tv Americas News HQ FOX News January 28, 2018 9:00am-10:00am PST
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happen to be doing something different on sundays. we'll be back next sunday 11:00 a.m. with the latest buzz. [♪] eric: president trump set to deliver his first state of the union address in two days, tuesday. he's expected to detail his proposals to make a safe, strong and proud america. welcome to "america's news headquarters," i'm eric shawn. arthel: i'm arthel neville. the president will hit on headlines like infrastructure and national security and highlight how thanks reform and deregulation have boosted jobs and the economy over the past year. >> the president is going to
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talk about how america is back. and where we are as far as growing the economy. arthel: rich, can we expect a softer tone from the president? reporter: that's what senior officials are saying. saying we can expect the president to be more empathetic during this first state of the union tuesday. officials are pointing out that the president will discuss jobs and the economy, infrastructure, national security, trade and immigration identified as a broad areas the president will build on during this speech. the president will push congressional action in shared areas of agreement. on "fox news sunday" the white house legislative director said the president will reach out
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across the aisle. >> the president will make an appeal to democrats and say we need to rebuild our country. and to do infrastructure, we need to do it in a bipartisan way. reporter: the president will call for a trillion dollar infrastructure plan. this is not the first time the president has attempted to reach out across the aisle. arthel: the president presented his proposal on immigration and already there is pushback. what is the white house saying? >> they are defending the offer amidst attacks from the left and right. the so-called dreamers, those brought to this country illegally as children. to allow them a path to citizenship ranging between 10 10-years. conservative groups claim that's
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amnesty. >> the political reality is we have to come up with a deal. this is a deal we put forward for these daca recipients. there are education requirements, good moral character requirements. the bigger piece of this is securing the border. reporter: the white house says as part of that deal it wants $25 billion for a border call and an end to chain migration and the visa lottery system. eric: the president's immigration plan is facing pushback from democrats and republicans. this morning house majority leader kevin mccarthy said a deal could be done. >> the president is the one who showed leadership in this. to solve this problem we are
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going to have to have compromise. no one will get 100% of what they want. but this solves the problem long term. >> the president has put his wishes on the table. now congress has to work out the details. the president offered not just legal residence for daca recipients, but also a pathway to citizenship for 1.8 million of them. he wants 25 billion for the border wall and bored protection. today democrats are focusing on their objections to that. >> where the bad part comes is the idea of the wall. which i thought was a great idea in the 15th century. but not so smart today when we have telling that is much more effective and more cost effective in terms of protecting the border. i think you will see a lot of debate about how much money we
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should spend on border security. reporter: the white house says this is a credible offer on the part of the president and says the wall won't go where it doesn't need to go. >> the gang of 8 spent $43 mill on border security systems. you don't need $25 billion for a wall. you need wall systems, you need road, you need redundancy. you need to fiction old fencing. reporter: even some republicans long concerned about a path to citizenship such as arkansas senator tom cotton says the president's plan could be acceptable as long as we responsibly stop the future illegal immigration and unfair chain migration. arthel: senate majority leader
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mitch mcconnell is trying to reach an immigration deal in the first week of february. it's part of the compromise he struck with democrats after a shutdown earlier this month. but he could be facing hurdles hammering out the details and differences between the two side. jamie weinstein is the host of the jamie weinstein show podcast and also the founding partner at jmw strategies. as far as the opposition the president's plan is facing, would president trump get more bipartisan support if he would leave daca and at wall in miss proposal and deal with phasing out the visa lottery and family migration as separate legislation? >> i think that is the most of potent criticism. i think there have been some unfair criticisms of what the president put out there.
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he's getting hammered from some of the people in his base for going too far. but he's doing what he said he wouldn't do during that famous conference meeting with bipartisan leaders when said he would deal with daca and at wall first, then deal with restructuring immigration more broadly. this seems to lump all of that into one big proposal. and that might be harder to get passed by that february 8 deadline than just focusing on the wall and border security as well as daca. they will were leading up to the expiration of daca and wor work permits march 5, how much will politics get in the way? >> i think politics is huge here. it has been huge in the last he
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kade where we saw they were close to coming to a deal. there are people who see advantage to keeping this issue festering. as long as the issue is there they can claim republicans are not good to hispanics. on the right they don't want to deal at all because they don't want to legalize this illegal population. you see both bases fighting this proposal. most of of america and most of of the people in congress can easily come to a reasonable compromise if they don't listen to the fringes pushing them to polarize. >> to that point and to that end, if there is a new immigration law before the mid-term elections, which party benefits more than the other if there is new legislation in
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place? >> you can get six different opinions talking to two didn't people on this issue. but my view is the base of america wants some type of proposal that ultimately solves this problem. you get security on the border. you legalize the dreamers. and are as american as most of other americans, they barely know their home country that they are threatened to be sent back to. i think that's a popular proposal. there are fringes who say that is not possible. but i think that is a popular proposal and that could benefit the gop. show that they have heart going into the mid-term election solving this problem. i think it could benefit donald trump. arthel: president trump already kicked steve bannon out of his camp. is that a signal he's willing to put some bridles on a little bit and not listen to the fringe on
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his side and maybe the democrats won't listen to the fringe on their side and maybe compromise will happen. >> even the proposal that was put outagers the immigration hawks who supported him. look at what they are calling him at "breitbart." they are calling him amnesty don. steve bannon said he wanted his followers to send videos burning their make america great again hats. that's how angry he was. will the politics kind of torpedo this deal before it gets to the desk of the president for signature? i think he will sign a deal that's a compromise. the question is, will congress be able to get him a deal to sign. arthel: the president will want to be more than just a one-term
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president. does he begin to not necessarily discard everything his base is telling him, but consider the mainstream majority of the country and that in the improved economy could benefit the president? >> i think that's true. i think most of of his base, while some of the hard-line base are upset. i think most of of the base voted for donald trump because they believe in donald trump. what trump may be able to do is expand the base by showing he's able to come to agreement. his numbers are not very high just approaching the first year of this term. but this could boost his numbers up. i don't think he will lose too many of his supporters by going to a deal. i think he will bring more in. this could be good for him
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politically. eric: steve wynn stepped down as finance chairman for the republican national committee. he's facing allegations of sexual misconduct that go back years. winn has been denying the claims. >> steve wynn is stepping aside at the rnc but he's not admitting guilt. he says he resigned to not to be a distraction to the party. he has contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to republicans. democrats are calling on the rnc to return any money they received from the billionaire. the rnc said quote in the exact
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word of ronna mcdaniel. if you stand for treating women well and stand for respect of women, you shouldn't take money from someone who treated womb went highest levels of disrespect. here is what lindsey graham had some say when asked about it earlier today. >> do you believe that money should be returned? >> give it a day or two to figure out. we should dove ourselves what we ask of the democratic party if these allegations have merit. i appreciate the fact that she had to quickly give her a chance to figure out how deep this goes. if the allegations have merit we
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should return the money like we ask of the democrats. reporter: he's accused of pressuring employees to engage in sex acts with hem. they found a decade-long pattern of sexual misconduct. steve wynn denies the allegations. arthel: former ambassador john bolton is on deck. will president trump go against his own justice department when it comes to releasing a classified memo on alleged conduct at if the fbi? i'm on the move all day long... and sometimes, i don't eat the way i should. so, i drink boost. boost high protein nutritional drink has 15 grams of protein to help maintain muscle and 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d. boost high protein be up for it
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eric: president trump is set to have unusual lunch guests at the white house. the united nations security counsel coming taint's a working session on iran. the diplomats are meeting with the president to deal with the continuing threat from tehran. and the get-together is part of a two-pronged approach to deal with what the president seize as
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flaws in the iran nuclear deal. and two ballistic missiles aimed at saudi arabia that he says proves they are involved with the how thin houthi rebels. ambassador, it's a field trip. a creative way to demonstrate to the security council that iran is violating the terms of the agreement. >> it should be an occasion for the security council to take steps against iran. but every indication by the european union is they are very reluctant to increase ballistic missile sanctions on iran and take additional steps to enforce them. the head of the european union
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foreign affairs operation said they are worried if they press too hard on ballistic missiles it will cause the nuclear deal to come unstuck. it could well carry nuclear weapons. the two are close live related. but that's where the europeans have been. i think this is useful for the security council to see these pieces of what he phones fired by the houthi rebels. hopefully it will have an effect, but i wouldn't hold my breath. eric: there are two pieces fired they say from yemen, one was aimed toward riyadh airport. it was destroyed and intercepted. what more do the diplomats need to see in do they need to see
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"made in iran"? >> one of the growth industries that the united nations is finding excuses not to do anything, i'm not sure the diplomats will say i don't think these missiles were made in iran. what are we going to do about it? not much. but it's certainly worthwhile to get this information out there. it should impress some people around the world. and i think you have to keep making the case that the nuclear deal has done zero to effect iran's rehigh year in terms of its relations with the wider world. eric: we were told it would basically moderate the behavior of the tehran regime, they would
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enter into the international community as a peace-loving regime and apparently out up so it would stop its support of terrorism and they are still on the list of state sponsors of tear requiremendterrorism at the department. >> it's true they are still the biggest financier of international terrorism. but they will be okay on the nuclear issue. they will give their word on that and reform there. it doesn't work that way. the broader claim has failed as well. this deal needs to be abrogated. the u.s. can create a new reality that reflects where iran has always been. remember, it's a two-sided objective. not just nuclear weapons.
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deliverable nuclear weapons. eric: the president said he won't certify the iranian deal again in order to pressure the europeans to negotiate something better. >> i don't think the europeans will do anything. they will try almost any charade to try and save this deal because the iranians and i think president trump correctly judged if they could emmesh the europeans in business deals with iran, it would make it impossible for them to back away from the deal, no matter what the evidence was. so far that's succeeding. i think only a dramatic step by the united states will wake the europeans up. eric: what do you expect from
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that lunch? what's it like when they sit down with the president of the united states, some of whom may not have the most fondness for? >> that's one thing professional diplomats are good at. it will be a cordial lunch, i don't think. i am not shire would have suggested it when i was in the bush administration because i don't think they would have done it. but maybe they will enjoy their tour of the white house and it will make an impression on them. arthel: coming up, protests under way in russia ahead of a march election. a russian opposition leader behind bars again. with president trump's first state of the union address two days away. a former writer for george w.
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eric: russian opposition leader alexi mcauley is back in jail after being detained three times last year. now he faces charges after calling for nationwide demonstration ahead of the presidential election in march. protesters showing up in large numbers across the country. police arresting on his way to a rally in moscow. amy kellogg live now in italy with more. hi, amy. >> hi, eric are predictably russia's most popular opposition
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leader was arrested the four to protest got going, but the protest got going without him anyway. he has been barred due to what many say are serious fraud charges. sure of a place on the ballot, and he has turned to his last resort, which is launching a nationwide campaign and urging people to boycott the upcoming election. people were out in force today, chanting various slogans, largely things like stolen election and we are the power. navalny's position for years have been super trade the putin regime. poverty rates growing faster than anytime since the ruble crash in 1998. his message resonates with many. rallies to place in 115 cities. do you see russia's extreme arriviste and the most frigid hinterlands people came out in
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minus 45-degree temperatures. navalny arrested on his way to moscow. he said this means nothing. this is not about me. it's about your future and early today we spoke to navalny's office for journalists or broadcasting today. apparently cops broke in with an ankle burning there. egg them on to present the camera in their ideas. the break-in was a bomb threat. finally, the point of all of this was for people to boycott the election is to get a very low voter turnout and i would certainly take some of the legitimacy away from president clinton's all but guaranteed the area in march. turning to face an unbelievable cold as well as the power of putin. thank you, amy. >> the fact america is open for
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business. talking about america's strength. the fact we wipe out i says but that we have growing threats such as north korea. tranter white house director of legislative affairs marks are weighing in on the president's upcoming state of the union address to white house aides say the president plans to offer bipartisanship on tuesday as he pushes his legislative agenda to congress. the founder of the conservative political training group american majority of its former presidential writer george w. bush come as perfect place on a sunday morning. nick, good to see you. >> good to be with you. >> out today, regarding substance, what message should president trump it that ads for style? how much teleprompter an unabashed twitter should he resign? >> first of all, we seen a record over the last year when he's disciplined, on the teleprompter. he just hits home runs. he think about his speech in saudi arabia, in his address in
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poland. when donald trump is disciplined, he hits homeruns. i expect we will see a triumphant tone on tuesday. i read a piece at the hill and i hope that he takes the tour that because i any stretch the first year he had it they put in a republican president putting a conservative justice on the supreme court, rolling backward delayed 1500 regulations, crushing a system of a major tax bill. by any stretch of the imagination this has been a successful year and if you put on top of that the fact they've been under assault by the opposition party and have the albatross and illegitimate investigation around his neck, it's been an amazing year. you'll see a couple other things playing out in this message tuesday night. from day one, trumps message on the campaign into the first year has been we choose not to decline. we choose to be great in the
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greatness and success for all americans. i think people still struggle with is the fact trump is not about democrat of them versus republicanism. use about americanism regardless of race entirety. arthel: i jumped in there because given night you have pointed out all the highlights and it's different for each president, what political roadblocks are rebounds if you will all president trump face as he navigates through a state of the union address? >> first of all he's going to talk about a lot of good things. we are looking at the lowest job claims rate since team 73. the american workers are the most optimistic they been in 17 years. the one place i see that there could be a little of negotiating through difficult subject is the issue of immigration. donald trump has laid out correctly the perimeters, 25 billion for ill, 5 billion
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for southern border security in the chain migration into the visa lottery system. in return, he has to be very explicit. the right number for the daca dreamers is not one putting a million. a 690,000 a lot of trumps find that number and when they passed his citizenship for the 690,000 dreamers. the one point that could be a little bit of a heads-up that he's got to negotiate carefully is the whole issue of immigration and how we come up with a successful daca deal. arthel: one of my guests yesterday said president trump state of the union speech doesn't matter and what counts is what president trump tweets. you agree with that? >> i really don't. you see the success he has had it when he's been disciplined, it has been a really great response to the speeches in the past year. i will say this. it's been a lot more discipline out of trump in the last few months in regard to twitter and i have to tell you 90% of his
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tweets and purposely finally. it's a great way to communicate directly to the american people. i think it's been one of those things that most of the american people find refreshing that he's being authentic in communicating directly to them pretty much in real time. arthel: do think his advisers would agree with you? some of them have to come up and clean up after the president's tweets. >> i think they've come to a certain point acceptance of the fact donald trump is going to tweet. arthel: but should he make sure -- they are taught to rap, but it is official information. should his tweet, should the president make sure they are factual? >> listen, 90% fine with. when he sticks to his policy and agenda, i love it. 10% gives me heartburn, that you think most of the good and a little bit of what make him
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comfortable and most people find the authenticity great. eric: ned ryan, we leave it there. thank you. eric: one of the things president trump has been touting, this month he signed an executive order expanding resources for vets. va hospitals continue to be rated among some of the worst in the country particularly in arizona were dozens of veterans died. back in the scandal and 2014. will carr has more from los angeles. >> the scandal rocked to be a pure president trump continues to pledge that care will improve for veterans. >> we made tremendous strides including passage of long-awaited veterans accountability legislation. >> the internal rating show significant gains for many hospitals, but having is considered ground zero the 2014 scandal after dozens of veterans died while waiting for care and
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once again ranked as one of the worst in the country in 2017. one out of five stars for the second year in a row. >> we are worlds away from where we were in 2014. the veterans were regaining trust even though it's one veteran at a time. >> the seventh director to run the va since the scandal broke took over in october 2016. >> one out of five the year before. when you talk about trust, when you talk about the veterans here in arizona, why are they not happening faster. >> they need to happen. we all know that. we still have a lot of work to do. >> nelson tells a dramatic drop the third average of 30 days down to just 11. jeff flake tells fox news i am truly disappointed in the continued poor performance of the phoenix va. clearly greater oversight is
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necessary. >> i'm disappointed because we are not where we are. we love to rid ourselves of 10. we are not there yet. >> would you feel comfortable getting your health care? >> absolutely. i would absolutely be comfortable getting the health care here. >> another positive brandon coleman, voted to the new va office of accountability and whistleblower protection in d.c. >> taking a proactive approach and reactive approach and not the big change. >> part of that includes the new protection office traveling across the country to meet with whistleblowers and doing what they can to help resolve issues. eric: thanks so much. arthel. eric: of the government call for the release of the classified memo? that allegedly shows abuse of the fisa system by the government. here is the health oversight committee chairman trey gowdy.
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>> if you are interested in who paid for the dossier, if you are interested in christopher steele's relationship with hillary clinton in the democratic national committee, you will want to memo to come out. bravo, tall meeting man. start winning today. book now at lq.com when it comes to travel, i sweat starthe details.day. late checkout... ...down-alternative pillows... ...and of course, price. tripadvisor helps you book a... ...hotel without breaking a sweat. because we now instantly... ...search over 200 booking sites
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or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you. eric: president trump once the classified memo released. you know the one that apparently detailed how the russian investigation started. the presidents request to put them at odds with his own justice department, which is running against made public without a proper review. "fox news sunday" the oversight committee trey gowdy says the memo should be made public but only after the fbi adverse. >> this memo is he has taken
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that under advisement. >> republican in louisiana mike johnston joins us. the judiciary committee. do you think it should be released? >> i do. almost all republicans and i found the content to be alarming and also very credible. i think we could do this in a responsible manner that doesn't sacrifice in any way national security interest or the apparatus. if we're going to maintain a government of the people, by the people and for the people, it depends very much upon transparency in the american people deserve that level of transparency. eric: what about the concerns it could damage national security? >> i can't get into the details of the memo as you know. we signed nondisclosure agreements and i think that's important. i will say that i think the level of details in these memos wouldn't sacrifice in any way our national security interest. some of the concerns about batter a little bit overblown.
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i don't disagree with what chairman gowdy said this morning as you just noted that the fbi should be able to review this. all of this should have been in the immediate timetable. there is a short timeframe to do it. the intelligence committee has the authority to release it and if you do if you get this to the american public within a matter of days, about a week. let's see how it unfolds. eric: stephen boyd who wrote the letter to the committee doesn't say to release it, but they want to see it. we believe would be extraordinarily reckless to disclose the information publicly without doing the department of the fbi the opportunity to review the memorandum advised the committee at the risk of harm to national security and ongoing investigations that could come from public release. indeed we do not understand by the committee would possibly seek to disclose classified law-enforcement sensitive information without consulting relative numbers of the intelligence community. you understand the damaging
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impact the release the material could have under national security and ability to share and receive sensitive information from foreign government. so what if the fbi or the doj does review it and they say no, don't release it? >> this is why we have the elect the representatives of the people in the congress. the house select committee on intelligence is very bright people. they understand the necessity of this and the american people deserve transparency. the metal is a summary of highly classified information. not the underlying information itself and as a set of the outside, not a responsible manner that doesn't jeopardize our intelligence community or national security. eric: could that be parts of it be redacted? other parts do not reveal sources and methods for example, could that be protected for it to be released? >> i think that's right. there are ways to do this, redacting the material that may
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be appropriate if the intelligence community decides that's true or the intelligence committee agrees that maybe it would do it. so much has been said about this already. i can tell you about the content and that people should be out of make these decisions themselves. >> it's for political purpose. the dossier kicked us off, whatever the stories are, it's really a political situation. >> we are in a hyper partisan environment right now in washington. these are matters that transcends party politics. the integrity of our system intelligence community is something that should be of great concern to all americans regardless of political persuasion. the people should be eliminate the decision on it. >> will see what they say if there is a review that the chairman may be and what could
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potentially be admitted it's be admitted it's ever released. republican congressman of louisiana commit thank you for joining us today. arthel: we are approaching 50 years since the pivotal event in the vietnam war. fox news is taking a special look back at the campaign that sparked a americana that war could be won. and how do you feel? [sighs] like a burden's been lifted. those other cards made you sign up for bonus cash back. then they change categories on you every few months. then you had to keep signing up! you...deserve...better. now get out there and keep earning that 1.5% cash back on every purchase everywhere. thanks, doc. i'm not a doctor. what? [whispers] time to go. what's in your wallet?
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eric: well, you may not know his face, but his brand of the household name and you have some other stuff in your house or at least someone you know. the founder of ikea has died at the age of 91 years old. he started assembling the swedish furniture company when he was only 17 years old and he saw it grow to a multibillion dollars empire because of it simple affordable designs and reportedly got that idea went flat furniture when you take it out of building yourself because you watch the employee take the legs off the table and fitted into a customer's car so that's how we came up with the idea to get all that stuff. eighth richest person in the world and we thank him for making our lives easier.
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arthel: nearly two years since the beginning of the tet offensive, one of the largest military campaigns of the vietnam war. fox news looking back at revisiting the works of the vietnam war photographer arguably captured his iconic images now part of a new exhibit at washington d.c. museum. molly line in with more. hi, molly. >> hi, arthel. museum open his innovative in several ways. through touch and sound and tells the story of a young army photographer whose images he captured. some of these photos are heart wrenching. this one, one of the most iconic images of the war taken during the battle in the 1068 with the carnage born out of the bloody fight during the tet offensive. the u.s. army as a combat photographer. >> i've never seen anything like
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it. it is all jungle fighting. the pile of rubble. we were met by 18 come and make team, 20 wrote marines. >> i was 50 years ago to today's work is featured in the new exhibit to find the voices behind those he immortalized in film. this hour for photo central figure of a handsome young marine is alan grantham of mobile, alabama. at the time he was just 18 years old and he was nearly left for dead. >> i hope it tells the story at a moment in time of what happened on that day, and knot tying. and you see the carnage of the battle. it is kind of an eerie picture, but i'm kind of proud of it, too. >> he continues to look for the men in the photos. 1968.com where they can aid in the search. the exhibit will remain on display through early july.
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arthel: thank you, molly. eric: president trump gearing up for his first hit of the union speech on tuesday. what will the president say? a preview of the topics expected to touch on straightahead. tou. easily digestible, it makes her favorite entrées even more delightful. fancy feast creamy delights. love is in the details. i'm the one clocking in when you're clocking out. sensing and automatically adjusting to your every move. does your bed do that? i'm the new sleep number 360 smart bed. let's meet at a sleep number store.
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first major tournament of the year. congratulations to roger. arthel: congratulations. we are back at 4:00 eastern. hope you can join us. we will see later on today. thanks. leland: countdown to the president's first state of the union. break down his major talking appoints to the economy to immigration to the fight against isis. standing by at the white house at the preview. >> plus, followed by billionaire currency resignation following allegations. what should happen next. leland: and to the president along with congressional leaders speaking out today about immigration. we will hear from them as the governor of colorado has some ideas about how to help his immigration population.
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