. sarah, we just saw air force one, it has started to rumble toward the runway. they're going to be taking off very shortly. there's the picture of the 747 right there. the story out there that reince priebus essentially was at the white house that helped get stuff done and the idea was while he was there was that they're going to pass anything through congress, they were just going to do it with republican votes online. well, he's gone now, and it looks like that mantra is done. is that accurate?
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>> look, again, i think this president is left focused on the who is getting the credit for it. but is more focused on making sure americans get help. the president wants to push forward some very ambitious legislative agenda that includes tax cuts, that includes infrastructure, ideally we get something done on health care. this is a president who doesn't like for things not to get done, and he's willing to work with anybody that's serious about accomplishing real things that help america. steve: and you're talking about infrastructure because that is the one thing that chuck schumer and he was at the dinner last night is emphatic about. he has said in the past i will work with the president, as long as it's about something real, like infrastructure. >> absolutely and this is another thing that the president is very passionate about. it's somebody who knows how to build things. he's built some of the biggest and most successful real estate companies in the world. he knows how to build, how to create, and he certainly wants to put some of those practices
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into the infrastructure of this country and make sure our roads and our bridges are much stronger and better than they've been in the last several decades because they've been totally ignored. ainsley: well, senator, he's really working with democrats as far as having dinner last night with nancy pelosi and chuck schumer and a few nights ago with the three republicans and three democrats. if he needs the 60 votes to pass tax reform down the road, he's going to need more than the three or five democrats. is he able to get any more? have to take word because this five have met with him and agreed to his policies? >> this president is willing to sit down with anybody who is serious about actual tax reform and tax cuts, particularly those for the middle class helping grow our economy. look, we would love to see all the members of the house and the senate come together and focus on solving real problems. that's what donald trump came to washington to do, and that's exactly what he plans on doing for the next seven and a half years. brian: sarah, i know you have a ton on your plate.
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but one of the things that's bothering me is a lot of things about the cuba deal. they didn't do anything to deserve these relations. we reopened the embassy. at which time, we understand our state department staffers had been harassed and now we think they're being attacked with some type of sonic device that's damaging their hearing and their overall health. how come the white house hasn't spoken out on this? why are they allowed to get away with this? how much is he studying behind the scenes to do something about this? >> this is something we are certainly reviewing, certainly doing a thorough investigation trying to get to the bottom of it, and we'll continue to do that and certainly make sure that americans are protected and that this is done correctly and properly. but we've got to make sure that we get to the bottom of it and get some real answers, and that's what we're in the process of doing right now. brian: has the president responded to anything on this? has he shown interaction with rex tillerson about taking
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interaction? i don't think he was too enthusiastic about how the cuban deal went down as a candidate. could this be relations to end it entirely? >> look, i don't want to get ahead of where we are right now. we're in the fact-fighting part of this process. the state department is leading that effort, and we're certainly going to make sure that they are aggressively pushing forward, and we get to bottom of it. >> air force one about to take off from joint base andrews. hillary clinton was counting on being on that airplane, getting the keys back in november. she lost and, sarah, i know you know she's been on all sorts of channels talking about the reasons why she lost. yesterday, though, she made the observation that perhaps that the electoral college should be done away with because, you know, she won the popular vote. and as the president takes off in the 747, what do you think about that? >> i think hillary clinton, this is about the 900th excuse that she's given for why she lost, and i think this book tour has done nothing but prove to america they were
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right in the decision that they made in putting donald trump in the oval office and not hillary clinton. she has just reidentified all of the reasons that she was not going to be a good candidate and that she wasn't going to be a successful president, and that's why is they chose donald trump. he actually had a message. he was focused on solving problems, not placing blame, which is what most of her campaign was about. he had a message, and he certainly carrying that through as we move into the fall with a very ambitious legislative agenda. brian: sarah, real quick. the new york times lead story today says the president's dealings with steve mnuchin and gary cohn, they're diminished as they lead the tax push because he's been dismissive. is that an accurate portrayal of the relations with the president? >> not at all. these are the two people helping lead the effort on tax reform and tax cuts in this country. it's one of the president's top priorities for this legislative agenda and certainly something that they're going to work very closely on. and, again, they're leading
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that effort, and we're going to continue pushing forward and make sure that they're successful, along with the president. and democrats and republicans coming together to do that. brian: all right. sarah huckabee sanders, thank you so much. ainsley: thank you. have a great day. brian: more fox and friends in just a moment. we're cooking something kevin, meet your father. kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin trusted advice for life. kevin, how's your mom? life well planned. see what a raymond james financial advisor can do for you. there's nothing more important than your health. so if you're on medicare or will be soon, you may want more than parts a and b here's why. medicare only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses.
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brian: all right. president trump continues to serve lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. but what do small business owners and homeowners need from congress to succeed? ainsley: here to weigh in fox news analyst and host of the property man bob massie. hey, bob. we hear a lot about the go corporate tax rate, how much money this is going to cut from the regular taxpayer. but what about small business? what exactly do they need from the president? what do they want him to do? >> yeah. and that's a great point, ainsley because i do a lot of seminars for small businesses in this part of the country, and one of the things they were talking about as they keep talking about this corporate tax, the big companies, they're saying what
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about us? well, obviously, they're looking for as many tax cuts, more write-offs, and the big thing that's talked about with businesses and homeowners is capital gains. a small business is when they sale, they're paying large capital gains. if they're able to lower capital gains on real estate, investment properties, as well as businesses, it -- businesses will move. properties will sell, and they're very interested in that. and the last thing is they want this sentiment of bickering gone, and they want things happen. brian: and the market seems to be somewhat responding. one thing we understand that you put together a checklist, tax reform for business owners 101. more tax write wrightoffs, different tax structure and change your personal income tax as we just discussed. first of all, more tax write-offs. isn't that part of the complexity of the problems we've had since we redid it in the 1980s?
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>> yeah. brian, this whole thing is complicated because when you get into one area for more tax write-offs for small businesses, then it affects other areas. then you start talking about increasing the deficit as a result. but the small mom and pop. the small businesses, they're just bogged down with regulation, with, of course, the president has worked on. and also, there's been so many tax write-offs over the years, it has been taken away. they understand that it doesn't have to go to the extreme. but they want to be heard. they want -- they don't want to feel like the only people that's being conservative are the big businesses. give us small write-offs. give us other interest write-offs and help us be able to grow payroll tax issues, and that will help grow the business. more income, you grow the business. ainsley: you've talked to homeowners, and this is what they say they want. more capital gain tax, more tax write wrightoffs, reinstate mortgage tax debt relief act. >> yeah. that one is the one, ainsley, from a few years ago that whenever people were selling their houses on a
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short sale or it wasn't a primary residence, you had to pay income tax on that. and then the mortgage relief effort came out and said, no, you don't necessarily have to do that if it's a primary residence. that expired, which means that there a lot of homes out there that still have not basically been foreclosed on, believe it or not, in 2017. it, in fact, it short sold, the homeowner can't pay taxes on that. they need to do something to reinstate that on some level, modify. but that's still a concern because there's a lot of properties out there. brian: and that's the concern. bob massie, thank you so much. you can watch the property man 8:30 p.m. on the fox business network. meanwhile. ainsley: coming up next, jason chaffetz and his wife join us for cooking with friends. their secret to the perfect pancake. brian: but let's first check in with bill because he's hungry, and he's nice. >> good morning, guys. white house said the white house broke the law. did he? build the wall?
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we'll debate it today. will you get a tax cut? majority leader kevin mccarthy answers that question and lindsey graham wants to revive obamacare. he'll explain his bill live when we see you in ten minutes top of the hour america's newsrm . even a marching band. and if i can get comfortable talking about this kiester, then you can get comfortable using preparation h. for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. taking over 7,000 maria's steps each day.o, and she does it in any shoes she wants, with lasting comfort. only dr. scholl's stylish step has insoles that are clinically proven to provide all-day comfort. dr. scholl's. born to move. ♪ hey grandpa. hey, kid. really good to see you. you too. you tell grandma you were going fishing again? maybe.
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steve: earlier we were talking politics with him, but now he's back with cooking for friends with his wife. brian: chairman of the oversight committee here now. and his wife are here to impart some wisdom. ainsley: you rolled up your sleeves. >> i eat. she cooks. it's real simple in our house. >> one thing. crack the egg one-handed. here we go. >> watch this. >> so we're making swedish
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pancakes. and. steve: that's pretty good. >> pretty good? let's go. >> they're going to be a little bit more crunchy today. i hope that's all right. steve: so we're making swedish pancakes because you're swedish and the recipe comes from a great person. >> so this is my grandma johnson's recipe, a picture of her in cooking school in sweden, and i grew up on these. steve: look at that. brian: she was born in 1899. she passed away in 2000, so she touched three centuries, and she said she never, ever wore pants. steve: she was on a exercise bike wearing a dress. >> yep. tell us the secret. brian: i've ever heard in my life. three centuries. who can say that. brian: not wearing pants. steve: she never wore pants. ainsley: always cold. always going. always going. >> here you go. so this is really easy. so it's three, two, one.
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three eggs, two cpus of milk, one cup of flower. and salt. >> julie always gets this dressed up for breakfast too. steve: 20 seconds. >> done and here we go. >> they're nice and thin and roll them. you don't fold them. ainsley: it looks like a crepe a little bit. >> it looks like a crepe, but we call them swedish pancakes. steve: we're going to let them cook far minute or two and come back and taste them. >> extra shell. 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 parodontax toothpaste. ♪
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>> i'm already digging in. >> the recipe on "fox & friends." thank you very much, julie. run to the radio. they'll be joining us. >> see you tomorrow. >> bill: looks good. good morning, everybody. brand-new reaction coming in from president donald trump on a potential deal with democrats. that deal would shield so-called dreamers from deportation. he is en route to florida to get a firsthand look at the devastation left by hurricane irma. he will land in fort myers an hour from now. i'm bill hemmer. >> shannon: i'm shannon bream. president trump hosting congressional leadings at the white house last night. he tweeted this. no deal was made last night on daca. massive border security would have to be agreed to in exchange for consent and subject to vote.

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