tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News November 13, 2017 11:00pm-12:00am PST
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it has touched my heart, and it has given me resolve to fight harder. you give me this camera every night, microphone every day. i think you so much. laura ingraham is there. how are you? by the way, i love the new law on a cable where they try to silence your voice. >> laura: a sean, i have been trying to silence you for years. it hasn't worked. >> sean: you have to slap him around. go ahead. >> laura: no one has a chance against you. sean, thanks so much. >> sean: have a good show. >> laura: and good evening from washington. thanks for joining us. this is "the ingraham angle" ." let's get right into our top stories. breaking news out of the department of justice about a possible special counsel investigation targeting hillary clinton. in a letter obtained by
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fox news, we have learned that attorney general jeff sessions is directing prosecutors to take a closer look at the 2010 the sale of uranium to a russian veg company, and of the alleged unlawful involvement. his donation it to the clinton foundation amounted to a quid pro quo for hillary to sign off on a transaction, which gave them control of about 20% of america's uranium capacity, and according to a letter from the doj to the house judiciary committee, the attorney general is open now is a possibility of appointing a special counsel. it to look into the matter and other matters related to the clintons. and news comes ahead of mr. sessions highly anticipated testimony tomorrow, before the house judiciary committee. joining is now exclusively for reaction are two house republicans, one on the special counsel, commerce minute jim jordan of ohio, and representative met from a
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florida welcome to the endemic show, gentlemen. you asked jeff sessions to move forward on this. are they listening? >> yes, they are definitely listening. sessions considers appointing the second special counsel. we sent a letter on july 27, outlining why we think it is warranted, we met with attorney general sessions and at the justice department at staff on september 20th. so far, we have nothing, but it is amazing. today, we do an op-ed, and they have had a come-to-jesus moment, and now, there will be a special counsel moment. that is exactly what has to happen we think about the things that we have learned and how serious they are. the american people want answers, and we want to give them those answers. fiona let's go through the many issues. the myriad issues. we have the clinton foundation,
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we have uranium one, we have the way comey handled a potential indictment, and now announcing that's there would be no indictment. his process for going about this investigation, of not being present at important interviews, immunity deals struck with people like sheryl mills, what's among those many things -- again, our viewers has our swelling, what are the most concerning elements of those, given what you both know already about them? >> so many of the scandalous link back to the clinton foundation, it highlights that the american people are tired of this double standard, and that there is another set of rules for everyone else. we are six months into this investigation of donald trump and his team in russia. they have found nothing. but look at the treasure trove of information that continues to be found out about the clinton foundation, functioning, essentially, as a money laundering foundation, and that really ought to concern us. our uranium assets are precious. we are an importer of uranium eye. it is crazy to give rusher this access to our uranium it.
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but you have the very people who now are investigating president of trumpets involved in approving the sale, and then silencing the witnesses about this. it is crazy. we need a special counsel to go after the clinton foundation, and they are way too conflicted to proceed against the president. >> laura: it now, rosenstein would have to call for the special counsel, is that right? >> we will see. >> laura: it goes back to sessions recusing himself. >> we don't know how far that goes. he called it the investigation a matter, not an investigation. prior to interviewing secretary clinton before the investigation is over. he should have been fired a long time ago, but what did he do? he leaks a government documented to a friend, to the near times, and what was his goal?
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to create momentum for a special counsel? and who does that happen to be? his best friend, his predecessor, his mentor, robert muller. and not to mention the dossier. if this doesn't warrant a special counsel, what's the heck does? that is all we said, and there is an op-ed today, they said maybe we better answer congress. >> laura: congressman gates, what did it take so long here. i think a lot of us here who are big fans of jeff sessions, and i am one of them, i just find this to be curious. it is almost like anything that touches russia, everyone is afraid of touching. because you think oh, you are trying to cover up for some phantom collusion. you are trying to get to the tracks for trump. this doesn't go to national security, the integrity of the justice system, the credibility
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of comey and how he handled this investigation from the beginning. when i heard that he wasn't present -- unless something has changed, he was not present when hillary clinton was interviewed. how can he not be present? how can they have no notes of that? no transcript of her testimony? it happened on a saturday, i believe, fourth of july weekend, if my memory serves me correctly. >> it is absolutely ludicrous that he made the decision to start drafting and exoneration router before interviewing witnesses and interviewing hillary clinton, herself. your question is why did it take so long? and why do we have on the eve of jeff sessions testimony, a statement that they are open to a special counsel, rather than what do jim and i would like which is the appointment of a special counsel? it all goes back to the clinton foundation. jeff sessions, in his testimony, he says that he was recused in any matter connected it to the clinton foundation. there was no legal obligation for him to do that, but he did. there is no way to investigate
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the uranium one the deal without looking into the clinton foundation, filling out the slips, with millions of dollars in donations from the russian. so that appears to be the challenge. and we certainly cannot link to mr. rosenstein, because it is rosenstein's name on the signature block, stealing from congress and the american people, the very testimony ready to tell us about the bribes. >> laura: what do you make of the old obama until she's coming out yesterday? and you know, and various ways, various interviews recently, coming out and criticizing trump on his comments about putin and so forth. given the fact that we know that each of them have their own credibility issues and testifying before congress. >> i also think it is interesting, go back to the january sixth at 2017 that comey had with a trumpet, that he briefed him on the dossier. and shortly thereafter, someone leaks the fact that that took
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place, and it was leaks that it was about the dossier. who likes data to cnn? and it did to that to become the thing that legitimize the dossier so much that the press could then printed? and buzzfeed could print the entire dossier itself. those are the kinds of questions that we need to be asking. if a clinton finance democrat and national committee of finance at this research, if it was turned into an intelligence document, and if that was the basis for them getting a warrant to spy on america, if all of that happened, if our government colluded with a major party and a major campaign and in country, you are not supposed to be anywhere near that. we don't know if it did. but if there is a lot of evidence pointing in that direction. and yesterday's piece outlined a lot of this in the journal. all of this talk about this.
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>> laura: it was marched over to the justice department by john mccann, was it not? he marched it over there. i speak out they were getting parts of this throughout the summer, and then launched a counterintelligence investigation. we want to know this kind of thing, and we are hopeful that jeff sessions it will do this. it >> laura: i will let you guys finish this up, but don't you think that many people watching this -- everything -- e republicans want to go after the clintons, and the clintons want to go after president trump. they want to redo the election, and they want to show everybody that they were right. we never should have elected him, and then the people who do not focus on this, the dossier, uranium one, how do republicans proceed so that you all don't look like it is just another rich mic witch hunt in reverse? it's speak of the first thing that we have to do is have an equal standard. we need the same standard to apply to the clintons.
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>> laura: developing news in the alabama senate race, a fifth woman is now coming forward it to claim that judge roy moore that made sexual advances towars her when she was a teenager. we are a month away from the election, where he will appear as the republican party candidate. today, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell called on the moore it to step aside. they worst-case narrative comic scenario for the g.o.p. would be for the democrats to take advantage and actually win the seat in alabama. and it is increasingly likely that the senate will refuse to seat him, or expel him soon after he is sworn in. today, "the new york times" reported that the white house officials are actually considering scenarios where attorney general jeff sessions
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would return it to his old job in the senate. joining me now for a reaction it to try to figure all of this all out, is a republican strategist and civil rights attorney, along with chief correspondent for the "washington examiner" ." in this press conference today didn't really surprise me. i can't believe it took her this long to bring an accuser forward, but the facts did not sound good. the fax sounded awful. and your reaction it to them. a 16-year-old girl said that he forcibly assaulted her. threw her out of the car. and he sped away in a parking lot. where does this leave him? >> and she has documented evidence too. the signature in the yearbook is certainly a very awkward thing for a 30 something-year-old man to be doing. so i think she is credible. and on top of his a very weird statements to hannity a couple of days ago it -- >> laura: very incriminating
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in a lot of ways. >> i think so. while it is way past the statute of limitations, in the court of public opinion and politics, i think he is toast. >> laura: yes, it is a political situation, not a legal one. byron, does that affect the alabama voters? the woman is a trump supporter. she voted for trump appeared she is not a democrats activist. she didn't cook to the women's merge. she is a trump supporter. and this is decades ago. you cannot disprove it or prove it. but i thought that was not a good development, to say the least, for roy moore. >> the election is not until four weeks from tomorrow, so there is time for more stuff to come out. and if indeed these charges are true, it is very unlikely that it was done once and never again. so i think you are likely to see more. but the republican party is in a terrible mess here. i mean, first of all, the
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republicans are wary of trying to -- it is a special election. it doesn't have the kind of turnout of a general election. the governor doesn't seem to want to change the election. she has already done it once. >> laura: she cannot do it again. what would happen if she did that? could you then reprint balance? is not possible or not customers because the law says that it has to be sub 76 days before the election, so you could change things, get a different candidate on the ballot, but roy moore it doesn't owe anybody anything, so now what you saw today, and members of the senate, upping the ante, saying that we will expel him up. >> laura: gardener, also mcconnell, they are both establishment politicians. it but they can make his life miserable, and then in turn 2018 senate candidates, they are all going to catch the roy moore question. will that push him to say well,
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i don't even want to be with you people, let alone run this whole race out? >> the senate can expel a membe member, but they can't adjust to swear him in and then expel him appeared there would be due process involved. there would be hearings, witnesses, a long process. and it will be uglier by the da day. >> laura: as a civil rights attorney, you have done a lot of work and cases supporting trump supporters who have been attacked. he physically attacked at events. and you also represented a lot of women who have been subjected to the various forms of abuse. it does this type of revelation years later -- does that seem a politically time to to you? he has been out there for 30 years, in the public life. it is kind of interesting that it all comes out a month before the election. the timing of this is quite a stunning. >> well, both of things can be
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true, that's the timing is engineered by his political opponents. but it also can be true, and probably is, that these women have nothing to game dumb i can gain it by coming forward. it is humiliating him. you can see this with the glory of. >> laura: yes, there have been false accusations. the duke lacrosse case. the rolling stone case. what did those women really have to gain? >> but these women at don't know each other, and they are telling a consistent story, and even after this story came out about him being banned at malls. >> laura: at the mall cops apparently did not want him out to the mall. and they try to to and confirm this, but they can't confirm it, end. >> it is a long time ago, but -- >> laura: cruising the mall for kids is not good. >> what 32-year-old is a sign here books? that is just creepy. >> laura: byron, as a matter
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of pure politics at this point, if he decides, okay, i am done with this. i am separating myself. i am withdrawing, his name remains on the ballot. and then if he still wins, he probably won't, but if he wins, they then it declared the election no and void. however, i learned over the weekend, that they never passed rules governing the primary process, the actual rules, which is kind of a dirty little secret in alabama. so it is clear to mike unclear what it would actually be. would it be doug jones wins? or the entire election is to run out? >> and it could mean the governor appointing a another senator. at the original plan was for luther's range to serve in the senate, until november 2018. and there would be an election and then, but the last two years, this current governor wanted it to do it sooner, so
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now, all of this has had. >> laura: we have holbrook, very strong on immigration. a great conservative. we have gary palmer, who is a congressman in alabama. right on the middle conservative. there are a lot of people in alabama who could actually step forward. the former two-time governor, very influential in alabama. he is very well thought of. we tried to reach bob riley. he does not want to talk right now. everyone is kind of running for the hills. >> you have to remember that they may dial this back a little bit. >> if they elect this man, then they are going to have to respect of this. >> laura: the south does not like to be considered dumb, backwater, all of these stereotypes, they don't much
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like whether it is television host or anyone else what they should do in their home state. it is great to see both of you. thank you so much. and with sexual harassment and assault scandals rocking some of the top names, even the sum on the left are turning their attention it back to bill clinton. he has been dogged by sexual assault allegations four years. for example, today, on the liberal "atlantic" magazine web site. this is shocking. an article reads in part "feminists save the 42nd president of the united states in the 1990s. they were on the wrong side of history. is it finally time to make things right?" joining us now for reaction from arkansas, is one of bill clinton's accusers, juanita brodrick, who claims that bill clinton raped her. after all of these years, even some on the left are coming around to the idea that you should be taken just as seriously for your allegations as if someone represented by a
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gloria. >> yes, i have been hearing that, laura, and it is very rewarding. do you think it, we need a, after all of these years, when you see these accusers now coming forward, in a very odd way, even though it was only lisa myers at nbc, a few short articles, about your situation with clinton, that they are advancing on this issue and this topic it? or is it still just about politics in the end? >> well, i think in in the situation, it is anything. i feel like people are starting to believe -- people are starting to believe, and realized that i was truly sexually assaulted by bill clinton. >> laura: and i think we are going to go -- i can't hear juanita, unfortunately. juanita, hold on. i am going to go back to my
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panel. fix the audio. so her point is interesting because it she says look at, no one believed me. no one believes me all of those years ago, and now, it looks like because it is so obvious, the double standard, when it comes to the left versus the right to that some on the left are now saying maybe we should have given her a little more credence. lisa myers did on nbc. it took a lot of guts for her to do that. >> this is an extraordinary develop meant. it is obviously coming out of all of the sexual harassment to stories that we are having right now, but it is also coming because the clintons are receding into the past, and their clout is gone. it is a safe to look into something like this, where it was not in 1990s. >> people are now piling on. driving the multiple knives into the backs of the clintons. this is one example of that. it is opportunistic. >> i am so sad i couldn't hear her audio, but think of her
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situation. she came forward after a very difficult. she got an nbc report. and i will always be grateful for lisa myers for actually receiving that. she came out, and she told her story, and i remember even at the time, people were doing polygraphs, and they were saying yeah, she is probably telling the truth, just the way that she told the story. she told friends at the time, what had happen. >> you know, i had a few of my republicans saying that judge moore must be lying, and the reason why people did not come forward is exactly this situation. if people don't believe you, it happened a long time ago, why did you not come forward at the time? it is common for victims do not come forward at the time. >> laura: and what we need to do is empower women. when you are an adult woman in the workplace, it is -- we and
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needed to empower women so that you can say at the time, you are a pig it, i am going to hr. and there is a disparate power basis. you are a little peon, and this guy is so big. >> you have to remember this, into the way that the clinton machine was treating the women who were accusing the president of some sort of misconduct. some of the things that were said in that case, which would released on people today, for example, one paula jones came out with her allegations against bill clinton, i believe james carville, his top strategist said if you drag a 100 a dollar bill through a trailer park it, there is no telling what you would find. >> that is what is the mike was upset about these ladies. >> laura: and remember when monica lewinsky was first learned about, before she was going to cooperate with them, they had all these nicknames, the stocker, they were ready to destroy that woman's character.
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and all of these years later, i actually feel really bad for monica lewinsky. this has been her whole life. she was 22 years old. so i think that her point is well taken. i know a lot of people watching tonight will say you are rushing to condemn a roi moore. i am really not. all these years later, as a lawyer, i can't say that everything everyone says is true on one side or another, but i will say if a man uses his power over a man or a woman in the workplace, and it doesn't something like this, they have no business in politics, and i don't care if it is a democrat, republican, or someone who is not well-known at all. this whole situation has to change. for the people of alabama, this is their election. it is up to them, and mitch mcconnell can threaten all he wants, but the people of alabama are going to do with the people of alabama want to do. >> and he is going to have to adjust for it. you can't just throw somebody out of the senate, refused to
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let them enter into the senate, if they have been actually elected. and this is a situation where -- believe me, if roy moore is elected four weeks from tomorrow, the voters will know what is going on. this has been a dominating alabama politics. if you want to do we have what we a broderick back? yes. juanita, sorry about that? they still don't want you to talk it. isn't that awful? i am so sorry. live tv. on the radio, it doesn't matter. >> anyway, -- go ahead. >> i was enjoying listening. >> laura: well, i hope you heard some of it. because i remember, and if you don't mind speaking to lisa myers of nbc, because all those years ago, i was actually hosting a show on msnbc, and i remember when she came forward with that report, and she had to
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fight to get set on the network. and i had to fight to talk about it. i got into a huge fight at the time, because they did not want me to run it at the time it. and i think you came on with me. >> yeah, well, don't you remember with all of them of being around him? women were wearing "free lisa myers" buttons. i don't know if you remember that. >> laura: it that is when we had reporters who are actually willing to go to the batch. do you think after all of this time, there will be -- it is not to justice because it is not a legal case, but there will be some type of comeuppance for the clintons? or is this just a momentary thing here? >> oh, laura, i hope so. i hope that's they finally get what is due to them up. you know, that is why i was so enraged yesterday when a chelsea handler tweeted what she did,
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and why a came back and tweeted what i did. you know, she supported my abusers in the 2016 presidential race. and i wanted it to say to her, i matter too. all victims matter. it doesn't matter if you are a democrat or republican. yeah, who cares? if you are straight or if you are a gay or if you believe in god or not, we all have the right to be believed. >> laura: and 22, we actually have a full screen, i think of that tweet. that chelsea handler -- "imagine being molested by an older man, and then that manna denies ever doing it, and goes on. what kind of a message does that sound? "and then you tweeted back at her, hello. what about me?
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>> laura: back on halloween, and isis inspired a terrorist killed eight people in new york city by driving through a crowd on a bike path. so, how does someone like that get into this country? enter turns out it was through a thing called the visa lottery program appeared and we are learning more about that program tonight. data is now showing that the u.s. government issued nearly 30,000 visas to people from countries designated as state
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sponsors of terrorism a period between at 2007 and 2016, again, all through that a lottery. this is not good. it doesn't take a genius to say that. and a joining now for reaction is michael, a democratic strategist, and executive director for the study of immigration. a gentleman, it is great to see both of you. michael, what is going on here? i mean, we have a lot of problems in our country. we have a lot of problems with gang violence, and some crime appeared some crime has gone down, but we still have a big struggle. and now, we are bringing in people on this lottery system. it is kind of like affirmative action for visas. we have to solve diversity. but it turns out we are bringing in a lot of people from countries -- we can't really vet people being very well. >> so, let me unpack all of that. immigrants have committed fewer
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crimes -- >> laura: fewer crimes. >> and crimes at a lower rate. so it is dangerous when we start painting broadsword. >> laura: what does that matter? people have a constitutional right to come into this country because her work >> everyone who comes in here after the diversity waiver, 4% of all immigrants, they all go through an extensive background check. they all go through -- they have to have a high school diploma, some have to have bachelor degrees. there is a very specific criteria, so i think when we start painting people as criminals and saying -- gang members are american citizens treated timothy mcveigh it was an american citizen. >> laura: you're going back to timothy mcveigh? we already have enough problems. we don't really need more. >> if we are making sure that people aren't getting killed, then let's look at americans before -- >> laura: so we should take a chance -- would you trust sudan's background check? i mean, sudanese record-keeping?
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are you kidding me? i go but we have the state department the state department. >> laura: we don't have a magic box that we go through to see if he is on a terrorist watch list. >> that is like they go through security. they go through our security before they enter. the same is true with immigrants. if you want to market, is this the problem? they get to bring in a not there whole problem, but they get to bring in a spouse? children under the age of 21. >> what it does. those are the people that they bring with them once they win the lottery. but the long-term effect is what they called chain migration because after five years, they can become citizens, then, they can bring their parents, their adult siblings, their adult sons and daughters back. and then those people have their own spouses, those that spouses have their own relatives, and it goes on and on and on. and what's the lottery does is it starts new migration a chanc chance. and our research shows that the average immigrant, it results in
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at least three additional people who will follow him up. not right away, but over the years. >> laura: it just the figures from a mexico -- >> it is even higher. >> but for mexico, it is over six immigrants per person, who eventually come and because of our family immigration system appeared because the way that it works, our system is based on who you know, not on what you know. and beyond husbands, wives, and little kids, you marry someone abroad, you adopt a baby abroad, you have that right. i am all for that. but other than that that -- >> laura: brother, aunt, second cousin. seek out people go through background checks. see when you get a leg up in the system, when you have an american citizen sponsoring you, you have a leg up on everyone else. >> yes, but you still have to go through the line. >> laura: i think it, we have to also realize that they are
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lowering at middle income americans, who still do struggle to get a good work. and when we say chain migration, bringing people in who can bring so much of the, have a skilled -- -- they should be self sustaining, prove that they can earn a living, or if you can't any longer earn a living, an american citizen must sponsor you, leg be in charge of you. you don't become a ward of the state. >> technically, that is the law now, but interestingly enough, do you remember michael bloomberg it? at the end of his administration, he actually perceived that because sponsors would sign sponsorship agreements for immigrants they brought in. the bloomberg administration said wait a minute, you guys are on the hook for this. a lot of people paid. they collected several million dollars, and then the next
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administration came in and mailed to the money back to those people. it doesn't work. because it is not going to be enforced. >> it does work it, though. some of the greatest people in a new york are not people who are american born. >> it does not matter if these people are good or bad. >> we are talking about things like our immigrants criminals customer >> no. >> laura: we are talking about thing is -- >> i am a product of washington, d.c., public schools. >> laura: northern virginia -- 17 lang witches are spoken. how does a public school teacher -- how are they supposed to teach with 17 languages? kids come into the school illiterates in their own linkage, let alone not being able to speak languages question marks because that is because we are cutting the estate attacks. >> no, no. it is not -- >> laura: we love immigrants. i love immigrants. they are human beings. i think it, michael, you would agree, a country has a right to
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to determine their own borders. and if immigration laws are being violated or not working for the american people, for whom they are supposed to work it, then i think they should be revisited. >> but we have had immigration reform on the table. and republicans -- >> so republicans who wanted to end of this got together with democrats. >> last i checked, that is bipartisanship. >> laura: can i say something completely unrelated to this? michael looks exactly like a combination of bruno mars and lenny kravitz, and you said if you get confused for both of them up. >> lawyer is not saying that i look like any of them appeared >> laura: enough, enough of the compliments for both of you. and straight ahead, president trump argues for a better relationship with russia. do the critics have it all wrong? maybe. stay
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for suggesting that vladimir putin is not involved in the meddling in the election. at that it doesn't sound like america first. it sounds like russia first. >> he continues to give russia pass created two of not seeing russia the way that they are. >> i regret to say this, the president of the united states is without a clue as to who we are and what this country represents. >> laura: he just won the election, he doesn't know anything about the people. bad idea? joining us now for reaction from l.a. it is the cofounder of pj media, and the senior writer at the weekly standard. all right, michael, let's start with you. this is the way that i look at it. i lived in the former soviet union as a student. i have two russian sons who i adopted. i am fascinated by the russian psyche. one thing about the russians is their pride. they have a lot of pride. russian history, and everything they have been through. so i better vladimir putin, when
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he tried it to to president trump, he is doing small talk it, but i think that like china in many ways, they wanted to be shown some respect. is it a bad thing for the united states not to to try to engage with russia where we can engage and actually may be accomplished something? >> well, i don't think anyone is seriously saying that we should not engage in russia. it is a big country, they have a lot of national resources, permanent devote veto power on the u.n. security council, that said, i think it is important to be clear about vladimir putin, in particular, and his desires for his own it -- she mentioned prior to, he also has designs to be a major power. in areas where the united states has its own interest. to really come in contact with each other, that is a place where i think we go back to the obama administration. they made a mistake.
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and it not getting involved. they wanted to reset. and what's they ended up doing in the middle east is they didn't engage in syria, they allowed the russians, who again, allies with iran, to really take it control. it now they are in charge of that region, into the united states is no longer a player. a-determiner >> laura: when i hear all that i do about russia, i always say okay, now apply that analysis to china. china is building islands in the south china sea. they are stealing our intellectual property. they stole 50 million personal background files from the office of personnel management. china is forever hacking into our systems. they have terrible human rights violations. and they have a 2025 planet to dominate most major industries. but we have no problem having constant dialogue with china, wanting to work with them appeared to china, china, china. russia is bad.
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>> young, it is just pure prejudice. china is more powerful. a-determiner >> laura: a much more powerful. by about three fold. >> i would say that is a good estimate. this is where i differ. i think that's a lot of the russia stuff has been going on since the beginning of the election. it has a sort of distorted things. the public it can to deal with russia. president trump has been undercut, continually, in the ability to try to deal with the demo. who was more soft than obama? to tell putin i will be fine after the election? if the president trump had it done that, he would be impeached and beheaded. >> i think this is something that all american presidents fall into. george w. bush said i can see into putin's assault.
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the problem is that the president has a problem in not being able to acknowledge that they did it tried to meddle in the election. three on both of you, we will have you back for a longer segment. thank you for joining us. and up next, the mainstream media is swooning over on k media is swooning over on k sick, why?♪ ♪ohhhhhh, ou! guess what i just got? uh! ♪i used to be spellbound hello again. ♪i used to be spellbound hi. ♪i used to be spellbound that's a big phone. ♪in your arms. [screams] ah, my phone. ♪you built the flame ♪that warms my heart, ♪but lying and cheating ♪has torn us apart ♪and i'm moving on.
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♪ >> laura: the governor who just won't go away. that's the topic for tonight's angle. john kasich has been a headline of a sunday so guest now 17 times since trump's inauguration, and he used his latest sunday show out income yesterday, to convene a gun-control talking group. >> what i want to do, is i want to get a group of reasonable people, pro-gun people, and those who favor it limits on gun
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ownership and i want to put them in a room and see if we can find some common ground. >> laura: fascinating. and a month ago he spent another sunday morning crashing president trump's trade and immigration policies. >> the republican party cannot be antitrade. the republican party can't be anti-immigrant. >> laura: why does kasich think his voice is wanted in the current political environment? he still governor of ohio, but he has zero constituency in the party in the grassroots. we wouldn't even attend the republican convention in his home state. i don't know if kasich felt like it was too humiliating to show his face tingly one. don't you hate us wearables will? even detroit mayor welcomed the g.o.p. to the city of detroit in 1980, and he was a democrat. kasich is a total wash out nationally, let's face it, it's uncharitable to say, but he is, he's considering running in 2020 on something called a unity ticket with democrat governor
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john of colorado. that will work. in his commentary, you can hear kasich's simmering disdain for the party that so roundly rejected him, and his contempt for president trump is now legendary. i was thinking back on this, i think it's one debate moment perhaps from october of 2015 that really stuck, let's watch. >> this is the man that was a managing general partner at the lehman brothers when it went down the tubes and almost took every one of us with us, including ben and myself because i was there and i watched what happened. >> laura: that stung, and his personal bitterness had anything to do with this grudge against trump, i don't believe it at this point. john kasich can go on all the sunday shows he likes and reporters will continue to celebrate him as the coolest never-trump of them all. after all of the greenroom time, john kasich is where he was at
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the end of the primary season. he's a man with enormous ambition and just minimal support but just a little bit. we may not know where kasich is headed, but boy do we know where he came from. do you remember his father did? >> let's start off with my father being a mailman. >> my father was a mailman. >> and my father, who was the mailman. they call him john the mailman. >> like my dad, the mailman. john the mailman. >> and i have to tell you, my father carried mail on his back. >> laura: i like mailman. we will soon be landing in the mailboxes of unfortunate "gq" subscribers everywhere. in there man of the year edition, gentlemen's quarterly has named colin kaepernick citizen of the year. the man who started the nfl kneeling epidemic during the national national anthem, the the man who inspired his fellow players to break space with their audience,
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the man who is responsible for the league losing millions in merchandising and tickets and viewers is being hailed by a men's fashion magazine as an exemplary citizen. if you are looking for exemplary citizen, i have a few. about the texas man who confronted and pursued that church shooter in sutherland springs. or houston texans star j.j. watt. he saved the mic raised $37 million for hurricane harvey. by the way, "gq" also named stephen colbert the bad hombre of the year. if you hate president trump you are instantly something of the year at "gq." the good news is they made our year end cut as well. not sure if they will be celebrating this honor though. and that's the angle. that's all the time we have tonight. if shannon bream and the fox news at 19 is up next. we know you have a great show on
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tap. >> shannon: we can't wait to see our list. at what a tease, thank you so much. here's what's on our show tonight. >> tonight, a new accuser says alabama senate candidate george roy moore tried to rape her when she was just 16 entries offering proof that he knew exactly how old she was. >> i was terrified. >> what happens next for moore and his place on the ballot? alabama's secretary of state separates fact from fiction. then, president trump promises a huge announcement after his trip to asia. >> i will be making a major statement on wednesday. >> we will find out what he has planned on north korea and trade. and critics claim trump is putting africa first in the war on terror and that is putting american lives at risk. we will investigate. ♪ >> shannon: hello and welcome to fox news at night, i'm shannon bream in
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