tv FOX Friends FOX News January 10, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PST
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>> stop resisting. >> i am not. >> this is louisiana school board meeting after she asked about the superintendent's $30,000 raise. >> is it it is it against policy to standing? >> we know she is not going to face any charges. >> "fox & friends" starts now. see you later. >> you are not so far away from comprehension immigration reform. >> things you are procedure posing going to be very controversial. >> you are going to negotiate. this you are going to sit down and say listen you can't agree here, we will give you half of that. >> trump is negotiating this meeting and asking democrats what you want right in front of the press. >> it was unprecedented. i don't think that's ever happened before. >> breaking overnight, a lifeline for dreamer as federal judge blocking president trump's plan to roll back the obama era program. >> former white house chief strategist steve bannon has stepped down from breitbart news network. a stunning fall from
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political grace. >> president trump and his legal team striking back at what his allies call that dirty dossier that was unverified. >> it's a legitimate defamation lawsuit. a false statement and clearly the dossier is false. >> first lady sharing this photo on instagram of her standing with dozens of police officers. >> showing her appreciation to the men and women in blue to honor law enforcement appreciation day. ♪ ♪ ♪ this is how we roll ♪ we hanging around ♪ everything on the radio. brian: i went to fgl house in nashville florida georgia line it might be one of the finest establishments in the history of restaurants. steve: florida georgia line. brian: three floors. each floor a different theme going. nonstop screens below is dance. up top very country, a lot
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of sports. in the smaddle great restaurant. if you are in mashville, you have to go. ainsley: do they have live music on each floor. brian: not in the beginning, by the time i was leaving at 10:00 because i had to get up in four days. ainsley: four days? brian: four days, actually. it was friday because i can't stay out late i don't know what it is anymore. they get the band start rolling. steve: one floor florida, one floor georgia. brian: a lot of velvet ropes and dancing tight pants. steve: those were the days. ainsley: glasses today? steve: got something in my eye today. can't put on my contacts. this is the steve. brian: i like them. ainsley: look smarter. steve: i will start wearing these. breaking overnight, a federal judge in san francisco has blocked the trump administration from rolling back the dreamers, the daca act. ainsley: the obama era
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program shields more than 800,000 people from being deported. brian: let me see, does that remove the pressure of getting a deal then? griff jenkins live in washington. griff ever griff, the doj is just now firing back we understanding. >> that's right, guys. the doj responding to that judge's ruling last night blocking the administration's roll back on daca in march. in a statement to fox news, the doj says quote today's order doesn't change the department of justice's position on the facts. damascus was implemented unilaterally after congress declined to extend these benefits to the same group of illegal aliens. as such, it was an unlawful sir couple convention of congress. they continue the department of justice will vigorously defend its position. it looks forward to convinced indicating its position in further litigation. here is what this means guys for this morning. for the moment it, allows the daca program to remain in place while legal challenges play out, potentially aleve yalgt some of the pressure of the march deadline while lawmakers take up permanent solution
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for dreamers. ed deadline the whole point of extraordinary meeting at the white house. this judge is judge william u.s. district judge in northern california. he was appointed by bill clinton. it's important to note this was a pre-trial injunction. so very likely this is the last we have heard of this and, you know, we will see what happens as lawmakers continue negotiations coming out of that meeting yesterday. steve: they do indeed. all right, griff. thank you very much for the live report. so, before, this and griff just mentioned that meeting that the president had with lawmakers yesterday, the narrative in the mainstream media for the last four days has been that donald trump is lazy because of the michael wolff book, he is lazy and he is crazy. he is up in his bedroom and eating kentucky fried chicken. what did he do yesterday? he did something brilliant. he called in the tv cameras and usually it's called a spray where did you go in and shine the camera over that way and then that way and then you leave. he had the cameras stay.
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and for 55 minutes he was a guy at the top of his game. showed exactly he knew every detail about what's going on with immigration and daca and democrats and doing a deal. ainsley: even mainstream media praising him for this. listen to. so comments that the president made to that group. >> i'm appealing to everyone in the room to put the country before party and to sit down and to negotiate and to compromise. having the democrats in with us is absolutely vital because this should be a bipartisan bill. this should be a bill of love. we have been talking about daca for a long time. i have been hearing about it for years, long before i decided to go into this particular line of work. >> democrats are for security at the borders. there are obviously differences, however, mr. president, how you affect that. >> when we talk about just daca, we don't want to be back here two years later. you have to have security. >> i will take the heat. i don't care. i will take all the heat you want to give me. i will take the heat off both the democrats and the
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republicans. my whole life has been heat. there should be no reason for us not to get this done. brian: a couple of things happened. number one, i just thought overall how about democrats would be if steny hoyer was in charged. i found him to be very reasonable throughout. he was listening, the give and take. that is as close to real as i have ever seen in washington. and i was sitting next to marie harf on outnumbered and she is saying that's it. that's what it's like in these meetings when there are no cameras around. in the beginning i can't wait to do the forensics and rebuild what went into the 55 minutes with cameras there. it seems to me it was like jersey shore. in the beginning you thought they knew they were on camera. after a while they forgot to were on camera and it became a real reality show. steve: the reality is a brilliant bit of stage craft. the president's team put democrat on each side. durbin and ohio river o hoyer oe
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other. here are the two top democrats right there. brian: saying he wanted to clean bill. senator feinstein clean bill, do the border security later. president is like all right. and then quickly kevin mccarthy goes no, we're not doing that if we are doing daca we have to do border security. there was also a request from the democrats do you really need $18 billion to build a wall? he goes no, i will take some of it so it was a real give and take. and i think that's what people wanted when they hired donald trump. ainsley: more negotiating. said it was a bill of love. brian: that's jeb bush line that he ridiculed. a lot of people on the right didn't love that. ainsley: this is what the bill looks like. these are their goals at least. phase one would be border security. end the chain migration. cancel the visa lottery program and daca. brian: i'm sorry, go ahead. ainsley: phase ii would be comprehension immigration reform. brian: daca other issues do you bring the parents?
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somewhat pathway to citizenship. they don't instantly become citizens. maybe they are here and allowed to stay. ainsley: do they bring the parents daca. the parents are already here. brian: can't legalize the parents. just because the kids got brought here at a young age doesn't mean the parents who came here illegally get amnesty. ainsley: he also talked about the visa lottery program. he said all these other countries are putting their names in the hopper. they are not giving you their best names. common sense means they are not giving you their best names. they are giving you people they don't want. steve: sure. ultimately when diane feinstein asked about a clean deal and the president said i would be open to that as brian said a moment ago clarified. there is going to be border security in it. in other words, if daca is going to happen, so is the wall. listen. >> agreement without the wall. >> no. i wouldn't do it. you need it.
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i would love not to build a wall but you need the wall. if you don't have the wall, you cannot have security. just can't have it. it doesn't work. brian: just so interesting that was the part 2. that aired first on our channel and he said you have enough now for the next couple of years i thought. what is he talking about. then they aired part one which was 55 minutes. then i knew exactly what he was talking about. ainsley: talking about building the wall because he said drugs are coming over record pace and we have to keep our country safe. he says i don't want to build this wall and spend this kind of money on this but he has to, he said. steve: absolutely. rush limbaugh having the benefit of being on in the afternoon noon to 3:00 he watched what the president was doing and he realized what the president and white house image makers and message makers were doing was showing that this president, despite what you read in the michael wolff book, which he even said he didn't talk to nibble in the cabinet, this was the narrative against that. look, this president is actually in charge and knows what he is doing. watch. >> you heard about all
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during the campaign trump being the art of the deal negotiator, brilliant. run rings around him negotiator. i think, i'm just looking at trump's body language here as is he conducting this meeting. arms crossed and folded. across his chest. and he has a serious look on his faces a is he listening to what these democrats have to say. but he is forcing them on the record what they want in front of the media. all the cable networks have just spent an hour televising trump in total control of a meeting. the democrats in the meeting showing total deference and respect to trump. steve: exactly. brian: that was the key there was total respect. there wasn't a lot of posturing. i didn't get any political slogans. i didn't hear anyone gave speech like you see on all these hearings. they don't ask a question and they give a speech to
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the person. you wonder what the person is even doing there among the critics was tucker carl son-in-law. he opened up the show and blasted the president. he said he showed too much give when it came to the wall and other areas. ainsley: how much is too much give, he said you are not getting daca. we are building the wall. brian: at one point he told senator feinstein he would do daca alone. ainsley: i'm curious if he will do this more often allowing cameras into the meetings to show they are working together? the rallies were so successful for him. he continued to have the rallies. he is still doing the rallies because he always gets, his ratings go um after that. i'm curious to see if that happens here. steve: hard for the democrats in that room to go out today or in the future to say the president is crazy, because they legitimized him yesterday by sitting at the table dealing with him. you don't deal with a crazy person. you deal with the president which is what th image was. brian: 16 senators. 15 republicans and 10
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democrats. steve: one person with the headlines right now. ainsley: good morning. jillian: good morning to you. let's begin with a fox news alert. we are following this story right now. frantic hunt for survivors in southern california intensifying after mud slides kill at least 13 people and wipe away homes. the same area is recovering from devastating wildfires now hit with staggering amounts of rain and now mud. take a look at this heroic rescue. a u.s. coast guard helicopter crew pulling a family of five including a newborn baby, a 3-year-old and two dogs to safety. president trump's attorney coming out swinging filing defamation lawsuits over the fake dossier that helped kick start the fbi/russian probe. michael cohen slapping lawsuits against the firm behind the report fusion gps and buzz feed for publishing it. it comes just hours after senate judiciary committee ranking member dianne feinstein released bombshell testimony from the firm's co-founder. glen simpson claiming some of the information in the report came from a trump campaign insider. steve bannon out at breitbart news. president trump's former
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chief democrat gist returned to the website over the summer as executive chairman after being ousted by the white house. the parting of ways comes after bannon's controversial statements about the president and his family were published in the newly released book fire and fury. that's a look at your headlines and i don't think many people were surprised when this news cal came out. steve: i think he is off xm sirius as will. ainsley: college cadets escorting the president. three will join us ahead. steve: this teacher questioned the superintendent's pay raise and then she got dragged out in handcuffs. >> what are you doing? >> don't. >> can you explain. >> stop resisting. >> i am not. you just pushed me to the floor.
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♪ come together to reach an agreement. >> i hope this agreement can be the beginning of building trust between our parties. >> what about a clean daca bill now with a commitment that we go in to a comprehensive immigration reform procedure. >> we're going to come out with daca. we will do daca and we can start immediately on phase ii which would be comprehensive. brian: quickly kevin mccarthy jumped in and said
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no, same time. a glimpse of what compromise looks like or brainstorming session. allowing cameras full access to bipartisan negotiation for 55 minutes. here to react great america co-chair eric beach. how important is this for the president at this point in his presidency to do something like this? >> i think the president realizes historic relevance of what happened yesterday and even furthermore he doesn't get enough credit on how he diagnosed american electorate when it built and centered around illegal immigration and built the wall. he was the only one that diagnosed that not only in the primary but the general election. he looked big. everyone else looked small yesterday. pushed back president is not in control of the negotiations. he was in his element yesterday. i was pleased to see it. brian: he doesn't have the negotiation in the past. for republicans they get concerned because democrats promise to do something and they never do. senator feinstein threw that out there. do daca now and comprehensive later and quickly kevin mccarthy and
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tom cotton said no, no, no; do it at the same time you never do it later. >> they are absolutely right. so is the president. he understands the art of the deal. he understands he is going to allow the democrats to apply any kind of rhetoric they want during the meeting. i was also very happy to see his tweet yesterday said no wall, no daca. and he was very clear about that. he has been very clear about that. he is the only candidate that was. this president does what he says he is going to do. brian: right. so here is. so reaction from the other networks about what they saw which was unexpected and unprecedented. watch. >> i can't think of an example of something i've seen like that in covering washington. >> this is not -- this is not the steve bannon version of donald trump. >> i have got to give the president of the united states a lot of credit. he allowed the tv cameras in there for this really remarkable meeting. >> after wolf blitzer gave the president credit jim acosta passed out. no one could revive him.
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in the big picture, i fear this. that as reasonable as democrats and republicans looked yesterday, there is going to be pressure for democrats never to allow that to happen again because it looked as if there was something getting done. do you worry about that too? >> they looked like contestants on the apprentice. he looked in complete control. again, you have to judge him by his results. in the first year of his presidency it was all about results. that meeting yesterday, he came out of it in a position of strength wasn't just a couple lines. do this in two phases. maybe we will do this with border wall and come back and do it again. he is uniquely qualified to do it. democrats brought up good points and seemed reasonable. it seemed like our life away from politics. thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: new front in fight against taliban first of its kind mission just launched between the marines. thrill of a lifetime, college, rotc cadet escorting president trump at
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the college football championship. three of those proud americans join us live next. ♪ and we're all-american ♪ in god we trust ♪ living the dream t comes to hen trust the brand doctors trust for themselves. nexium 24hr is the number one choice of doctors and pharmacists for their own frequent heartburn. and all day all night protection. when it comes to frequent heartburn, trust nexium 24hr.
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ainsley: we have quick headlines for you, the u.s. agreeing to sell millions of dollars of anti-blitz to japan as threats from north korea are intensifying. equipment included in the 133-million-dollar deal is capable of intercepting threats from the north. the deal follows a year of ramped up north korean missile launches, some of them over japanese territory. and the united states marines are training afghans to combat terrorists with drones. afghan troops using boeing scan eagles is what they are called to identify the targets, which are then destroyed in the air strikes. according to a marine
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captain this air support is causing the taliban to actually lose ground. steve? steve: thanks, ainsley. rotc cadets getting a thrill of a lifetime looky here to escort president trump ahead of the monday night college championship game ♪ o can you see ♪ by the dawn's early light ♪ what so proudly we hailed ♪ at the twilight's last gleaming ♪ steve: joining us right now, three of those university of georgia rotc cadets who marched onto the field with president trump. we have cadet melissa roofa and t.j. and mitch. they all join from us atlanta today. good morning cadets. >> good morning, sir. steve: cadet roofa tell us what it was like when you were standing on the
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sidelines and right over there is the president of the united states and you are about to go out onto the field with him? >> it was just surreal. i'm a senior at uga and this is my last game. i couldn't have imagined a better end to my college football season at uga. so it was just no words for it. steve: cadet made, as we are looking at you walking out on the field with the president and you all stop for the national anthem. what were you feeling? >> just immense pride. i mean, you know, this is a once in a lifetime experience, and to be able to stand and salute, two people over from the president of the united states for the national anthem, it's just -- you can't describe it. steve: sure, cadet walton you planned a career in the military. to be that close to the commander-in-chief must have been a thrill of a lifetime. >> yes, sir. just like cadet maddy and ruffa said a thrill and something i never imagine wood happen.
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steve: cadet ruffa i understand the involvement with the cadets was going to end with the ceremony. after you were done, what did the president tell all the cadets? >> when we were walking out to go to our original seats because we had all already had tickets, he told us, you know, y'all should come um and hang out with us in the suites that we have and so we were able to watch the whole game from the suites and it was really awesome. steve: cadet maddie, i imagine you had an opportunity to chat with the other president and be upclose. what do people not know about the president of the united states when he is not at the lecturn, not at the podium, not at the microphone? >> i mean, i didn't get to talk to him too much but he was asking a lot of questions. just, you know, about what we wanted to too and stuff like that. seemed real interested in the football game which i guess you don't think about a president liking sports. it seems like such a normal thing. but seemed like a normal
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guy. steve: all right. and cadet walton, apologies, your team did not win the national championship but nonetheless, what a night. >> yes, sir. and the bulldogs played a great season and made everybody on campus very proud. steve: cadet ruffa, let me tell yolet meask you this. did you think about that at all that night because, of course, there is so much going on and yet, here is a president who felt so strongly about the national anthem. he talked about it earlier in the day in nashville at the american farm bureau convention and then he stood with you at the 40-yard line to salute our nation and our flag. >> honestly, i wasn't really thinking about that. i was just in amazement about all the dog fans around us and being next to the president and in front of us singing the national
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anthem. it didn't come to my mind. i was trying to remember the words in my head. steve: before did you go, cadet ruffa, what do you want to do in your career? >> i want to be a veterinarian. steve: cadet mattie? >> i will be commissioning field artillery officer in may. steve: cadet walton. >> two years i hope to commission as an armor officer. steve: thank you all for joining us. it's a great pleasure to host you here on "fox & friends" and talking about the game you will never forget. thank you very much lady and gentlemen. >> thank you, sir. >> thank you. steve: all right. have a good day. that was great. coming up on this wednesday, she was convicted of leaking top secret government documents. now chelsea manning just took another shot at the people defending our country. wait until you hear this. and what is happening on our college campuses from violent protests to therapy llamas, what's next? we have a panel of professors and college students here to discuss that and they are next.
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campus whether it's with professors or college students. it's hard to be the single conservative voice in the classroom. it's been difficult. you have to keep strong to your values and to your core beliefs and make sure you are advocating for what you believe in. ainsley: we have paul anthony in the front show a student junior at manhattanville college and part of campus reform.com. you are a correspondent. so the university of south florida, they brought in these therapy llamas. we remember this story. we did it about two weeks ago during final exams to just calm the students after the election we heard about coloring books and play-doh. your school was offered counseling when president trump was elected, right? >> yeah. ainsley: what did you think about that. >> i thought it was terrible. offering counseling to students having difficulty coping with the presidency of donald trump. i know for that fact that service would not have been
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offered if the election results were different and we had a president hillary clinton. ainsley: if hillary clinton had won they would not be doing that? >> not at all. ainsley: wendy osefo, professor at george washington and liberal commentator. you are saying that you are feeling backlash for your liberal views. >> yeah. i feel backlash for my liberal views i feel as though when you work at a campus you have to understand everyone has different views, right? but sometimes when you are a professor and you are outspoken, students wonder why you're able to say certain things and i think it cuts both ways whether you are a progressive or whether you are a conservative. and it's just something that we have to know that campuses are for us, too. ignite conversation in whatever your view is you should not be stymied by it. ainsley: we have professor adjunct professor city university at new york. one of the professors was fired at your school for
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advocating for dead cops. and professor at nyu hoping for white genocide. what about these professors saying outlandish things. >> i respectfully disagree with what wendy is saying. we do see a lot of these examples throughout the country not just here in new york. and we always see them in the vein of them being annual at this conservative or anti-trump. no one incident speaks for a systemic problem. but when you have a pattern and it's almost never reversed in the opposite direction, i think it is something system wide and it is a problem. this is a real problem for academia. academic writing should be free. professors should be free to write whatever they want. for the first time i think in history we are seeing this liberal bias sort of dissend into every facet of campus life. >> i have to disagree with that for you to sit here and say it only cuts both ways i'm sitting right beside you and tells you it goes the other way. if you look at the 1980 with apartheid and 1960's for civil rights for you again to say it only goes to
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conservatives, that means you don't know your history, historically it has also gone to liberals. it does cut both ways. >> emily, do you agree with that does it go both ways? >> not on my campus. ainsley: emily goes to harvard. campus reform.org correspondent as well. >> i think on my campus what we have seen is that the problem is that liberal bias extends both from the university administrators and to professors and the students. and it's a multi-faceted problem that we are seeing on our campuses because not only do professors often use their platforms as teachers to profess their own views instead of teaching students how to think about issues. they are instead telling students what to think. ainsley: harvard is a great education. congratulations on being accepted there. >> thank you. ainsley: betsy devos there were protests when she went to speak she represents president trump. place mats she said when people went home for thanksgiving to talk about how to discuss liberal views with your family?
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>> i think that's just another example of the prevalent liberal bias on harvard's campus. and the place mats are just one incredible example of how that happens. my freshman year before i headed home for the holidays my dining hall became inundated with place mats telling students how to talk to their backward families at home about liberal issues. putting their views into student's minds. this is the office for equity, diversification and inclusion that put out these place mats. i don't think they were being inclusive at all of other student's viewpoints. ainsley: raise your hands if you think this can be fixed. okay. we will have you back toward the end of the show in the last hour and talk to you about how to fix the problem. okay? thanks for being with us. knock i think you all are wonderful. hand it over to jillian for headlines. jillian: chelsea manning blasting our men and women in blue on law enforcement appreciation day. the american traitor tweeting this photo and writing quote: blanket
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police, #disarm the police, #we got, this and #law enforcement appreciation day. manning spent seven years in military prison for leaking classified documents to wikileaks. president obama commuted her sentence before leaving office. a veteran's memorial destroyed by criminals will take hundreds of thousands of dollars to repair. the tribute to the people walked off the mount of hero's memorial park in georgia last month. three suspects are under arrest. one is still on the run. the memorial board members say the damage is so extensive it will likely take months and at least $200,000 to fix. a teacher is handcuffed and arrested for questioning her boss' new contract. watch. >> what are you doing? >> don't. >> can you explain. >> what are you doing to me? >> stop resisting. >> i am not. you just pushed me to the floor. >> this all happening at a louisiana school board meeting after she asked why the superintendent was getting a $30,000 raise when
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teachers weren't getting one at all. >> is it against policy to stand? sir, do not. >> she won't face charges. there are reports it was all a set up to get rid of the superintendent. that's a look at your headlines. send it back to you. steve: joe arpaio is getting back in the senate. looks like is he running for senate in arizona. going to join us live for first tv appearance. brian: i don't think senator jeff flake is thrilled with that journalists in places like russia, china, and turkey or killed are jailed. one group says president trump is the biggest oppressor is of the press in the world. really question mark? real question mark again?
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brian here you go time for sports headlines, nbc will show nfl sports kneeling at the super bowl if they kneel at the super bowl. the executive producer says the protests are a big story. and if any player kneels, it will be broadcast. anthem protests widely believed to be the reason for a drop in tv ratings or a lot of it they are down significantly. and football coach nick saban might want to want back in the nfl after sixth national title in the college game. former arizona cardinal coach bruce thinks it will be with the new york giants. >> it would not surprise me. you know, and there is a job that does happen to be open. >> why the new york giants. >> because they are the new york giants. brian: saban had limited success coaching the
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dolphins in 2005 and 2006. he said i don't like this anymore. the "new york post" reports he has no interest in the giants gig. that's what he looked like there. ainsley: these are some of leaders with the worst reputation of cracking down on the press ever. russian president vladimir putin, china's president, egypt's president, turkey's president erdogan just to name a few. steve: why is an organization called the committee to protect journalists naming president trump the world's top oppressor of press freedom? brian: katie is the managing editor. she joins us now. what an insult is. illogical and no legitimate criteria here only a political agenda. >> you are right. it's absolutely partisan and ridiculous to anyone with even a shred of common sense. first off, did this in response to response to president trump's fake news media awards. i think those are silly, absolutely partisan doing. this not doing this on their own merit. of course, you look at there
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are journalists disappearing, being murdered, being imprisoned all over the world for trying to tell the truth about the wrongs that their governments do. and trump is mean to people on twitter. trying to say that that makes him worse than people in turkey are oputin in russia or myanmar, syria or anywhere else is flat out insulting to journalists all over the world to risk their lives to reveal actual truth. steve: he is the top oppressor in the world in mexico six journalists were murdered. in russia two were murdered. in the philippines two were murdered. and, yet, donald trump, not only the top oppressor, he is also the most thin skinned according to this outfit. >> again, clearly that's wrong. look, like, it is true that trump does have a thin skin. you can see it in how he behaves on twitter with the media. again, he cannot be the worst because he's not killing anyone. and there are presidents that are murdering
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journalists. i don't understand why they think that this was going to give them any good p.r. it's absolutely a farce on its face. it's ridiculous. and on top of that if you look at the actual article that cpj put up as to why they believe this, their arguments are entirely filmsy. they say because trump and a bunch of other western leaders don't do enough than somehow it's their fault that journalists are being murdered in the world. it's flimsy arguments that don't hold water. steve: you know what, katie, you said you didn't think about they would abou bad pr. they will get good pr from reporters who don't like donald trump. >> those reporters are doing a disservice to their job for fighting for real truth if they don't step back and look at this and say you know what? this is not okay. it's a disservice to our industry and you should absolutely. cpj should be ashamed for themselves for trying to do
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this tit-for-tat with the president. ainsley: as a journalist, katie, i'm thinking we are so fortunate to be able to sit in this country and speak our minds. these journalists get killed by the president if they don't like the narrative of the journalist. that's insane. >> it is absolutely insane. look, trump gives his ire and his praise on twitter very freely. again, freely. we have the first amendment. this is a country that protects free speech. and people need to remember that trump is not taking that away and many countries in the world that don't have those privileges. ainsley: he has the right and freedom to tweet if he wants. brian: if you are in iran or china watching us right now, do a critical editorial on your government and let us know how it goes. let will's see if it goes in the paper or publish. >> they probably wouldn't be able to watch this program because of the censorship there. brian: i know they would censor ainsley but not steve or i. steve: thank you for watching us.
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>> thank you. steve: political left is hoping for oprah to run for president in 2020. does president trump think she is a threat? >> ainsley: school asks for 50 volunteers breakfast with dad's event because some dads didn't have fathers. 600 showed up and the event's organizer and one of those volunteers will join us live next. isn't that sweet ♪ whatever kills you make you brighter ♪ doesn't mean i'm ♪ whatever kills you ♪ makes you stronger, stronger stronger ♪ hehe a ants. ants. to grow more delicious coffee. which helps provide for win's family. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters.
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once again, look at this turnout. ainsley: an incredible outpouring of love and support organizers for a breakfast with dads event at a dallas middle school asking for 50 volunteers to step in for absentee dads. guess what? 600 men showed up. steve: unbelievable. joining us now is the event organize early reverend donald parish jr., one of the guys a mentor by jamil tucker geist. thanks for joining from us dallas. >> thank you. >> thank you. steve: reverend, tell us about what you had in mind for this event as you put out a plea to have guys show up to mentor these young men. >> okay, great. let me first say that this was definitely a joint effort school's principal tracy washington, the liaison ms. ellen favors had an idea to have a breakfast with dads, doughnuts with dad that's popular. they thought we would do a full breakfast we will get more guys. we were there just having
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our regular community meeting and they mentioned hey reverend parish don't forget we have this event coming up. then my right-hand woman, ms. christina dove big thought immediately whipped out her phone. that's great. let's post on social media. she posted it i copied her post. we put it on linked in on facebook and other social media and it spread like wildfire: boom. it spread like wildfire. actually 800 responded. 600 showed up. ainsley: amazing. donald, what was your reaction and what was your involvement? brian: jamil? ainsley: yeah, sorry, jamil. >> i was expecting right at 50. i got there a little late. so parking was crazy by the time i got there that's when i knew that it was way more than 50. so i was actually on stage leading with the tie tying
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instruction. it was phenomenal experience. >> it was amazing nobody believed the numbers i was reporting. i had to call in a favor to a school board trustee to help make sure we had enough people to cold front feed and everything. no one believed me the outcry was so great. brian: a lot of people sitting at home i'm from a single parent family. what's the big deal? why is it important for a male figure in these kid's lives? why was this more than just symbolism at your event? >> okay, great, now you know i'm a baptist preacher and it's wednesday you got to be careful asking me questions like this i will get on my pulpit. honestly, i believe what is ailing america, no matter what race, no matter what color, no matter the income is men not being involved in raising of our young people. and stats show us that you look at the incarceration rate 80% come from single parent family homes. we have to do something about that. and so this is step one in us doing something about that. and you cannot discount the
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power that a man has in a neighborhood, in a home, in a school, in a church, in a civic organization. we just need men simply step up and be men. steve: men like jamiel. why did you say i will show up? it wasn't just for the breakfast, obviously, although i'm sure it was delicious. >> yeah. actually i come from a single parent home. so i know how it felt to have, you know, events where your father wasn't there, but then on the flip side my uncle lonnie was very instrumental. i knew how it felt to have someone there although your dad wasn't there. i just had to be there whether it was leading tying the tie or just being there. i knew i had to do it. brian: i know you teach a lot of kids how to tie a tie. that's your business. now you are doing more. hopefully this is the first step and many more steps to come. jamil and donald, thanks so much for sharing your story. ainsley: thank you so much for what you are doing in the lives of those precious children. >> thanks for having us. ainsley: god bless you both. thank you. steve: coming up, sheriff
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joe arpaio is going to join us next hour. first interview since announcing running for senate. david perdue, michelle malkin and john solomon from the hill. improve our workflow. attract new customers. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics. yeah! now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com.
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>> i really do believe democrat and republican will want to get something done. >> three pillars, daca, border security and chain migration. >> do you really think there can be agreement on those three difficult subjects. >> there should noble reason for us not to get this done. >> looked like contestants on the apprentice and he looked in complete control. >> breaking overnight a lifeline for dreamers a federal judge blocking president trump's plan to roll back the obama era program. >> the former maricopa county sheriff joe arpaio says he is running for u.s. senate. the 85-year-old calls himself america's toughest sheriff. >> president trump's attorney coming out swinging filing defamation lawsuits over the fake dossier. michael cohen slapping lawsuits against the firm
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behind the report fusion gps and buzz feed for publishing it. steve: rotc cadets getting a thrill of a lifetime escorting president trump onto the field. >> i couldn't imagine a better end to my college football experience. >> a thrillin thrill, somethingi never imagined would happen. ♪ ♪ ♪ it doesn't matter where we go ♪ we always find a way back home. brian: andy grammer who did our show. ainsley: did you make him famous? brian: he was on his way. steve: he was on his way. brian: i told him to stick with it. steve: thank you for staying with us. we have a busy day. in that montage, you had one of brian's guests from the first hour eric beach who said when he saw the president there with those lawmakers in one of the rooms at the white house, it was like the apprentice. it was. because there you had donald trump in the big chair
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presiding over all these other people that is not the image. that's the image right there. steny hoyer and dick durbin on the other. they're negotiating. you are wondering at the end of this episode does he fire somebody? ainsley: even mainstream media was praising him for this. we got a bird's eye view what it is like at the white house. brian: as key was they were unaffected lie the camera. i'm watching every lawmaker there speak out and felt like they were having a real conversation where they were eavesdropping. the guy with the hand held camera with the room and whoever comes up with this deserves a raise as jonathan swan of axio says this whole debate is -- this whole thing we saw for 55 minutes yesterday is what we hear president trump is like behind closed doors when he has these meetings and senator graham told me, too. that he is as good in a setting like this as anyone he has ever been around.
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ainsley: a lot of you y'all are working while this was going on. if you missed it, shear a montage of it. >> i'm appealing for everyone in the room to put the country before party and to sit down and negotiate and to compromise. >> having the democrats in with us is absolutely vital because this should be a bipartisan bill. it should be a bill of love. we have been talking about daca for a long time. i've been hearing about it for years long before i decided to go into this particular line of work. >> democrats are for security at the borders. there are obviously differences, however, mr. president, on how you affect that. >> when we talk about just daca, we don't want to be back here two years later, you have to have security. >> i will take the heat. i don't care. i will take all the heat you want to give me. and i will take the heat off both the democrats and the republicans. my whole life has been heat. there should be no reason for us not to get this done. steve: he is absolutely right. why did they do that? usually the way it works is the white house press pool gets called in to a room where they are having a
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meeting, so they stand there for about 30 seconds, they shine the camera over there, over there get all these people and get out. it's just so that there is coverage. why did they leave the camera in there? probably because of the michael wolff book. i mean, because for the last five or six days people have been looking at that book which has got all this gossip in it going oh, donald trump, you know, he's crazy, he's lazy, he is eating chicken. brian: 25th amendment. talking about ousting him. steve: all that stuff. what they did is the white house said you know what? leave the camera there so people can see he is not lazy and he is not crazy. ainsley: it is like a reality show. i hope he continues to do this. our country is evolving we like to see things immediately. transparent. there were some goals in that immigration meeting. phase one they talked about was border security ending chain migration canceling the visa lottery program. phase ii they want to work on comprehension reform
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plan. steve: the key was the president made it very clear first things first, if there's going to be daca, there's going to be a wall. watch. >> agreement without the wall? >> no. there wouldn't be. you need it. i would love not to build a wall but you need the wall. if you don't have the wall, you cannot have security. just can't have it. it doesn't work. brian: unscripted situation a couple things alarmed a lot of conservatives the ann coulters of the world and maybe the byron yorks. wait a second the president says i will sign anything you give me. that didn't sound like the president we saw on the campaign trail. we saw for the first 11 months who said i need a wall and that's a nonstarter and there is not going to be a pathway to citizenship for everybody generally. because you have got to find people in this room whatever you give me i will sign. that got some concern. then when senator feinstein came out and said i have an idea. why don't we just do the daca thing by january 19th. fund the government and then we will do the rest of the immigration down the line the president immediately
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said okay. and kevin mccarthy said no, no. not okay. tom cotton said earlier in the past there is no trust between us because of things like that have happened. steve: white house came out and said when she asked for a clean daca bill, the president said yes, because to him a clean bill would have border security with it. that's just a no-brainer there. brian: let's hope they do. this they do have to fund the government by january 19th. some are not optimistic it's still going to get done. ainsley: yeah. brian: how embarrassing and bad would it be for the country have a government shut down when things like funding the military means so much. ainsley: remember we had the interview with the girl in the hospital bed after the man shot some people at that concert in las vegas and the girl he went to the hospital and he visited this girl and she said you know i didn't like him before but sitting here one-on-one with him it made me look at him in a different way. i really liked him. kellyanne conway said that's exactly what happened in that room a lot of america to see what he is really like. listen to this. >> everyone in that room today, everyone watching now knows where the president stands on the wall. he just repeated it for you.
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live and in person in front of the entire world to see. those of us who work there see that every day on a regular basis. he really enjoys a discussion. he welcomes dissent and he welcomes discussion. this president takes many different inputs and ideas and he makes the final decision. he was the one elected here after all. but i think what you saw on full display today is very similar to what we see ongoing basis at this white house. steve: okay. so they open the doors to the cameras. we got to see what they do, deal with at the white house every day. we asked you what you thought. and marcia emailed us and said the dems, democrats' idea of compromise is give us everything we want. then we'll talk. and we will say no. brian: got to push back then. betty sells this on facebook. do you a better betty. ainsley: daca needs to be part of the immigration reform discussion and not tied to the budget bill that is for legal americans. brian: i do a great michelle. she writes on facebook not happy about any thoughts on
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giving in on immigration daca and the wall. my fear is i think they are going to come out my hope is because it's early enough where they can say it's not early enough to affect the 2018 elections. my fear is they will never do this again. steve: i bet he will do it again. ainsley: i bet he will. brian: you had 15 republicans and 10 democrats. what if the democrats don't show. what if they say we don't want on camera. only show up if there is no cameras. ainsley: at the end of the meeting the reporters got to ask questions of course someone asked a question would you run or if oprah runs in 2020, will you be able to beat her? and this is what he said. >> oprah would be a lot of fun. i like oprah. i don't think she's going to run. brian: he said the last show one of the last shows she did she had the whole trump family on. oprah winfrey is getting push back the myriad of harvey weinstein kissing shots aren't going to help her candidacy too much. steve: i will tell you what, in both the "new york post"
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and "washington post" they have the opposition research done on oprah. they list things she has done through her history that would be hard for her to answer if she was running for a president. nonetheless, her best friend, gayle king over at cbs says oprah is not considering a 2020 bid but is intrigued by the idea. brian: can dr. phil be reached for comment. he also knows oprah and is a friend of ours. that could be our source. ainsley: maybe dr. oz. brian: will she run with somebody else on television? steve: somebody suggested the rock. a run with tom hanks or harrison ford. brian: mayoral streeps wants the rock and harrison ford on her cabinet. so she thinks we are casting a movie. steve: that's one of the arguments where people say oprah should not run because we have seen what it's like when a celebrity runs for president. do we want to do that again? that's what people on the left are saying. ainsley: let's hand it over to jillian who has headlines. brian: who is a celebrity of
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her own. jillian: very much. so you guys are forgetting about george clooney. i feel that's a name that could be thrown in there potentially. brian: would he jump into the fray? jillian: i don't know. we will see for sure. if he does we will let you know. ainsley: ben affleck. jillian: we do have a fox news alert to get to. let's continue that conversation later. frantic hunt for survivors in southern california intensifying after mud slides kill at least 13 people. that number could increase. the same area is recovering from devastating wildfires now hit with staggering amounts of rain and mud. >> it sounded like a freight train coming down the hill. you know, you could hear these boulders rolling down. >> oh my god. >> the whole house was shaking. jillian: take a look at historic rescue u.s. coast guard helicopter crew pulling a family of five including a newborn baby a 3-year-old and two dogs to safety. honoring washington state deputy killed in the line of duty. dowtzens of fellow law enforcement lining the
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streets as daniel mccartney's casket left the hospital. married father of three was shot and killed fred distribution, washington. authorities now have a second system in custody who is believed to be the get away driver for two other suspects. one of them found dead at the scene. mccartney was a navy veteran and joins the police force in 2014. president trump signing an executive order aimed at reducing suicide rates among veterans. the order will take effect in march and provide all new veterans with mental healthcare for at least one year after leaving the military. >> they get out of the military and they had nobody to talk to, nobody to speak to. and it's been a very sad situation. but we are taking care of them. jillian: according to the department of veterans affair about 20 veterans commit suicide every day. what athletes will be wearing when the united states dominates the winter olympics. nike releasing metal stand collection south korea. aside from the jackets, pants and boots, athletes
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will get touch screen friendly gloves, you know, perfect for that gold medal 1e68y. you will be able to buy the gear yourself starting next monday. ainsley: brian brings two ties to the set every day. there is one on the sofa we are like brian, can you move your tie? brian: because brian the nighttime guy chose this. when i was the morning guy i went back to blue because after doing the promo i actually. steve: you thought the paisley didn't match the stripe. brian: didn't work. ainsley: ly this is the tie i was going to wear it doesn't work. it does work. i think that works, don't you think? what's the rule with paisley? brian: i don't know there was a rule. i just know it didn't feel right. steve: brian, work this out the night before. i just come with one tie. brian: who -- i don't have a full time assistant like you do. wear my clothes the day before to see how they work. steve: i just look at a tie. ainsley: which one, america, do you like the blue on him
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or the red? the blue is great. i like the blue. here's the thing. i don't like it when you all both are in blue. i think you should wear contrasting colors. jillian: because you have the blue on today it doesn't make it look like fall, like thanksgiving, you had the red and you had the red would be very -- it just breaks it up. it's fine. brian: i don't try to de-conflict like the russians and u.s. over syria. i just try to do my best and i think i came up short today. ainsley: if you wore this red it conflict with a different red. brian: looks good on him. steve: welcome back to the my tie show. ainsley: i will put it back over there where brian keeps it. steve: coming up former sheriff joe arpaio getting back in the saddle and apparently running for senate. on the other side of a time-out first tv interview since the big announcement. he is next. brian: this world leader just walked out of a press conference and told reporters talk to my cardboard cut out. that is awesome ♪ let's give them something to talk about
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the race to replace retiring senator jeff flake down in arizona. joining us now in his first tv interview is former maricopa county sheriff in arizona joe arpaio. sheriff, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: at 85, why do you want to do this? >> i'm doing it for the people of arizona, for our country and to support our great president. i was with from the day he ran in july of 2015. i said then that he would be our next president. i guess it did happen. steve: with your long career as a sheriff, what part of that experience would be helpful in the u.s. senate? >> you know 24 years as a sheriff fighting the drug and illegal immigration problem, which got me in trouble. i have had the obama and holder zero in on me, took them eight years to get me
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on contempt misdemeanor. so i will be talking more about that in the future. but don't forget, i spent 55 years in law enforcement. i was a director of mexico city, south america, tuckery, you name it so i wasn't just a sheriff. so i'm going to take all the experience that i have gathered in my career and use it in the senate. steve: do you think you would be using that experience and it would be helpful to help drain the swamp because ultimately during the commercial you said that donald trump was a heroic figure to you. and he wants to drain the swamp. if you were in the senate, would you do that as well? >> oh, i would have a lot of fun. i'm an independent guy. there's no rubber stamps. but, the president and i have a good relationship. and that's going to be good for arizona and for our country. and, yeah, there is a lot of people that do not want me to go to washington, including a few republicans.
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but, that's okay. steve: well, one of them is the guy that has the job right now jeff flake said yesterday he was asked whether or not he would support you and he said no, no, no. he's the best forward for republicans. how would you like to respond to senator flake? >> well, i'm not going to get into his personal situation. that's another issue. i know he doesn't like me. who cares? he is not running. he is saying that i'm not going to last more than a month. that i will leave. what about him leaving? he didn't have the guts to face the people to get reelected. at least i got the guts to face all the detractors, democratic party, you name it so he can have his opinion i got mine. it doesn't bother me at all. steve: i will tell you what, nobody has better name recognition in arizona than senator joe arpaio. thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. steve: what do you think about that? email us the friends@foxnews.com.
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21-year-old aspiring body builder died just a couple days after being diagnosed with the flu. what happened? the warning from his grieving family coming up. 3rd grade teacher tried showing the students the power of twitter. instead, attacked for being a conservative. i take pictures of sunrises, but with my back pain i couldn't sleep and get up in time. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. aleve pm for a better am.
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♪ ♪ brian: back with news by the numbers. first 45 years, that's how long it's been since the arrest of the border was this low according to homeland security. they take the stats down. illegal crosses have plummeted since president trump took office. a lot of it happened in the first few months. got to get legislation passed quick to continue that trend. toyota and mazda will be spending on a brand new plants in huntsville, alabama. i have been there it's nice.
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facility will bring about 4,000 new jobs and open up by 2021. they will be working on those cars. my final conversation would be like this. $105 billion. that's how much is in my savings account and that's how much bloomberg's billionaire tracker says jeff bees zoz is now worth. that makes him the richest man in history puts me second u now, let's go over the railing to ainsley. ainsley: it'bbezos. supposed to be a fun classroom activity for 3rd graders in kansas. instead, turned into attack on their teacher, c.j. markel who teaches math and science at elementary school tweeted out on monday he wanted to show his students how far and quickly information travels on the internet. he asked people to retweet his comments from where they were tweeting. the tweet quickly went
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viral. when a writer for jimmy kimmel live saw that she replied she has since deleted this she wrote this after seeing some of c.j.'s your unfortunate ignorant tweets about kneeling football players and glib retweet of an antigun control pundit were read out here to a saddened room in los angeles. best of luck from the other side of history. she then continued please consider the power you have over young minds before taking stands against those who peacefully protest against systemic police brutality that you'll blessedly never experience. your tweet spread and your narrow ideology spreads, too. well here now with his reaction is that teacher. c.j.marbel. >> thank you for having me. ainsley: what was your reaction when you red bess' original tweet. >> i was on a bus coming back from a junior high
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basketball game. this blew up up and i wasn't expecting it when i first saw that i didn't understand why anybody would do that then i started realizing it was twitter and that's the whole thing that happenings now on twitter a lot is people attack other people. i stood up for myself. i tried to do it as nice as i could. but that was really why i did it i wanted to respond to her. i felt a little bit attacked. that wasn't the purpose of the assignment. i just brushed it off my shoulder. ainsley: a lot of people are asking what's wrong with being patriotic. you got a lot of support, too. >> yeah, i did. and that is really cool to see. being from kansas you don't see all of the -- you are not in l.a. you are not in new york city. not in d.c. and so it's really hard to get to fathom how many people are out there. to get support from all of the conservatives out there, that was really cool. ainsley: yeah, you were able to teach your kids a lesson how fast this stuff does travel on twitter. you had 62,000 replies. you were retweeted 181,000
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times. aaron stone treat from modern family retweeted you and tagged the adele and dana retweeted you back. she said i'm tweeting from my apartment in new york city. how does this make you feel this guy from kansas. >> it was really cool. so, since i was getting so many notifications on my phone, twitter kind of shut them all off. so i didn't even really see the eric stone streak or dana perino i got those via text message from my friends. just blown up. eric stone streak the k state fan even though i didn't go there i love k state. it's really cool to see a kansas guy and kansas state guy support me a little bill. ainsley: that's awesome. you retweeted her the jimmy kimmel writer. you wrote her back and said i get what you are saying but i teach 3rd grade which is why i did this in the first place. they didn't get the general context things. therefore teaching them religion, politics, et cetera would be out of place and wrong. have a great evening which i
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thought was very nice. she did take down her original tweet and she did apologize. which i also thought was nice. she said i was wrong and i apologize. as far as the response to the probably very nice gentleman on twitter tonight, i think okay to disagree politically and engage with an opposing oppose perspective. she said we all make mistakes. what's your reaction that she apologized. >> that's perfect. i'm a 3rd grade teacher. that's what i teach 3rd graders to do. if you make a mistake, maybe she didn't think it was a mistake. she still apologized. that's the point of it that's why we have school rules that are behind me. that's why we do this stuff. if you make a mistake. i tell my 3rd graders every day. if you make a mistake own it and move on. it happens, move on. there is no sense of dwelling on it just move on. ainsley: those are great class rules. will you read them for us? >> it's be honest, be respectful. be responsible and be yourself. i underline be yourself because kids get very upset
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about not having the coolish shoes, coolest shirts. i want them to know it's okay. be yourself is the most important thing to me. and so i stay myself. i stayed with my conservativeness and so she can stay herself. that's fine. i'm not judging, i'm not mad at her. i'm not -- it's what she thinks and that's perfectly fine. i just think something opposite. we kind of went our separate ways. it worked out pretty well and the whole assignment was a real big success. ainsley: cj i know all the parents watching pray their kids have teachers like you. you seem like an upstanding gentlemen. >> i appreciate it thanks for having me. i really appreciate it. ainsley: you are welcome. god bless you. he is the author of the dirty trump dossier. next guest claims obama officials politicize his unverified intel at the height of the 2016 campaign. former federal prosecutor andy mccarthy is here to explain. that's coming up next. and think president trump hates the media? this world leader just walked out of the press
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dossier as his relationship with the united states government officials is now coming under fire. steve: next guest claims obama officials politicized unverified intel briefing congress about it at the height of the presidential campaign. brian: former federal prosecutor andrew mccarthy joins us now to explain. andy, i know you went through, we have 300 plus pages hours of testimony now exposed. what's. so things that stick out with you asighted from the fact it's been revealed that
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somebody got called because of the steele dossier, what sticks out for you with the steele investigation? >> brine, look, they say somebody got killed there is a lot of talk about transparency when mr. simpson discusses his testimony publicly, the interesting thing is you go through it, there is an awful lot of redactions when they didn't want to discuss things there appear to be a few factual inaccuracies i guess that will play out over the next few days. i think the important thing is if you look at an important moment about six weeks or so before the election what you find between obama administration officials and fusion gps which we know was working to for the clinton campaign, there was a full-court press to urge the allegations in the dossier which was composed by steele on the media, on congress, and there is very good reason to
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believe on a federal court, specifically the fisa court. brian: andy, they do say in this testimony they are asked do you push stories on members of the media? and they say yeah, we do that brian they are in the opposition research part of it when the calendar comes around. i don't think ever we would have a problem with that. what's really problematic is that former fbi director comey testified in june of last year that's 2017 that the dossier was salacious and unverified. my point is if it was unverified in the middle of june 2017, it had to be unverified in september of 2016 when they probably went to the fisa court and when they certainly briefed congress on it. ainsley: andy, there's news this morning that glen simpson was being interviewed and investigated by congress because he
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co-founded fusion gps. it's come out now dianne feinstein released this 312-page document saying what happened in that interview when they were talking to him. there's news that the anti-trump dossier got someone killed? what do we know about this. >> i don't think we know anything yet, ainsley. he says so. and i don't think you can take anything at face value. it's -- i don't mean to minimize it. we are in this smoke and mirrors world of intelligence where it's a little bit hard to fathom whether what people are telling is you exactly accurate or not. look, even if it's true, we don't know why the person was killed. so, you know, could it have been, for example, that the regime there didn't want exposed the degree to which they tried to feed misinformation into our intelligence community and rub out somebody who had information about it my speculation is as good as
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anybody's. steve: you know, andy. >> -- which is nothing. steve: so many moving parts to this story and you look at all the investigations on capitol hill and the fbi and the special counsel and stuff like that what does this advance if anything. where do we go from here? >> steve, the biggest thing right now is the fact the house intelligence community has finally after five months of stonewalling by the justice department and the fbi gotten its hands on information we have been asking for since august. what we need to know at the bottom did the obama administration use unverified, uncorroborated basically rank rumor information in getting a warrant from the foreign intelligence surveillance board to conduct spying on the trump campaign essentially based on
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information from the clinton campaign that's what we need to know. brian: clintons paid for this information from kessler. the trump people sent people over to russia five to seven times but they never got a deal done and that raised suspicion that something might be going on he also says this whole thing was unverified. >> look, brian, even steele himself, once he was in court in a libel suit, after being very confident, apparently, when he talked to the fbi and when they briefed the media about this stuff. when he finally got into a forum where his statements would be actionable if he made misstatements or accusations he said look, it was just raw intelligence. it was unverified. i never said it was true. it was just for the fbi to go run that down. that wasn't my business. i just reported a few things i heard. steve: oh boy. >> very different tact now. steve: andrew mccarthy trying to sort it all out.
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thanks for joining us live today. >> thank you. steve: it is 7:40 now in new york city. jillian, they thought he had the flu. ferlgt. jillian: i know, this story is insane. let's go ahead and tell you what happened. this is about a 21-year-old aspiring body builder now dead days after catching the flu. the family of cir could i ler for everyone. see a doctor if you feel sick. within 48 hours of becoming ill he was air lifted to the hospital in pennsylvania where he died hours later. the official cause of death was organ failure due to shock from the flu. a democratic lawmaker indicted accused of going on a lavish shopping spree with stolen federal and state funds. prosecutors calling pamela harris a corruption veteran. they say the new york assembly woman bought plane and cruise tickets and even paid off victoria secret bill with donations meant for children. she is also accused of stealing thousands from fema after super storm sandy. talk to the cardboard because i don't want to listen. thailand's prime minister leaving a life-sized paper
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replica of himself in front of a microphone and walking away to avoid questions from reporters. just one of 17 cutouts meant for a children's celebration. is he known for disliking journalists. in the past he has thrown ba than that peals at them and threatened some with execution. he has been in power since 2014 after leading a military coup. that is just crazy. steve: talk to that guy. very two dimensional. thank you, jillian. jillian: thank you. steve: 18 minutes before the top of the hour. ainsley: janice, how is it feeling. janice: i would like a cardboard cutout of me right now. it's cold, i'm not going to lie. not as cold as it was the weekend. take a look at the maps. i will show you how cold it is right now it's 30 in new york city. 36 in chicago. a little warmer in charleston. 48 in class. taking a look at the radar, so we did have a little bit of a system across the northeast. still a little bit of rain in florida. but out west, we have had
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unprecedented, you know, wildfires and now the potential for flooding and mud slides and debris flows. it was a tragic day in southern california yesterday because of the rain. thankfully that has moved eastward but it's giving us some energy for a storm system across the you were midwest and the northern plains and look out, we might have a storm system here across the northeast on the weekend. so we will keep you up to date. stay tuned, folks. steve: is that a snow storm or a rainstorm? >> i don't know yet. steve: okay. glad i asked. janice: i will keep you up to date. brian: keep my snow tires on just in case. steve: okay. i will keep my rain tires on. ainsley: long train ride from long island? steve: meanwhile, president trump letting the press into his bipartisan meeting yesterday in the white house on immigration. what happened after the cameras left? senator david perdue of georgia was there and he will fill brian in next. brian: right. john solomon and michelle
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and find out how you can save 25% on your first purchase, plus first shipping. life hurts, feel better. brian: president trump giving the world a rare glimpse of what compromise looks like at least. at least that's how it's being hashed out. cameras access to bipartisan meeting on immigration for about an hour. what happened after the cameras went away and what was it like for the cameras there. senate budget committee member david perdue at the meeting and joins us with inside story. when did you become aware those cameras weren't leaving and this was going to be pretty unique? >> well, as a clock kept winding to 55 minutes duration of the media the media stayed in and frankly i applaud the president for doing that it brought an air of transparency to a conversation that's been attempted here for the last 15 years or more trying to solve our immigration problem so i applaud that. brian: did you know they were going to stick around? did he say hey guys i'm
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going to ask the pool to stay? >> no. i think he just did that as he heard the conversation unfolding. i think he felt like it was good for the american people to see this dialogue firsthand. brian: all right. so he just winged it. senator, what do you think came out of that meeting that we saw? >> brian, i think yesterday was a watershed date. i think this president is an outsider. is he a business guy. he just wants to get results on this issue just like he did on tax. what we did yesterday is agreed on two things. one, we agreed on the scope of this current negotiation. we are not trying to solve all the immigration problems here. what we want to do is solve the daca issue. bring border security to our borders. second thing or third thing is eliminate chain migration and this ar archaic diversity visa lottery. the second thing the president did yesterday was establish a since of urgency. that's something rare here in washington. brian: that'that's fine. when do you think the first phase of the daca program border security, chain migration, when do you think that first phase starts? are you going to use this funding the government if
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january 19th is the deadline? >> no. those two issues are totally separate. i heard members of the other side talk about that yesterday after the meeting. but, january 19th about funding the government, that's another conversation entirely. brian: what if they won't fund the government without daca which i have heard that? >> we trillion to deal with that as it's do. that's not righteous. it's not what we should be doing for the american people. what we have right now is a date that we have been given of march 5th. we are still working toward that date. there are people meeting today. we will have meetings today and every day until we get to some solutions on this. frankly, i think, brian, we have a unique opportunity that democrats and republicans now have a common set of, i believe, objectives here that overlap. i think we have got a unique opportunity in history to actually get this solved. brian: so when you -- your gut tells you when the 10 democrats left, and they met with leadership, did leadership say that stone any hoyer technically a leader, too. what are you doing? we are not negotiating here. did tammy dunkirk do the
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same thing? is she going to get blow back from nancy pelosi with the decisionmakers not in attendance? >> there is always some of that. here is what is at play here, 72% of america wants this dealt with 72% believe immigration should be based on the worker and the immediate family. name me another idea or another concept or another issue here in washington where 70% of americans agree. this is one the american people are going to hold us accountable like they are on healthcare and tax, brian. that's why this president wanted to bring a sense of you are general is i yesterday. >> i heard it march 5th isn't a real date because have you that court out in san francisco say daca stays for now. >> we are still working against this hard date here of march 5th. that's how you bring a sense of urgency and get things done here in congress. the president said one thing yesterday. that is he expects results on this issue. and he is willing to work with us day and night. i think that was evident yesterday in the conversation we had in the white house. so, i give the president high marks for bringing a focus to this issue. not trying to solve every
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problem relative to the immigration problem but to focus this on the legal immigration system. i think we have an opportunity to do that. brian: i know on the right they feel that way. i believe they want daca and want it by january 19th. it's going to be an interesting standoff. senator david perdue, thank you so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: coming up straight ahead the trump administration considering a brand new strategy in heir battle with north korea. we are live in the white house with the details. plus, the president's tax plan paying off yet again. the electric bill going down. stuart varney who uses nothing but candles in his house will join us next ♪ higher ♪ for you, baby ♪ the twist n' turn. the stretch n' grab. the gummy squish. centrum micronutrients fuel your body from the inside out.
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brian: more americans will be cashing in thanks to president trump's tax plan some say. ainsley: baltimore gas and electric companies announcing it's passing on $82 million in tax savings to its customers thanks to their new lower corporate tax rate. steve: here to weigh in is the host of varney and company on fox business network stuart varney. we heard about big companies giving bonuses now we heard about a company's big utilities spreading a little wealth back to the customers. >> wait a minute, there is more. not just baltimore gas. i have a list here. pacific power west coast, pep co, washington, d.c., rocky mountain power, mountain states, commonwealth edison, illinois. all of them major utilities considering giving back to their customers. this is not bonuses or higher wages for workers. this is going directly into the form of lower utility bills, gas electric bills for these now five utilities. direct pass through. ainsley: how much are we talking about per month. >> with baltimore gas it's an average of a 5% reduction
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in the monthly gas and electric bill. in dollars terms it's not a whole hill of beans for individuals but it's 5% down. ainsley: it all adds up. >> that's a different way of passing through and giving back. i've got, you know, 10 sheets of paper here titlely scripted, titlely typed of the number of companies which are giving bonuses or higher wages because of the tax cuts. a million americans will now be receiving bonuses higher wages. $1,000 a pop for a million people. that list is growing. ainsley: why do they do it? if they own a business why aren't they gride? i'm glad they are not. why aren't they greedy and keep it themselves? why are they doing this? >> it's a way of enticing people to stay with the company. brian: competition with workers. >> competition because it's a tight labor market. have you got to compete for workers who are qualified and good at what they are doing. and also, you know, we were promised a give back and the companies are fulfilling that promise.
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brian: feeling pressure. >> they were given everything they wanted. a much lower tax rate plus deregulation. okay. come on, boys. give back a little bit for the people who work for you and your customers. that's what they are doing. steve: the economy seems to be roaring. yesterday jp morgan chase's jamie diamond expects the g.d.p. to be 4% this year. >> that was very important. jamie diamond is america's top banker. he is also a democrat. we have the democrats en masse saying that these tax cuts are armageddon. oh, it's a terrible thing for america. and a long comes the top banker, a democrat, and says it's a fine thing. we're going to invest more. you are going to see more of these bonuses. he's going to possibly give bonuses. complete contradiction. brian: right. by the way, the other administration was finding those major banks and this administration is giving them a tax break. >> my, how times change. steve: no kidding. stuart, thank you very much. we'll be watching you in an hour offer the fox business channel.
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♪ >> you're not so far away from comprehensive immigration reform. >> some things you are proposing will be very controversial. >> but you're going to negotiate those things. you will sit down, listen we can't agree here. we'll give you half of that. >> he brought transparency to something behind the closet and i applaud that. >> sheriff joe arpaio getting back in the saddle, running for the senate. >> the president and i have a good relationship that will be good for the arizona and the country. >> what we really need to know is did the obama administration use unverified information to conduct spying. ainsley: organizers for a breakfast with dads event asking for 50 volunteers to step in for
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absentee dads. guess what? 600 men showed up. >> incarceration rate. 80% come from single parent homes. this is us doing something about that. ♪ brian: way too many people in that bad. worried about them getting paid like elo. steve: mentioned that many times. i don't get the fascination with imagine dragons. you have the album? brian: nobody gets albums anymore. you download songs you like. steve: download an album. brian: stuck with a lost songs like back of the album, they don't listen to. steve: the tie is back. ainsley: brian bring as tie on the set trying to pick, you didn't even ask us.
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what do you base that on. brian: i think i base on what it works at night. a lot of times it doesn't. steve: get the tie on ted right now. that is kind of the look brian had, that he walked in this morning. brian: i walked in, i needed a shave when i walked in, much like ted. we'll make a decision. find out what the people want. steve: there is breaking news. vice president of the united states and mike pence and his life will be leading the u.s. delegation to the olympics in seoul, south korea. the winter olympics coming up. before they do that, they will stop off alaska and tour the facilities there, our nuclear facilities. do you think that could be sending a strong message to north korea? look who is in south korea? the vice president of the united states. brian: the vice president will be on martha tonight. ainsley: how many democrats, how many republicans? >> 25 members, 16 senators, nine
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congressman and women, 15 republicans and 10 democrats overall. ainsley: they sit around the big table. they're negotiating immigration. listen to part of that. this happened in the middle of the day yesterday. most of you were at work. listen. >> i'm appealing to everyone in the room to put the country before party and to sit down and net and to compromise. having the democrats in with us is absolutely vital because this should be a bypartisan bill. this should be a bill of love. we've been talking about daca for long time. i've been hearing about it for years, long before i decided to go into this particular line of work. >> democrats are for security at the borders. there are obviously difference, mr. president, how you affect that. >> when we talk about daca, we don't want back here two years later. you have to have security. i will take heat. i don't care. i will take the heat you want to give me. i will take the heat off democrats and republicans. my whole life is heat. there should be no reason for to
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us get done. steve: how brilliant is the strategy. whoever came up with the idea to keep the camera in there. the president seated between two top democrats. what was he doing on tv? he was negotiating. when he was running for president of the united states. i'm a businessman. put me at a table with the democrats. i will try to get something done. that is what people saw yesterday. brian: senator purdue indicated to me before the president came up with that himself. they decided at beginning, they never left. why don't you stick around. ended up being a real conversation. ainsley: you said earlier it was like reality tv show. i wonder if he continues to do that. as an american nice to see what happens behind closed doors. brian: i like reality shows they forget the cameras, and do the postgame on andy cohen at night they forget the cameras are there. my sense on this washington-based reality show they forgot the cameras were there for a while. steve: they are politicians. i don't think ever forgot the cameras were there i think.
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ultimately what the 5 a minutes they saw maybe the narrative from the michael wolff book how the president used to repeat the same thing over and over, 20 minutes. now every ten minutes. there we saw him for an hour and he did not repeat himself. he was in charge and in charge. brian: imagine dragons thing. every time we run that. ainsley: got to stop playing imagine dragons. you like to talk about it. brian: will michael wolff write a book about me? ainsley: that is called transparency. rush limbaugh says this is the "art of the deal." >> you heard about all during the campaign trump being "the art of the deal" negotiator, this brilliant, run rings around negotiator. i think, i'm looking at trump's body language here as he is conducting this meeting. with his arms crossed and folded, across his chest and he is got a serious look on his face as he listening to what these democrats have to say, but he is forces them on the record,
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what they want in front of the media. all the cable networks have just spent an hour televising trump in total control of a meeting, with the democrats in the meeting showing total deference and respect to trump. steve: pinch me. it wasn't just rush limbaugh. consider nn had nice things to say. ainsley: it's a real. it's real. steve: nice things to say about the president's meeting. brian: including wolf blitzer. senator purdue is with us was in there with the cameras and stayed after the cameras. it is clear what both sides want. listen. >> here is what is at play here 72% of america want this dealt with. 72% believe that this should be based on worker or immediate family. name me other concept or idea or issue in washington where 70% of the americans agree. this is one where americans will
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hold us accountable like health care and taxes. president wanted to bring a sense urgency to the issue. steve: president mate it clear there will be no deal on the daca without a wall. arizona sheriff joe arpaio is running for the seat vacated by republican jeff flake. jeff flake, the senator was ask. on cnn whether or not i would support joe arpaio. he said no, no. he said that is not our best forward as republicans. well, we had joe arpaio on less than an hour ago. we asked him about senator flake's comments and this is what he had to say about him. >> i know he doesn't like people. who cares. he is not running. he is saying that i'm not going to last more than a month. that i will leave. what about him leaving? he didn't have the guts to face the people to get reelected. at least i got the guts to face all the detractors, democratic
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party, you name it. so he can have his opinion. i got mine but it doesn't bother me at all. steve: he doesn't have the guts. ainsley: they are tough guys. i love it. brian: we'll see what happens. you have congresswoman mcsally wants to get into the race and run. steve: united states might consider a strike on north korea if the rogue regime conducts another missile launch much. brian: the report comes out as our government approves 133 million-dollar anti-ballistic missile deal to help protect, japan. ainsley: kevin corke live at the white house with more on the story. hey, kevin. reporter: guys you will hear a lot more about deals with japan in the future because the administration is committed to security. you heard talk about the bloody nose strategy, that is limited strike against the north if they keep testing out missiles. keep in mind this is
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consideration, not a policy the idea to punish pongyang and perhaps not start all-out war on the korea peninsula. the north has fired 23 missiles during 16 tests dating back to last february. the latest in november. jack keane telling fox news he is not sure if a limited strike is even feasible. >> north korea committed itself it would look at prove vision of war. as a result of that they would unleash all their capabilities on south korea. these are coply indicated difficult issues. reporter: complicated indeed. white house officials continue to insist that dialogue is still a first option, including the recent overtures from pongyang to seoul. >> certainly the next steps would be denuclearization of the korean peninsula is our number one priority. certainly what we would like to see. we're in very close contacts with our south korean allies about these conversations.
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reporter: and i think you will find this interesting. president moon of south korea gave president trump big credit for the resumption of talks between the north and the south, something we'll keep a close eye on. guys, back to you. they can't start sending them food and clothing because that would circumvent the sanctions. ainsley: thanks, kevin. jillian with more headlines. jillian: get you caught up on some news of the day starting with a fox news alert. frantic hunt for survivors in southern california intensifying after mudslides kill 13 people and wipe away homes. the area is recovering from devastating wildfires from staggering amounts of rain and now mud. look at heroic rescue a u.s. helicopter crew pulling a family of five, newborn baby, three-year-old and two dogs to safety. majority whip steve scalise who was shot at a baseball practice is having surgery today. this is part of his injuries
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that happened last summer. >> a lot of prayers got me over the last seven months. i appreciate the prayers continue. look forward to getting that done and getting back to work. >> president trump said congressman scalise is braver than all of us. rotc cadets getting thrill of a lifetime escorting president trump on to the field healed of the national anthem ahead of monday's national championship game. [cheering] those cadets joined us earlier to share their experience. >> this is once in a lifetime experience. to be able to stand and salute, two people over from the president of the united states, and national anthem, it is just, can't describe it. jillian: the president even invited the cadets to watch the game right by his side. that is look at headlines. they did an interwith them
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earlier. steve: they got to go into the president's suite, said the food was great. the company was even better. brian: thanks, jillian. stick around for the show. come over. ask ted to bring back my tie. we asked america what they thought. did i make the right choice chose the blue tie, taking off the red tie which is paisley, which is color scheme i'm not familiar with. steve: ken writings in, brian is absolutely right. stripes and paisley is a fashion don't. solid with striped shirt. from tom. ainsley: tom says stay with the blue today. if you look at the colors on air right now, you're varied to about the same degree as the golden girls. work for them. steve: however on the instagram poll apparently more people -- ainsley: they went with blue. brian: commenting on your glasses. >> nice windshield? ainsley: very scholarly.
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i looked at instagram, they liked the blue. keep the blue on. brian: read more about steve's glasses. ainsley: ainsley is right. steve glasses make him look great. steve: so much easier to put on than contacts. ainsley: you scratched your cornea? steve: yeah, something went haywire. brian: were you at the golden globes last night? steve: no. brian: no, golden gloves. you said you hurt your cornea. only time you do that when you punched in the face. steve: i scratched my cornea with ping insulation. >> instagram says, the poll said you should wear the red tie. it changed. ainsley: take it off. steve: leave it there. thank you very much for writing to us about a bunch of stuff this morning. ainsley: tell us when we get
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dressed. brian: i will stay dressed. steve: firm behind the trump dirty dossier released. claims that the unverified intel came from the trump campaign. john stossel covering the story to from the start. he has reaction coming up next.. green mountain coffee roasters. of the season' on the only bed that adjusts on both sides to your ideal comfort, your sleep number setting. does your bed do that? right now our queen c4 mattress is only $1199, save $400. ends soon. visit sleepnumber.com for a store near you.
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ainsley: brand new transcripts just released revealing bombshell testimony from the firm behind that anti-trump dossier, the dirty dossier. one of the claims is that information in the dossier came from a trump campaign insider. brian: that is one claim somebody already has been killed as a result of publication of the dossier, thought to be a russian and no harm should come to anybody related to honest work. ainsley: "the hill"'s john solomon has been breaking details on this story from the very beginning. we wanted to talk to you, dianne feinstein released 312 page transcript, when they interviewed glenn simpson who started fusion gps you read this last night what is the most shocking thing or what surprised you? >> one of the things is glenn spend a lot of time this wasn't a partisan document, that he is about research. we know his clients were clearly partisan, the dnc, and clinton campaign. those are two things, when you see him trying to do that,
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interviewed before we knew that the dnc and clinton did a sort of a tap dance that caught my attention. i think revelation somebody was killed over the release of the dossier is really most shocking thing. we don't know a lot. i have been digging on this i can't find a whole lot suggestion it might have been one of christopher steele's sources in russia who might have been killed after this came out. we don't know more. people will have to dig on that a lot. brian: john, you do this for a living, but as the editorial came out last week as they tried to exonerate themselves, we got the information, steele got the information he went to the fbi and corroborated it. there is a little problem with the editorial as opposed to reality. they have walked back, there was no corroboration with the fbi so to speak, right? >> if you take james comey at his word, he called it an unverified document. that was in may, 10 months after they had begun working on it. sources i talk to in the law enforcement community, hey a couple things are corroborate the, and a lot of things are
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unverified, like the president's lawyer taking a trip that didn't happen have been out right dismissed. you will see over next few weeks, reporters compare glen simpson's testimony and what we know in the public and make more sense what is right and wrong with the story. ainsley: wasn't there a point, i was asking you during the commercial break, this gets me, mention in the interview, glenn simpson's attorney says someone was killed, i was what? did dianne feinstein or investigators in congress say, wait a minute, we want to learn more about this? they didn't press him on it? >> they missed a real opportunity. certainly as a read i wanted to know more. it came up because the lawyer mentioned it. it wasn't glenn simpson, it was his lawyer josh levy. it was an aside. it got lost in the back and forth q&a i would like to ask questions. we will be over the next couple days. brian: senator dianne feinstein released it anyway without checking with the chairman grassley, although many people find rage just, maybe
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irresponsible for 80 something-year-old senator. john solomon, thank you very much. >> thanks very much. ainsley: michelle balkin next. michelle malkin next. brian: she will be coming on too. tack or stroke. talk to your health care provider today about diabetic heart disease. and find out more at heartoftype2.com. your heart and type 2 diabetes. make the connection. ( ♪ ) with 33 individual vertebrae and 640 muscles in the human body, no two of us are alike. life made more effortless through adaptability.
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now, with instant text and email updates, you'll always be up to date. you can easily add premium channels, so you don't miss your favorite show. and with just a single word, find all the answers you're looking for - because getting what you need should be simple, fast, and easy. download the xfinity my account app or go online today. ♪ steve: bipartisan meeting on immigration yesterday in the white house donald trump making quite clear when he wants to see that wall. >> please, don't do that to me. seven years to build a wall. we can build the wall in up with year and we expand build it for much less money than what with they're talking b any excess funds, whether it's a, rink i built under budget and ahead of
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schedule. no reason to say seven years. steve: president said they can do it in one year. ainsley: no way to do it in seven. we can do it once. brian: michelle malkin from crtv. michelle, were you one of the conservatives at one point during that negotiation? >> yes, i was, but that particular exchange was music to my ears. it is amazing what the federal government can do when it puts it mind to it and what state and local governments can do. i was in l.a. after the northridge earthquake, a huge part of the santa monica freeway had collapsed. took them three months to build it. there were incentives for the contractors if they finished ahead of time and they did. they knew if they didn't get this done, there would be a massive revolt. people would lose their jobs. why don't we have that same sense of urgency about the infrastructure on the border? that part of the meeting i was
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very happy about, guys. ainsley: what were you note happy with? >> well i think there was a little bit of lack of clarity about what's going on with this so-called deal. but in the end i have to say that even though there had to be some clarification statements about what is a necessary element for the white house, that in the end it doesn't matter what was said yesterday at the meeting. the most important promises, and the most important aspects of this are what donald trump promised to angel moms and dads, to all of those workers, whether they were white-collar workers who have been displaced because of h1b, or whether they were families, victims of illegal alien crime. what he promiseed those people who went to bat for him in the election, there will be no amnesty. there is a clear statement and promise, if he reneges on this
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promise, there will be hell to pay not just for donald trump but entire republican party. steve: michelle. what did you make of ever since last thursday when the michael wolff was starting to be discussed, donald trump is lazy, he is crazy all that stuff, yet, that was the narrative, until yesterday when he was on live television, play back live television for almost an hour. and he was doing exactly what he presented himself to be during the campaign, that was a negotiator, who could get the democrats to the table. >> well there is a grand canyon sized disconnect between the leftist punditocacy and haters like michael wolff who make a living spinning false narratives and the actual reality of donald trump. he didn't get to where he was either in the business world or in politics by being any of the things he being accused of. what we have a lot of
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psychological projection. remember, i have had a very interesting relationship with donald trump over the years and i have come to respect the fact that this man, a, loves this country and b, puts 200%, 300% into everything he does and, that was clear yesterday and it was clear the day before and the day before and there is nothing that these trump-deranged saboteurs can say or do that takes away from that reality, and it is clear to people who are not as adeleed as people in the beltway. brian: chelsea manning, changed genders, gave up biggest secrets, 35 years in prison, hundred of thousands of documents, never-before-seen given out to other countries, much to our country's embarassment, president obama gave him a pass, let him out of prison, nothing but belligerent. on law enforcement day, she
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writes, blank the police hashtag, disarm the police, hashtag, we got this, law enforcement appreciation day, with a picture of her as a cartoon character. what is your reaction? >> this is breathtaking. this person is a disgrace to the uniform that this person once wore. over the last couple of weeks we had everybody on the left, in the media, and in politics pretending to be some sort of licensed psychologist. well i will tell you as dr. malkin, that this person is absolutly deranged. the other question i want to know is, why is twitter and twitter safety council allowing this kind of tweet to go on when people on the right have been banned for so much less? ainsley: good point. steve: twitter. your move. >> hello, jack. steve: jack indeed. michelle, thank you very much for joining us today. ainsley: thank you, michelle. >> you too. steve: you bet. ainsley: this teacher questioned
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her superintendent's pay raise, then she got dragged out in handcuffs. >> what are you doing? what are you doing to me? ainsley: we'll tell you what the school is saying about it this morning. steve: what is happening to college campuses. from college campuses, what is next? our panel of professors and college students are here to discuss that next. you're watching "fox & friends" live from new york city. ♪ your an amazing machine. especially when inside another amazing machine. the lexus es. with standard technology like lexus safety system plus. the lexus es, and es hybrid. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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spaces. how do we go forward? we're back with our education panel to discuss. emily, let's start with you. you're a student. you're at harvard. what is your main concern as you look toward the future? because we see all these images of crazy stuff going on on campus? as a conservative do you feel threatened in any way there? >> that is my biggest concern, conservative students on campus feel threatened physically and in their academics. we've seen students all across the country, campus reform.org record the at various colleges from berkeley to harvard, where i am, various schools, students are being threatened with violence and students being threatened by the professors with poor grades and public ridicule for voicing conservative opinions. steve: okay. >> instead of colleges teaching students what they should be thinking they should teach how students should think critically. my biggest concern, that education has lost its main purpose which is to lead
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students to think better and to engage with each other. steve: paul anthony, you're with campus reform. you're a student at manhattanville in new york city area. what are your concerns about the future. >> my concerns are students feeling if they don't have to carry themselves like second class members of their campus community. i'm really proud to be affiliated with campus reform as correspondent, we give a voice to the the voiceless to students have platform to speak up on issues and injustice from liberal bias. me personally at manhattanville college our campus is toxic towards conservative students. stock honest, when i approach my fellow members at american student association or students of caribbean affiliation they look upon me and they change their behavior. they -- steve: that is not right. >> it isn't. we have to make sure we are able to provide a network and give a platform for students to speak up. that they're not alone in the strug fell, other people that resonate wish shoes on campus.
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steve: you're a professor at johns hopkins in the maryland area, you have a different point of view, you're more to the political left. what do you think of the observations threes two students just made. >> as a country we have more that unites us than divides us. politically that has sown division. what is really important, instead of safe spaces college campuses should be brave spaces. we should be able to talk about politics whether on the left or right not be ridiculed for. steve: absolutely. what about at these places on the west coast where a conservative speaker is coming and everybody rises up, we can't let that guy talk because we don't want to hear that stuff? >> you know -- steve: you're saying that is wrong, that reaction is wrong? >> not that that reaction is wrong, there is difference between conservative speakers and those that are provocateurs. when you bring milo -- steve: what about ben shapiro?
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>> i don't think he is a provocateur. i think he should speak. steve: there are pros test es. that is wrong. >> that is delicate dance. steve: then there is a line, is this person to provocative or not provocative enough? >> when you make statements lens lgbt community and people of color, that is absolutely wrong. that is cuts both ways. steve: professor borelli? >> when the administration chooses to street conservatives versus liberals subjectively, barring people like ben shapiro, that same school had convicted palestinian terrorist speak at that school. talking about depaul university that is it where we see the problem. i hope students who are very encouraging, stay on your administration. you guys are paying bills at the school. keep calling for conservative speakers at your colleges. steve: what about after the wagner college? >> my main concern the divide is only growing more. i've been threatened, not necessarily threatened i been told i deserve to be tarred and
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feathered. i deserve to be killed. watch your back. steve: who says this? >> people on campus. say it face-to-face to me, tweet it at me. steve: because you're conservative. >> for my support of trump campaign. focus on people willing to talk and come together. like president trump did yesterday, bringing two sides together to have a conversation. steve: can i see your hands. who thinks we reached a tipping point and things can get better now that we acknowledge it is so super polarized. you're all positive. wendy give you the final word. >> i warrant to us make sure it is not just conservatives, it is also liberals who feel this, right? our country is polarized but i am warmed by just the conversation we're having here today and know that we can come together as a country. steve: very good. charlton, wendy, joe, paul, emily, great discussion, thank you very much. it is 22 minutes before the top of the hour and jillian has some
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headlines. jillian: good morning. good morning to you as well. teachers and first-responders will soon use videogames to train for school shootings much the department of homeland security and the army teamed up to create a virtual reality simulation that shows the best way to react in active shooter situation. users can experience the perspectives of a teacher, first responder or shooter. it will be released in the spring. a teacher is handcuffed and arrested for questioning her boss's new contract. >> what are you doing? >> don't. >> can you explain -- >> you're hurting me. >> stop resisting. >> i am not, you pushed me to the floor. jillian: this happening at louisiana school board meeting when she asked why the superintendent was getting a 30,000-dollar raise when teachers were not getting one at all. >> is this policy -- jillian: she won't face charges, there are reports it was set-up to get rid of the
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superintendent. veterans memorial destroyed by criminals will take hundreds of thousands of dollars to repair. a tribute to the people defending our country, knocked off their mounts at walk of heroes memorial park in georgia last month. three suspects are under arrest. one is still on the run. four members say the damage is so extensive will take months and at least $200,000 to fix. a look at the headlines. i believe we go to janice dean. >> cold out here, miss jillian. it feel as little warmer than it did over the weekend. look at the maps. hi, there, how is it going? we'll take a look at maps. 31 in new york city. 31 in cleveland. 38 in chicago as ed brings the camera over. there is the past 24 hours. the storm across the west unfortunately brought incredible flooding is now on the move. some of that energy will move across the plain states, bringing the potential for a little bit of a winter storm. so we will watch that and maybe
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even this weekend. hi friends, where are you from? >> texas. >> my gosh. what do you they have the weather here? >> it is very cold. >> but you're dressed appropriately. want to say hi to everybody at home? >> my mother is watching. she wanted to be on fox news forever. hi, mom. >> mom, we're waving to you at home in texas. back inside to steve, answer sy and brian. ainsley: hey to mom in breakfast. president let the trump into the meeting on bipartisan meeting on immigration. but did the president give too much to the other side? our next guest says, maybe. ♪ every great why needs a great how. with its historical ance records...test ...you could learn you're from ireland... ...donegal, ireland...
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everything we heard in that room. he is executive director for center for immigration studies and joins us right now. mark, why shouldn't we be somewhat encouraged by the very candid comments both sides made? >> well, i mean my question, my concern is what the president said, and he made a lot of comments that frankly sounded a lot more like jeb bush than donald trump. i mean i joked on twitter that the j in donald j. trump should be jeb at this point. but all that having been said, this kind of thing has happened before. last year, remember he met with chuck and nancy, seemed like he was cutting a deal. even during the campaign he had various events it sounded like he was going rogue. it never turned out that way. i'm not, i'm actually, you know, i'm worried but i'm not necessarily more worried than i was before. brian: well, mark, he is showing he is not so rigid to not bend at all. you do have to negotiate. he doesn't have 60 votes in the
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senate. what i found interesting he quickly backed off 18 billion he needed for the fence. i will take less. okay, i will do daca alone and quickly kevin mccarthy said no, we'll not do that. >> i think he was cultivating discussion. brian: yeah. >> his strongest offenders probably saw that as is playing 14 dimensional chess and all planned out. i don't think that is what it was going on. he wasn't selling out necessarily the supporters. he was just i think, it was a reality show. it was the real politicians of washington, d.c. the question is going to be, what is the actual legislation that is going to come out of it. the encouraging thing was that the only actual bill he talked about is one that congressman goodlatte, chairman of the judiciary in the house which is introducing today which is actually a pretty good bill. brian: which is? >> it is to deal with, to
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amnesty the dacas, give them three-year work permit legally, not the phony thing obama has done, in exchange for getting rid of visa lottery, getting rid of chain migration and e-verify and border and other enforcement measures. it is not everything i would like. that is a pretty good bill. that is the only bill president talked about. brian: the president talked about whatever you get me i signed. what he meant, republicans will give me something i can sign. he knows he can't get everything. mark, you know you can't get everything. there is a sense that the businessman from the outside, and if there are some stops and starts since the '80s, we are ready, as a country to get something done. do you sense there might be, it might be the perfect storm? >> maybe. probably but, probably only on the specific issue of this unique group of illegal immigrants, these people with daca. they're different from any other
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illegals, and the people, the democrats in that room were basically saying, look, this is a camel's nose under the tent. we want to give them amnesty. then we want to give it to everybody else, where the rationale of fixing the problem of these daca people is that they actually are very different from any other group of illegal immigrants. brian: right. that would be it. i'm sure there wouldn't be any long-term agreement on 11 million here estimated to be here illegally, within the daca, especially because the parents are not included. they will not become instant citizens. mark, thank you so much. >> thank you. brian: next on our run-down. how to lose weight while eating all your favorite foods. you don't even have to count calories. seriously? let's check in with sandra smiths she doesn't need a diet because she is a track star. >> i ran fast on the treadmill this morning. always good to see you, brian. good morning everyone. san francisco judge ruling against the white house on
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immigration, ruling against to temporarily end daca. after that bipartisan unbicameral meeting with the president yesterday. will republicans and democrats come together on this? dhs secretary kristin nielsen is here. we'll talk about visa my greiges, border wall, all that coming up on "america's newsroom" in a couple minutes. prevagen. the name to remember.
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david joins us. >> happy new year. ainsley: as you talk about the super foods, is that right? >> basically, number one question i always get how do i maximize my metabolism especially as we age. i wrote the book. it is easy. it is for everyone. it is effective and delicious. basically what you're learning how you naturally turbo charge your metabolism, eating super proteins, super fats, super carbs, lose 14 pounds in 14 days. steve: wow. >> super carbs and super proteins and super fats. this is eggs, yogurt, salmon, chicken, buffalo. then you have the super carbs everything from sweet potatoes to ancient greens, sprouted
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greens, whole wheat. then you have your super fats and these are everything from walnut oil, coconut oil, seeds, everything. if you can eat like this, what you're doing is you're pushing the junk out of your diet and the fat out of your body. ainsley: take us through a day. how do we start? >> you will, this is a salmon sandwich. this is a new york classic minus the bagel here. this is only 280 calories, this powerhouse. basically getting a super protein and a super fat in the salmon. it is filled with omega-3s, anti-inflammatory, good for heart health. good for brain health. a lot talking about mental fitness. this is great way to start your day. ainsley: do you have to cook it? >> you don't have to cook it. already prepared. putting it together with the nine-grain bread and everything is terrific. a little bit of coffee which is a natural metabolism booster. ainsley: lunch? >> this is faux style turkey
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lettuce wrap. this is faux my friend at "fox & friends" this is just 240 calories here. you're getting turkey, which is the super protein. you're getting veggies, sesame oils, super fat and you're combining it with tumeric iced tea, helps to boost metabolism and shut off the fat genes. spices are great, cinnamon, tumeric, basically getting the flavor without the calories. then we go to dinner there. is still dinner. that is bison burger. say bye to your belly. it is 375 calories. buy son has half the fat of red meat. it is packed with b-12. >> is it really gamemy? >> it is really delicious. with a ton of b-12. sweet potato fries the king of slow carbs. if you combine it with exercise, and there are dozens of exercises and plans in the book,
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>> oftentimes brian comes into work with two neck ties, doesn't know which one to wear. we're reading some of your email regarding your choices. >> my nighttime choice isn't like my daytime choice. i come with one in my pocket. >> charles said get ties with red, white and blue. they go with everything. >> josh writes brian's blue tie looks perfectly. better than red for him. also the glasses look great. >> i think you should do a
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survey every morning. put two ties up and the audience decides. >> what did instagram say? >> tied right now. >> tied? all right. >> see you tomorrow. >> bill: good morning. breaking news this hour. new reaction only moments ago from the white house. this after a federal judge temporarily blocking president trump's decision to end the dreamer's program in the month of march coming hours after reporters and the american public were given this live unfiltered access to an hour-long meeting between the president and lawmakers from both sides. fascinating stuff. good morning. everybody. what has changed. i'm bill hemmer live inside "america's newsroom." good morning. >> sandra: what a meeting that was. i'm sandra smith. good morning. the white house calling the move by a san francisco judge outrageous. as the president worked to negotiate what he is calling a bill of love to protect the dreamers and secure th
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