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tv   Fox and Friends Saturday  FOX News  February 3, 2018 3:00am-7:00am PST

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♪ >> classified memo makes the case that the national security court was kept in the dark by the fbi and justice department. >> i didn't want to have to do this but the sad part is that i have an obligation to the american people when we see fisa abuse. >> president trump left no room for interpretation how he felt about the memo. >> i think it's a disgrace. what's going on in this country, i think it's a disgrace. a lot of people should be ashamed of themselves. >> the investigation is now going to be reversed. i know that members of congress are going to call for a special counsel to investigate the investigators. >> dow worst week in two years.
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u.s. employers hired more people in january than economists had forecast, adding 200,000 jobs. >> downtown minneapolis has never seep this much security. triagely parked national guard humvees crowd and party venues of head of sunday's big game. ♪ ♪ ♪ we'll have a house party ♪ we don't need nobody ♪ turn that tv off. >> pete hegseth having the real party. we are going to get to that in a moment. welcome, rachel, todd, everybody is here. todd: great to be here. if you are waking up at home brew an entire pot of coffee for the next four hours. so much to get to, it's a jam-packed day and it all begins with that memo. rachel: by the way mom just texted me her and the cat are up in arizona watching. there is a lot going on and started with the memo.
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ed: #release the memo. #memo day. i guess this is something hash e day after. some concerned on the right it was going to be dad. some on the left insisting this was going to nowhere. in the end it turns out devin nunes brought a lot to the table here. go through. so key take aways in the memo. first of all that dossier was key to the fbi and justice department's application to end up spying on members of the trump team. also, that the fisa court, that secret court was never told about the dossier's political roots. they were told there was political motivation here but not that it was paid for by the dnc and clinton campaign. the court never told that christopher steele, the former british spy was passionately anti-trump. maybe the most important point and hotly disputed right now, but andrew mccabe testified in december, according to this republican memo, that the fisa warrant, initially, to surveil carter
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page, the trump advisor, resulted from the steele dot dossier. without the steele dossier he testified to the intelligence committee they wouldn't have even gone to the fisa court. they wouldn't have tried to get a warrant for surveillance. democrats on the committee are insisting that is not what andrew mccabe said. there is a transcript of what he said. that will come out. rachel: how can it be in dispute. there must be a transcript. if the papadopoulos -- you know, the papadopoulos meeting is what initiated this investigation. if that was enough, why include the dossier to begin with? to me it's an admission that papadopoulos wasn't enough. ed: papadopoulos, the other advisor had met with australian diplomat. there was an attempt by the fbi and the justice department in the summer of 2016 to get fisa warrant to start surveillance. that was denied, we're told. it was not until roughly october 2016 with the does
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way thrown in there that they were able to start by spying. rachel: correct. todd: this whole thing offends me as a lawyer because you take an oath and literally the words of that oath say i will not misrepresent anything to a court. we had a bunch of lawyers misrepresent a lot to the 40 toe fisa court. those people should be elm bares are a areembarrassed and n oath. rachel: you have to pagliano there is a fisa judge out there pretty angry out there. what happens? is can that person come out or is it so secret that -- ed: it is secret but the question will be whether or not there was more evidence presented beyond the dossier that in fairness we do not know today. was there a lot more than the dossier? what we do know from devin nunes, that's his contention, he is the chairman of the committee, that the dossier was central to the initial fisa warrant.
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and so there may be a judge and then there were multiple judges by the way, there were four judges in all because this warrant was redone every 90 days up until late 2017. devin nunes gave an exclusive interview with other own bret baier. here is how he laid it out. >> somebody first reads that dossier, i would think you would come away from that and think okay, this is wild stuff. let's not forget where the dossier came from. it came from russians. so there there is clear evidence with the russians it happens to be with the hillary clinton campaign and democratic national committee that the news media fails to talk about or fails to investigate. >> we are in phase ii of our investigation which involves other departments, specifically the state department and some of the involvement that they had in this. that investigation is ongoing. and we continue to work towards finding answers and asking the right questions to try to get to the bottom of what exactly the state department was up to in
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terms of this russia investigation. ed: state department under john kerry who by the way has been tweeting recently that this can't come out. todd: we also heard sara carter say this we are only about 10 to 15% of the way through on this investigation there is a lot of information and the state department could be the next ones in the crosshairs if you hear devin nunes. rachel: i mean, we saw carter page. could they have spied on other people in the campaign? is that a possibility? todd: absolutely. why do you think, just taking a step back. why do you think everybody on the left is so worried about this information coming out there. has to be a reason just beyond political and beyond hatred of donald j. trump. rachel: that's right. ed: the man who has been saying what, me worry is james comey. tweeting all these deep thoughts. yesterday he reacted by saying that's it? dishonest and misleading memo wrecked the house intel committee, destroyed trust with the intelligence committee. damaged relationship with fisa court and
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inexcusablably exposed classified investigation of an american citizen. for what? doj and fbi must keep doing their jobs. two points, number one, he doesn't dispute a single fact in the republican memo. he gives talking points. beyond that let's not forget the time line as well with james comey. set fbi director in october of 2016 when the dossier is used for the initial fisa warrant number one and a couple months later what does he tell president-elect donald trump in private? i need to tell you there is this dossier but it's unverified. you used that to get a warrant to surveil the president-elect's people, basically. his inner circle. so, he is saying one thing and doing another. rachel: devin nunes is actually firing back. responding to this. let's take a look at what he has to say. >> mr. comey had a chance in january, february, march, april, i believe all the way until june to come clean on who paid for the dossier. he was asked about it in
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january. and he said very clearly that he knew that republicans had started the dossier, which was a lie. and then when asked and further who finished the dossier, he didn't know. now, maybe he was lying. maybe he didn't know. but both seem to be a problem. >> bret: comey said in testimony that some of the dossier's unverified and salacious. are there parts of the dossier is true? >> what that russia is a country and speaj person? other than that we don't know anything. >> whats what the number one thing we heard from the left? ed: going to endanger national security. rachel: the sky is going going to fall. todd: i don't know but, i read this thing a couple times. did i not see. granted i'm not in this community. did i not see one thing to jeopardize national security. somebody who did fight for our country, you know him. he is in minnesota. his name is pete hegseth and we bring him in right now. pete, you read this thing.
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pete: good morning, guys. todd: is there anything in here that worries from a national security perspective? >perspective. pete: what worries me what they did to jeopardize our national security by putting politics first. it reads like political sabotage. opponents of then candidate trump wanting to do whatever they can to use information against him and undermine his presidency. their whole point and belief was that he would never be president. hillary clinton would be president and as a result none of this would come out. this is part of a draining of the swamp. i'm glad god bless devin nunes and the president for pushing this information out and exposing what our doj and fbi did in trying to under -- they are undermining faith in our process by not exposing undermining in our process. rachel: they say the sky is going to fall. all week long there has been breathless reporting on the other side from media, from democrats saying this is going to endanger national security.
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the memo comes out. there is nothing there that would endanger. their own credibility is in danger when they do things like this. pete: yeah. they want to muddy the waters. they understand how bad this is. the only place reporting so much of this has been fox news channel and some conservative outlets. otherwise, if you are watching the so-called mainstream media. you don't know a lot about this. this isn't the bombshell or at least you are surprised by it and then when you start to unpack what's actually happened, if you are not familiar with this scandal, it really is one. it's not new news to us because we have been covering it but man there is a lot of there there. ed: pete, there is only one moving forward. special counsel to investigate why your minnesota vikings did not make it into the super bowl. todd: what america wants to know. pete: you are unkind man. you really are. i am in minnesota trying to enjoy the super bowl there is a melancholy over the entire city. no doubt about it all. ed: give us a feel for
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what's happening there because i'm obviously teasing you and viking fans. give us a feel for what is happening. pete: a lot of excitement. this is one of america's hollywoods, the super bowl. we have been doing what you do. big party with our own. obstacle course called the farm bowl with two minnesota super stars stephon diggs. and trerlg owens all going to come on the program. it's the super bowl, guys. so i'm eating. cheeseburger. red robin gourmet burger bar. ed: getting to you every hour this morning and tomorrow: rachel: now we will turn to headlines. the deadly flu taking more lives, showing no signs of slowing down, especially for children. 16 kids have died in the last week alone, according to the cdc report, bringing the total to 53-flu related
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pediatric deaths this season as hospitalizations sore. health experts strongly encourage everyone who hasn't had a flu shot to get one. a judge says she will not punish the father of three girls sexually abused by michigan sports doctor larry nassar after he charged towards him in court. >> grant me five minutes in a locked room with this heathen. i'm happy -- rachel: randal mar graves apologizing after saying no way he would be fined or jailed. >> no hero. my daughter are the heroes and the victims and survivors of this. a terrible atrocity. >> the sheriff still is investigating and margraves could still face some charges. more proof president trump is making america win again.
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>> i thought we had to stop there. >> you may even get tired of winning. and you will say please, please it's too much winning. rachel: best buy now giving out bonuses to more than 100,000 employeeees join ago grows list. the electronics retailer says it will pay one time bonus us of $1,000 to full-time workers and 500 to do so part-time workers. those are just crumbs. ed: maybe they will get their employees to buy flat screens for the super bowl. there are a lot of names in that fisa. buck sexton breaks down the key players live next. todd: while she was searching for love police were searching from her. how that woman went from being missing to being on reality tv. the mystery when "fox &
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this is a memo that did not risk anyone's security. ed: let's go to tweeter in chief james comey, he keeps going on twitter to explain his side of this and yet a lot of explaining to do. >> i'm still waiting for the zen tweet from comey with the lake in the background to explain how all of this happened. first, he certified three fisa requests. he is very much involved in this whole process. he also is the individual who got the mueller probe started. he is at the center of this. he leaked information that at least one member of congress said was classified to the "new york times," central in hillary email leak probe. he stepped up in front of the country and said there would be no charges which as we know was a very strange move. he tweeted it was devin nunes' fault there was a quote, unquote classified cleaning leak of the carter page surveillance. >> what he put out yesterday was essentially one long series of exaggerations and falsehoods saying this was somehow not helping anybody. it was destroying the relationship with the intelligence community.
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that's just essentially a pile of nonsense coming from the former fbi director, which i think is making people ask questions about how he could get sgt. so wrong. maybe he is really partisan. maybe he is somebody -- ed: andrew mccabe what about him. >> mccabe is somebody who came up on his own certified one fisa request when he was acting fbi director. i should probably put a question mark next to that. when you have a member of congress saying behind closed doors he testified the dossier was central. if the dossier was in fact central to the fisa memo request that's a very big deal there is a lot of contention whether that's true. ed: insurance policy text also pushed out after christopher wray last weekend saw the memo. mccabe was out within 24 hours. sort of interesting right there. let's go to bruce ohr. >> he is the individual that the most personal contact we know of at least with christopher steele the author of the fusion gps dossier and he has very close connections with obviously his wife who was also at fusion gps and
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working on the dossier. and it seems that he conceals his connections or that his connections to christopher steele weren't shared with the fisa intelligence court. ed: even when steele was maybe cut off then all of a sudden ohr was back door getting information from fusion gps. dirt diggers here and feeding it back to the fbi,justice department where he was going back to the fisa court. >> wouldn't we think he would stay away from the souter when the fbi says you know what you are out of here? he did not. he kept it going. ed: sally yates high and might ynchts #resistance being the acting attorney general. she actually has her name on one of these fisa applications according to the devin nunes memo. she also is somebody who reported the phone call between flynn and kislyak so the washington. ed: russian ambassador. >> led to all kinds of problems. refused to do her job.
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#resistance duong. you want to watch out what comes from sally yates. ed: we appreciate your time. >> good to see you. ed: president trump wants to make a deal with democrats on immigration. can the deal actually get done if democrats won't come to the table? we will debate that fair and balanced next. is the story based on the true story of the jamaican bobsled team. one school putting school sledding on ice because it is, what, racist? >> it's bobsled time. when you combine ancestry's dna test with its historical records... ...you could learn you're from ireland... ...donegal, ireland... ...and your ancestor was a fisherman. with blue eyes. just like you.
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strong and so powerful that it will deter any acts of aggression by any other nation. todd: some quick headlines on your saturday morning. president trump keeping his promise to strengthen our nuclear capabilities. the pentagon just releasing a new policy to develop two low yield nuclear warheads to send a message to moscow. this as russia develops a nuclear tornado thatting can strike the u.s. the trump administration accusing vladimir putin of violating a treaty by accumulating a stockpile of those tactical nuclear weapons. and the department of homeland security issuing a warning ahead of the olympics. hackers could target americans attending the games in south korea. keto keep personal information secure, encouraging travelers to limit use of wi-fi. the games begin on friday. rachel, up to you. rachel: thank you. a looming showdown over daca.
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president trump wants immigration deal but democrats don't seem willing to come to the negotiating table. >> i would say we want to make a deal. i think they want to use it for political purposes for elections. i really don't -- i really am not happy with the way it's going from the standpoint of the democrats negotiating. daca is something, should absolutely be easy to do. and i don't think the democrats want to take care of the daca recipients. rachel: all right, joining us now for fair and balanced debate john coalway a democratic strategist and former state representative and a republican strategist. welcome to both of you. >> good morning, rachel. >> good morning. rachel: trump is offering 1.8 million daca recipients dreamers path to citizenship. that's three times the number that obama offered. by the way obama was offering temporary status. this is a pathway to citizenship. tell me why you're telling
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dreamers or daca recipients not to take this deal. >> that's complicated but let's start from the beginning here. the president ended daca in september. president obama took executive action to make a pathway for citizens -- excuse me, for dreamers to stay here. ending daca breaks up families. it destabilizes our economy. and president trump ended it. so if he cared about daca, if he cared about the real effect that these people have on -- the positive effects that these people have on our country, he wouldn't have ended it so, to create a crisis and then offer a pathway out of it is extremely disingenuous. now the president's path is quite amorphos. so the plan he laid out is not one that congress has taken out. it's not one that has details or any teeth to it so the president saying path to citizenship is a buzz word that doesn't have any teeth or fundamental underpinnings when you consider the idea that he ended the program in september to begin with.
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rachel: right, again, obama was offering a temporary status by ending daca. >> president is the one that ended it. rachel: daca path to citizenship it has to be done legally through congress. that's the constitutionally the way it is done. gus, we are seeing a lot of progressive groups like la rassa against it. and then had to retract it and now his board wants him fired. we are seeing democrats, again, saying they want come to the negotiating table. do you think there is a reason why democrats don't want to have this resolution solved by a republican president and republican congress. >> absolutely there is. first of all, you know, hispanic voters have been a central tenet of the democratic, you know, voters that come out during midterm elections. and why should democrats come to the table at this point when they don't want to risk having them stay at home or even losing that.
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because they don't have anything that's, you know, that they are passionate about. now, that's not to say that they are just passionate about immigration. hispanic voters are passionate mostly about the economy. they will be happy to see that they will be getting more of what they earned in their paychecks. especially this coming month. i think mostly because, you know, democrats don't want to come to the table. but, you know, it's important that they do so that we can get a deal done. rachel: if they don't, they are definitely putting the daca recipients at risk perhaps sacrificing it at the table at the altar of the resistance. >> rachel, what puts the daca recipients at risk is ending the program. now, why we won't come to the table from a legislative standpoint is the idea that it's tied -- daca has been tied to the president to the funding and building of the wall which we fundamentally disagree with if you want to talk about the actual legislative proposal that we haven't seen but heard about in let rick, that's the reason why.
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rachel: we will leave it there, gus. thank you don and thank you, gus. >> thank you, rachel. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: still ahead dan bongino is up next. jim jordan, michelle malkin and rob o'neill all live and coming up. plus, the hawaii official who sent that false missile alert now speaking out for the first time. why he says it's not his fault. and pete's in minneapolis having a super bowl party for the super bowl. pete? >> you better believe it come on, it's wisconsin weather. minnesota weather here at the super bowl. you know, it's not a super bowl without super bowl parties. they actually let "fox & friends" into one. and we talked to two super bowl champions. you will find out which fox host is loved by an espn host. tease there. we will bring it to you on "fox & friends." ♪ i have type 2 diabetes.
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kayak compares hundreds of travel and airline sites so you can be confident you're getting the right flight at the best price. cheers! kayak. search one and done. ♪ >> i think it's terrible. you want to know the truth? i think it's a disgras. what's going on in this country, i think it's a disgrace. when you see that and you see that and so many other things, what's going on, a lot of people should be ashamed of themselves, and much worse than that. >> he has abdicated his responsibilitied as commander-in-chief by protecting people, by protecting our intelligence
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sources and the rest. if the president uses this fake, horrible release of distorted intelligence as an excuse to fire rosenstein or mueller, it could lead to a constitutional crisis. todd: with that as the back drop, let's bring in dan bongino. mr. bongino it's always a pleasure to speak with you, especially on post memo day. and i was watching some of the other shows yesterday, other networks. i heard the phrase nothing burger uttered. your response? >> >> nothing burger, you mean like the lighting up the constitution, shedding of the constitution, using the constitution as toilet paper? i don't know what i'm more disgusted by the memo or the filthy media acolytes and their liberal boot lick ires pretending there is nothing in that memo. let's be chris call clear about what's in that memo. the donald trump team was spied on. it was spied on due to a
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dossier, the number two at the fbi said would have never -- this dossier was critical to getting those warrants to spy on people. you know, elements of the police state, guys, are already here. they are all here to rounds of applause by the democrats and their media buddies. it's a real shame what happened. rachel: dan, you say this is one of the most consequential scandals in american politics in recent memory. you are also very good about bringing up obama in this who seems to have gotten off clean. this all happened under his watch or a lot of this. >> you know, i used to say it was likely one of the more consequential. it is now the most consequential, no question, political scandal in american history. let's be absolutely clear what happened. the obama team during a critical, political election, found a way to circumvent u.s. law, jump over judicial restraint and found a way to spy on the donald trump team. after donald trump is elected president and he is in that transition phase,
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they find a way to basically reverse engineer crimes against the trump people to justify prosecutions into people like general mike flynn. i mean, folks, listen, rachel, this is an important point here. these aren't political disagreements here. these are agreements about who we are as a country. if nothing is done about what happened to the trump team, we are already in the midst of a cold civil war. there is no doubt about it. ed: dan, would you acknowledge though at least have you made a lot of important points that at least the way it's supposed to work with fisa and obviously we will learn a lot more in the days ahead as to whether or not the constitution was shredded as you suggested at the top. the way it's supposed to work is that the dossier would have been maybe a key piece as republicans are claiming but that there was other evidence that we are not seeing today that that fisa warrant is dozens and dozens of pages. there is a possibility, to be fair, that there is more evidence there that was used to get the fisa warrant? >> you know, ed, listen, as
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a former federal agent, if i were to go into federal court, right? so let's just set up. you are saying, okay, the dossier may have been have been a piece of larger poiferl. let's say i walk into federal court and i'm a federal agent involved in a murder case, right? and i testified in court that i found the body. and me finding the body is a small piece of evidence in the case. there is a gun. there is other stuff. all of a sudden the guy who is supposed to be dead walks in the back of the court and says hey, i'm here. that's a pretty big piece of evidence that went out the door. the dossier was, according to the number two at the fbi, the central core focus of the fisa warrant. that's not dan bongino talking. that is the number two agent at the fbi. i'm sorry, this was a shredding of the constitution. full stop. todd: dan, i want to get your opinion on the following. kind of got lost in the shuffle with memo gate yesterday. a judge blocked the release of comey's memos documenting conversations with president trump. why does this matter? >> it matter because this
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entire special counsel investigation was started by james comey's leaking of classified information in those very same memos he wrote. it's clear now that james comey had some personal animus towards donald trump. his soul target seem to be to start a special counsel and then subsequent impeachment hearings later on. james comey was a political actor at the end. he was not a law enforcement actor. rachel: thank you, daniel, you always do a good job of breaking this down and helping us focus on what really matter in these important moments. thanks for joining us this morning. todd: i'm shocked dan was fired up. rachel: turning now to headlines. going on the popular reality tv show the bachelor requires disappearing from your regular life. but one contestant reported missing in november. she was, in fact, found competing on the reality dating show. martinez was among a recent article featuring 35 missing
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persons in california. the reality star telling a sheriff's deputy that she was working on a marijuana farm during the time of her reported disappearance. speaking out on twitter, martinez wrote mom, how many times do i have to tell you i don't get cell service on the bachelor? racially insensitive, that's what some people are calling the movie cool running. a true story about a gentleman make canal bobsled team qualifying for the 1988 olympics. >> veer to the right. it's bobsled time. rachel: complaints prosecuting the high school principal toll cancel a viewing of the disney class classic which she says no longer fits the institution's values. the women's bobsled team making it to winter olympic games for the first time ever exactly 30 years. todd: true story is racially
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insensitive? rachel: charter. the hawaii official sending false missile alert claiming he was 100 percent sure that the threat was real. >> the message that i heard was this is not a drill. i didn't hear exercise at all in the message or from my co-workers. rachel: preliminary report finding the drill had no procedures in place to prevent a person from mistakingly sending an alert. the fired worker now saying the state emergency management agency deserves the blame. and those are your headlines. ed: saying he might sue the state. todd: we should all ask to go outs there to interview that individual. it is a lot warmer there than it is here rick reichmuth. rick: a little bit better there than at least anywhere across the eastern part of the country. really cold. moisture coming back in. a little bit of snow coming in across the northern plains, including minneapolis. so, the snow coming in today. take a look at these cold
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temperatures. we were cold a lot in january. sea saw thing. that's where we are again in the sea saw pattern. in the short-term all across the east is very cold. 25 your actual air temperature in atlanta. 29 in mobile. this is the wind chill. what it feels like out there. minneapolis 20 degrees today with some snow tomorrow. 5 degrees for a high. minus 4 for a low. so, thank god everybody knows it'knows it's played insi. pete hegseth is from there. rachel: he is home. is he happy. odd toed to the dow dropping more than 650 points but, on the other side, companies added 200,000 jobs in january. wages continue to rise. what does this all mean for your wallet? we get answers coming up. ed: speaking of cold weather i mentioned pete is live in minneapolis with a live look at super bowl party he hosted with our buddy big
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ed: we have been talking about minneapolis all morning. a guy from minneapolis not on our couch today and not in our man cave that we have done especially for the super bowl. rachel: didn't shave. ed: used to the cold. pete hegseth. pete: you never get used to the cold. you are right. i didn't shave. super bowl let it out here a little bit. big daddy. he knows how to host a party. what kind of party was it? >> it was -- we raised money for the challenge athletes foundation and we launched the candle line. pete: we sure did. it was a party. check it out.
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♪ pete: i walk into the party and who is here chad greenway, 11 stephens, minnesota vikings linebacker. one of the best of the best. grew up watching you play football. i'm geeing out, fanning out right now. you are probably used to that, right? >> a little bit, yeah. pete: i'm not a small dude. you are a big dude. on tippy toe makes me feel linebacker in the nfl. >> i was never biggest, fastest stronger but i was the winner. figured out a way to get on top. pete: we are here at the big daddy super bowl party which coincides most importantly with the launch of the delgado men's collection candle line. this is the world premier tonight. >> we are excited to be here for the super bowl in minneapolis. it's strong. that's how i wanted the brand to be. the vision behind it strong, powerful but with elegance. pete: i got to say though every visionary founder has a guinea pig and i feel like
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maybe big daddy, had you to smell a few accidents. scents. >> one thing can i vouch for this candle line is that my house never smelled so good. pete: i'm going to give the microphone to you and let you actually interview people which is scary. big daddy with a microphone should never happen. ♪ ♪ >> look who is here standing next to me. one of my favorites. yes, i'm biased. i'm like pete. he's a viking guy i'm a giants guy. you know what? steve,. pete: super bowl prediction. what do yo do you think? what is going to happen on sunday. >> i'm not a prediction guy. patriots know how to win super bowls. eagles are built to possibly win this football game. >> we happen to be here with one of my dear friends from espn. is he reading brian kilmeade's andrew jackson book. i asked for it for christmas and my daughter sara bought did for me and i'm reading it right now.
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♪ pete: two time super bowl champ. what does it feel like when you go to visit super bowls? >> when you come to these and you experience it as a former player that was able to come here and win one, you respect how hard it was to get here. pete: normally, as a team, what would you be doing right now? >> i would be laying in bed getting ready for sleep. pete: always ask you for your super bowl prediction on sunday. who do you like? >> the eagles. >> really? >> yes, i do. pete: you are a giants guy and going for the eagles? >> you know what? i'm going to use the rockie theme, they have a puncher's chance. pete: well, they do have puncher's chance. big daddy, hold onto the ball. he knows how to hold onto the ball and throwing a party. >> thanks for being here. pete: you know, even at a super bowl party brian
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kilmeade gets a book promo. >> what was that about? ed: we just had our fact check team, you said you might be able to play linebacker in the nfl? did i hear that right? pete: come on, you know, maybe. former life. [buzzer] todd: pete, considering had you a whole segment in there about man candles i'm pretty sure you're ability to play linebacker is shot down. >> arguably lost the pushup contest to aadam klotz. ed: love you both. see you all morning. enjoy the show. rachel: d.c. is dealing with the aftermath of the fisa memo. are there more memos to come. devin nunes says this is just the beginning. ed: mixed day to say the least. the dow dropping more than 650 points. companies added more than 200,000 jobs in january and wages, paychecks on the rides. what does it all mean for your wallet? we will break it down next.
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♪ ♪ pete: pete. todd: shaky afternoon for wall street yesterday. companies adding robust
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200,000 jobs in january. wages growing 2.9% compared to last year. rachel: what does this all mean for your wallet? here to weigh in managing partner at bench mark kevin kelly. welcome, kevin, coming to us from arizona, right? >> yes, exactly. i'm just steps away from our alma mater. rachel: right on. tell us why are wages growing now after 8 years of obama and everyone wanting to see wages go up. >> it's really no secret. it's the change in policy, right? so the difference between a year ago and today is that you have seen the regulatory cap has been removed. deregulation environment as well as a healthy tax enenvironment. global companies on parody here to the united states compared to international brethren. international tax rate of 21% versus 22.5% globally. i think our companies are able to compete at a better level.
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todd: the market took a huge bip yesterday but that was in part due to a good jobs report. explain how that all comes together. because you think good news would lead to good news in the market but not so in this case. >> yeah. i'm glad you brought this up because this isn't the end of the bull market. if anything the bull market is strengthening. we will see the end of the bull market and if there is a recession. and so that's what we will really lead to it what have you seen is that the rising rate of when rate gone up. 10 years 2.5% to 2.8%. healthy reprising of risk. strongest january on record since 1997. right now the market is just trying to digest the rising cost of debt as well as the strengthening, but tightening labor market and wages are going up. that's starting to trickle through the system. that's what you are really starting to z. rachel: really quick, kevin. we just saw that yesterday
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best buy announced that they are handing out crumbs, i mean, bonuses. tell us if we're going to continue to see these kinds of companies continue to give out bonuses. >> yeah. this is just the start of it because, as i mentioned before. one of the most important things companies can do in a strengthening economy is to take care of one of their most important stakeholders. that's their employees. we have seen that across the board from walmart increasing their minimum wages to these crumbs being distributed in bonuses. rachel: great. thanks so much, kevin. todd: kevin, appreciate it. >> thank you. rachel: still ahead dan bongino is up next plus congressman jim jordan. michelle malkin and rob o'neill all coming up live. how do you chase what you love
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>> only one day since the fisa memo released list of names and faces. devin nunes brought a lot to the table here. >> i didn't want to have to do this but the sad part is that i have an obligation to the american people when we see fisa abuse. >> donald trump team was spied on. now the most consequential no question political scandal in american history. >> i think it's a disgrace. what's going on in this country, i think it's a disgrace. a lot of people should be ashamed of themselves. >> members of congress are going to call for a special counsel to investigate the investigators. >> the dow worst week in two years. when there were so many signs of strength in the u.s. economy, the reaction was puzzling. u.s. employer hired more
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people in january than economists had forecast, adding 200,000 jobs. >> downtown minneapolis has never seen this much security strategically parked humvees and soldiers crowds and party venues of head of sunday's big game. ♪ ♪ hear my voice when i shout it out loud ♪ it's my life ♪ it's now or never. todd: i think he owned the philadelphia soul arena league because of where he grew up he should be a giants fan. 20 minutes from the stadium. ed: pete is out at the super bowl. if you are looking for him on the couch. todd here with me and rachel, welcome. rachel: thank you. ed: a bit of a scare this week you were on that train. rachel: we had all will of our trains with us. it was tragic.
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luckily nothing happened. we were up on a ditch. had the train fallen off that it could have been a lot more tragic. the heart goes out to the one in crib. critical condition. and my heart go out to the one who passed away. ed: this was the republican memo, there had been all of this hype. some on the left saying this is going to turn out to be a whole lot of nothing. some republicans even were worried that it was going to be a quote unquote dud. devin nunes clearly brought something to the table here it turned out to go through the key points that talking about these spying. dossier key to the fbi application to spy on members of the trump team. the court never told -- was never told about the dossier's political. told political motivations here but not to the dnc and clinton camp paid for it
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fisa court never told andrew mccabe, the now ousted deputy director at the fbi were told that in december he testified behind closed doors that the fisa warrant never would have been even wrought to the court unless they had that dossier. not that it was critical for it to pass through the court. to be approved by the court. but that they would not, the fbi and the justice department wouldn't have even gone to the fisa court unless they had the dossier. which we know was unverified. rachel: democrats are saying that's not true there is a transcript. ed: but what mccabe said. rachel: hopefully we will see a transcript who is right. was the dossier the main reason? i would say that, you know, the other reason they say they brought the investigation forward which is papadopoulos and the conversation caught by the australian diplomat and brought to the fbi. if that was the reason, why have the dossier to begin with. to me it's indication that
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the papadopoulos information was not enough evidence to get fisa approval to begin with. todd: go to the guy who created that dossier christopher steele. this is an individual who said did not want president trump to become president trump. explicitly stated that his bias is evident. his picture is right there. in addition, quite frankly i haven't heard this mentioned a lot. we relied on a foreigner, quite frankly, to implicate an american. carter page. his sort of unverified salacious dossier got surveillance on an american citizen. i'm no fisa expert i don't pretend to be one. that's not the way fisa should work. rachel: he said he relied on the russian. let's see what sara has to say about that. ed: sara carter, yeah. >> what's unbelievable people associated with hillary clinton and now we know fusion gps, bruce ohr
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and sale yates, former director james comey, they were spreading the disinformation campaign they tried to say it was the russians. buff the whole time, based on unverified and salacious dossier and those are the words coming out of comey's own mouth, they use that to spread lies about the trump campaign to the media and anybody they could share it with. the media bought it and chose to egg norther side. todd: we will talk to jim jordan in a moment. he pointed out yesterday on the air not once, not twice, not tree times but four times are people up at the top of these organizations presented the steele dossier to continue the fisa process? that is outrageous. rachel: the irony of what sara carter is bringing up is so important to note, this investigation was supposed to be about did trump and his campaign collude with russia? and what we are finding from the memo and the more we uncover about this
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investigation is that it was the democrats and the media campaign spreading this that actually colluded with the reconciliations and aloud the russians to have an effect on all our politics right now. ed: that's an important point the article by isikoff that we now learn was also used along with the dossier to go to the fisa court and get the initial warrant to surveil carter page the trump advisor. why is that important? circular reporting because isikoff himself did a podcast yesterday saying i didn't know that i was used to get the fisa warrant because christopher steele had been briefing reporters like michael isikoff about what he was finding. then they were putting that in the dossier. the fbi and the justice department are taking the dossier with the unverified steele information and stapling to it, basically, a yahoo news story based on the dossier. it's the same stuff being recycled. todd: the spuriousness of that circular reporting really does underlie this
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was a political witch-hunt. and with that in mind the much maligned in the other media devin nunes says we're not really done just quite yet. this is just the tip of the iceberg. >> we are in the middle of what i call phase ii of our investigation which involves other departments specifically state department and the involvement they had on this. that investigation is ongoing and continue to work towards finding answers and asking the right questions to try to get to the bottom of what exactly the state department was up to in terms of this russia investigation. rachel: democrats, more coming, democrats spent the whole week, certainly yesterday leading up to the memo being released saying this was going to be, the release of this memo was going to be a danger so national security. let's see what the media has been saying. >> next waco. the next time that federal law enforcement agencies are killed in the line of duty, that's on trump.
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>> i'm not surprised that the fbi comes out and says that this is dangerous, the declassifying this information is dangerous. endangers national security. >> the so-called nunes memo, a four page memo which, by the way, threatens extremely classified information and endangers sources and methods. >> the president wants it out each though there are concerns that the work of tens of thousands of law enforcement and counter intelligence officials may be smeared. >> they are advancing in some sense the interest of russia. ed: adding to that someone at cnn called this a dark moment in history. he was referring to the memo being released there are others saying no, the dark moment in history is intelligence being weaponized by one campaign against another through the fisa court. which has never happened in our history. todd: you had buck sexton on earlier there is no imoccasion to national security he told me less than zero. somebody who would agree with that pete hegseth live
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in minneapolis for super bowl weekend. pete, when you heard this immediate reaction of the republicans in jeopardy because of the national secrets going to be divulged. ha what was your reaction? pete: predictable. you guys did a nice job of breaking it down. you boil it down, this is political sabotage. this is political sabotage from your opponents when a small group of well-connected powerful people use political motives and the most powerful arms of our government to target a candidate that they do not want to see in the white house that's why dan bongino calls it the political. it's how republicans go down really bad and dangerous roads. needs to be investigated all the way down to the bottom and get a sense of who was involved, who made the calls, what justifications were made. i think this is just the beginning of that we are going to see. god bless devin nunes and the work they have done. looks like we will see a lot more from there as well. ed: go ahead. rachel: you are so right,
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pete. this is the first time we have ever seen one administration spy on the campaign of their opponent in a presidential election. this is huge. >> yeah. let's not let the distraction of nicolle wallace and other members of the media talking about who is to blame and this is -- it's all distractions. all trying to muddy the waters away from what actually happened, which is we're having to rip details out of the deep state because hillary clinton was supposed to win. and we were not supposed to see any of this. ed: real quick, how do you balance, this been getting on social media from our viewers they are frustrated with the nfl. they're not going to watch of the super bowl this year. how do you balance all of that? because you have talked very openly about the anthem and some players not standing. pete: i have the same frustration, guys. look, i was pulling for my minnesota vikings all year because none of those players kneeled for the anthem. at the end of the day you say the super bowl itself is
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a national institution. can you celebrate that we can all stand for the anthem and celebrate our country. yeah, i understand if people don't tune. in i totally get it the nfl is going to get a chance next year to prove that they have fixed this. ed: you said that very well. there is this rumor you want to be a linebacker. do we see any drills or anything? pete: yes. i'm trying on the offense, first. i spent yesterday with stephon diggs and kyle rudolph. two stars of the minnesota vehicle kicks. we did obstacle course called the farm bowl in minnesota and wisconsin, rachel, we like to do a lot of farming. we tried some farm equipment maneuvers and it's an obstacle course. had a little fun with it got to throw a pass to stephon diggs. ed: passes. >> i walked into that one, ed. ed: good to see you and you we will see you soon.
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pete: thanks, guys. ed: former fbi director james comey ripping apart the fisa memo on twitter calling it quote dishonest and misleading. ohio congressman republican jim jordan has wanted the memo out for a long time. is he fired up and ready to react next. todd: take a look at our green room right there. it's michelle malkin. i have a hunch we will have something to say about it. rachel: she will be fired up ♪
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today, the new new york is sparking innovation. you see it in the southern tier with companies that are developing powerful batteries that make everything from cell phones to rail cars more efficient. which helps improve every aspect of advanced rail technology. all with support from a highly-educated workforce and vocational job training. across new york state, we're building the new new york. to grow your business with us in new york state, visit esd.ny.gov. ♪ ed: former fbi director james comey waste nothing time attacking the newly released fisa memo tweeted yesterday. todd: that's it misleading memo mistrust.
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damaged relationships with fisa court inexclusivably exposed classified sleation of an american citizen, for what? doj and fbi must keep doing their jobs. ed: republican congressman jim jordan has long called for the release of that memo. it's finally out. he joins us now with his reaction live. congressman, it's great to have you today. when james comey has, you know, kind of, i use the word nerve to come out on twitter, and fire away like he does there, when, in fact, he is the one of the people who signed off on that first fisa warrant to go to the judge using the dossier. in october 2016 and then january 2017, december time frame there, he goes to the president-elect donald trump and says by the way there is this dossier but it's unverified. he had used that a couple months earlier to get a fisa warrant. >> yep. salacious and unverified, his words. not our words. and what you had is in the midst of a presidential election. the fbi takes one campaign's oppo research political document to a secret court to get a secret warrant to
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spy on an american citizen and they don't tell the court who paid for it namely the democrat national committee in the clinton campaign. that is a fundamental violation of the fourth amendment. and james comey says that's it? here's a guy who is supposed to protect the bill of rights. protect the fourth amendment. the first amendment. and yet, he says that's it? that is just so wrong and what they did is so wrong to get that secret warrant to spy on, again, fellow citizen and use it in the midst of a campaign. todd: as you have pointed out, that didn't just happen once. >> four times. four times. and four times it went to the court and didn't tell them about bruce ohr and nellie ohr. four times they went to the court and didn't tell them that they had terminated their relationship -- this is important, first time i read it i didn't get this point as much as i did the second time. they had terminated their relationship with chris steele because he fundamentally violated a sacred trust. when you have an informant, that informant is not supposed to go to the press and tell the press that he is working with the fbi. so they got rid of chris steele, no longer had that relationship. and, yet, steele took the
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document he produced to the court to get the warrant. that is not supposed to work that way. and, yet, they did that very thing. ed: congressman, as well. you have been calling for a second special counsel to finally really just get to the bottom of this once and for all. >> yeah. ed: let's talk about that. something specifically i want to hone in on here. people get from us straited that these things become political footballs. republicans say this, democrats say that were there actually crimes here? i'm struck by the fact that just a few weeks ago republican senators chuck grassley and lindsey graham sent a criminal referral as you know to the justice department involving the former british spy christopher steele. some people, many people in the media were shaking their heads dismissing. this now that we have seen the dossier. is there real grounds for that criminal referral. >> yeah. i think there are grounds for the criminal referral. definitely grounds for a seconds special counsel. i'm not a big fan of special counsels. i see no other remedy. that's why six months ago, mark meadows myself and several others called for a
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second special counsel. now more than ever certainly warranted. one thing i always say doesn't have to be someone from washington. mueller and his team all the washington insiders. have it be a retired federal judge? somewhere in the middle of the country. somewhere outside the swamp, have him put together a team. then go do you the investigation. and whatever conclusion they reach, i think there is much better chance that the american people will accept that conclusion. if it's someone from d.c. if it's mueller to tries to expand. i think that's a problem. if it's attorney general sessions who has recused himself. i have think that's a problem. i see no other remedy but a second special counsel. todd: congressman, in the 10 seconds we have remaining, should this be the end of the mueller investigation? >> i leave that up to -- let the mueller investigation continue. but i think -- think about this. comey is gone. mccabe has left the fbi. lisa page has been dee dee moated. peter strzok has been demoted. special counsel has been. lots of things happened there. chief of staff and robicy has left.
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mueller is going to finish his investigation. what i do know to date not one bit of evidence that shows any type of coordination between the trump campaign and russia to influence the election. ed: have to leave there. congressman jim jordan. appreciate you coming. in have a good weekend. todd: thank you, sir. ed: v.a. used motto for decades. wants the agency to change it wait until you hear why. todd: family reunited with its dog 10 years after that dog disappears. it's not abe lincoln. it's an actual dog. how she was able to find her way home when "fox & friends" on saturday. ♪ mom? dad? hi! i had a very minor fender bender tonight in an unreasonably narrow fast food drive thru lane. but what a powerful life lesson. and don't worry i have everything handled. i already spoke to our allstate agent, and i know that we have accident forgiveness.
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ed: a fox news alert. we have very sad news to bring you this morning philanthropist and grandfather of our own abby huntsman passe pass jon huntsman sr. passed away yesterday. todd: last year on 80th birthday institute unveiled facility and abby was able to see what impact her grandfather had on so many lives. take a look. >> all of us, i'm sure, have been touched in some way or another by cancer. >> we dedicate this facility to the healing and -- of this frightening disease. >> thanks to this magnificent new facility, we will double the size of our cancer research program at huntsman cancer institute. >> i hope i inherited my dad's heart. you see, he turns 80 today with a heart that just keeps giving ♪ happy birthday, jon
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huntsman ♪ happy birthday to you ♪ >> we will be able to end this disease once and for all. in this spirit and this cause and as a birth did i gift from me to you the huntsman family and huntsman cancer foundation don't united states another $120 million to the cause. thank you very much. >> happy birthday. happy birthday. >> when did you first decide that you wanted to give everything you had to cancer? >> i decided when my mother died in my arms in 1968, i thought if ever i could succeed in any way, i would like to do something for her and cancer. and i had it four times. after the second time i said i'm in. this is the end of this stuff. it's got to come to an end. so, in 1993, we began this facility. these are the heroes of our
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life. these cancer patients. they don't complain. they are taking chemotherapy or surgery or radiation. and. >> i think someone wants to say hello to you. >> i was diagnosed with incurable multiple my loma in december of 2014. i found my way to your unit. and i have just completed a bone marrow transplant. >> excellent. >> god bless you for this facility, sir. >> thank you. >> now we are going into the chemotherapy. >> largest chemotherapy center in america. fully staff it. i want them all to have a beautiful view. >> look at this. you are so right. i have never been in here before. >> you doing okay? >> yes. doing good, thank you. >> thanks for taking care of these wonderful people for us. >> tell me what type of cancer do you have? >> mil mye loma. 8 tumors removed.
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>> you look beautiful to me. >> thank you. >> in some way the lord has placed this here by blessing you. >> thank you. thank you very much. >> i'm abby. >> sarah, row better attachment. >> hi, roberta. >> hi there. >> how long have you had the disease? >> i found out last year. last january. >> how are you progressing? >> pretty good. >> i'm so honored to meet you. >> i'm honored to meet you. >> oh, sit down. >> no. i want a hug. thank you for all you do. i really appreciate it? >> sweet of you to let us see you. tell us a little bit about your situation. >> i am a stage 4 melanoma asht and i have had melanoma for 8 and a half years. >> where is your me melanoma located. >> i started with a mole on my forehead, now it it's mine brain, lungs, liver, spleen, bones and my neck. it's a fight. >> when i walked, in the first thing i sa i saw was your
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smile. you are a fighter. >> i try every day. make the best out of the worst. >> what a great attitude. abby: great advice. so nice to meet you. >> honorable to meet you. my dad would say thank you as well. >> our love to you. >> thank you. thank you so much for this wonderful facility. >> when i found out that the research could genetically target. >> isn't that something? >> the chemotherapy to the tumor itself, i was just amazed to see that type of research. i know we are very lucky to be in here right now and very blessed and it started with you. ed: wonderful piece. what a legacy. todd: we have a statement from abby. my grandpa was and will continue to be the truest example of what it means to live the american dream. serving his country, his church, and community.
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he taught me the importance of trust, hard work, giving back, loving unconditionally, and, above all else, family. he was old school. nothing but handwritten notes and firm hand shakes until the day he passed. giving everything he had to help cure cancer, this world is a much better place because of the 80 beautiful years he lived. he will be so missed. rachel: my condolences to abby and her family. a beautiful story. ed: really is sent her a note last night said that she is heart broken and really thinking about her granddad and can you see from that piece and the love she brought to that piece, what an awesome legacy he leaves behind. rachel: absolutely. well, still to come. politicians have made it clear how they feel about the president keeping guantanamo bay open. but what does the men who fight wars think? we are going to ask the man who killed bin laden rob o'neill coming up. ed: democrats say releasing the fisa memo would
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endanger. you should also believe the dirt dossier now under fire. why the double standard? michelle malkin on deck and she is on fire ♪ walk this way ♪ walk this way ♪ walk this way ♪
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>> the dossier they wanted out immediately. had to be put out. they didn't question it source it they wanted all
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that stuff out. for some reason they didn't want this memo out. i find that curious. i mean, it's a double standard. when it suits their pleasure, they want to keep it quiet. this is something that obviously is of deep concern to the american people to use a democrat-funded document that's clearly used for campaign oppo dump to use that and not tell the judge that that's what you are doing when they are signing fisa warrants. that's very dangerous. ed: remarkable story and somebody who i bet has a whole lot to say about it is michelle malkin host of michelle malkin investigates on crtv. great to see you in person. >> glad to join you on the curvey couch. ed: a lot of people on the mainstream media laughing this story out saying it was a dud. >> yeah, i'm old enough to remember during the bush years when there wasn't a leak that the newspapers wouldn't run to and embrace. and then also, of course, those leaks always somehow happened to redowned to the detriment of the bush administration. and here you know we have
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all of the open watchdog groups and all of these journalists who are supposed to, you know, shed sunlight. ed: safeguards of democracy. watchdogs. >> instead what we have a stonewall media to match the stoned face democrats this past week. rachel: you guys are journalists. have you ever seen a time where journalists are saying we want less information. we want less transparency? trust the government on this. >> right. and obviously the contents of the memo show exactly why. because it is confirmatory, not re relevantory. in cahoots. all the accusations over the past year were really severe psychological projections. todd: what about the yahoo article? i think we have a full screen right now the michael isikoff article september 23rd, 2016. u.s. intel officials ties trump officials and kremlin. the basis for that article is the dossier, which was
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then used, the article and the dossier, which are basically the same thing at this point, to get the fisa warrant. >> well, it's the worst kind of self reverentialism. it's the worst bizarre row mirror maze. that sir could you. michael isikoff and david corn the other journalist name checked in the memo are co-authorizing a book on the russian collusion story that's coming out in march. what a coincidency. todd: that's awful. ed: hear the other side point out. devin nunes, democrats like adam schiff were saying the dossier may have been an important part of what was brought to the fisa court. but, as you know, and have you dug into this legally and you have the perspective of the bush administration surveillance when that was a big issue as well. that these fisa warrants, what you bring to the judge is not just four pages like this memo. >> right.
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ed: dozens and dozens of pages. is it possible there is a lot more evidence that went to the fisa court that we just have not seen yet? >> so, from people who are reporting, who have seen underlying documents, they are saying that what the memo summarized was absolutely accurate. we are getting push back as you said, ed, from these democrats who apparently have their own 10 page memo that's going to show allegedly that there was much more disclosed to the fisa court then they said. i think the bottom line, the foundational point here is that information was suppressed and it was key information about who funded the junk dossier. ed: to your point the democratic memo that you just mentioned. >> yes. ed: the "new york times" says the democratic memo points out christopher steele had political motivation or this was coming from some politically motivated sources. but it did not disclose. even the democrat michelle michigan that'.>> that's right,y
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acknowledge it did not disclose the source of the funding. the memo also tells us there were three other applications that were approved with regard, i think, only to this specific issue. but then there is this large larger question for the american public about how many other fisa warrants and applications were based on other junk science. there is plenty of fusion gpss out there. rachel: we had clips from devin nunes saying hey this is just the beginning. scratch the surface here. >> tip of the iceberg. ed: have you back. >> that's right. rachel: thank you, michelle. good to see you. president trump keeping his message to build a wall straight to border agents at the national targeting center in virginia. >> securing the border that's also a wall, a real wall, not a little wall like some people said. let's just build a little wall. they have them. it will work. rachel: president also threatening to cut off aide to countries refusing to
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accept. >> don't take them back. put tariffs on the country. take them back so fast your head will spin. rachel: ice acting director thomas homan border crossings are at 45-year low. fighting for their lives. three women violently attacked by a carjacker. a man punching and kicking them as the women feerlsly fought back inside of a nail salon in southern california. one of them smag him right in face with a chair. employees from a neighboring business finally coming. in taking down the suspect before police arrested him. authorities saying they had no idea why he attacked them in the first place. honest abe at the center of a new debate. one group now calling for the v.a. to change its official motto of 59 years a quote from abraham lincoln's second inaugural address quote to care for him who shall have born the battle for his widow and orphan. the iraq and afghanistan
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veterans of america saying it excludes female service members symbolizing barriers. the v.a. responding hey, we are not going to make that change. incredible homecoming. a dog is reunited with his family after missing for 10 years. debra and her family assumed their dog abby had died after she ran away from their pennsylvania home in 2008. but the black labrador mix showed up on the stranger's front porch last week just 10 miles from home. the good samaritan contacted the animal shelter which discovered the dog's microchip. the vet then contacting abby's family. that's amazing. ed: unbelievable. must be so happy. the trump administration following through on another promise. strength our nuclear capabilities as russia develops a nuclear tornado thatorpedothat can hit the u.s. who better than to explain this is rob o'neill. he is next.
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todd: you know about the super bowl. how about the farm bowl. pete putting his farming skills to the best with some of the nfl's best. ed: should be farm l or something. ♪ ♪ like safe driver, paperless. the list goes on. how about a discount for long lists? gold. mara, you save our customers hundreds for switching almost effortlessly. it's a gift. and jamie. -present. -together we are unstoppable. so, what are we gonna do? ♪ insurance. that's kind of what we do here.
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>> and rebuild our nuclear arsenal, hopefully never having to use it, but making it so strong and so powerful that it will deter any acts of aggression by any other nation or anyone else. todd: president trump following through with that promise as the pentagon unveils a new policy to expand our nuclear capabilities. rachel: all right. the plan ending an obama era push to reduce the arsenal and countering russia's growing nuclear strength. ed: here with his reaction is rob o'neill author of the operator and the navy seal
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who killed usama bin laden. a lot to dissect here, rob. and i want to get into the policy. but i also find it interesting here you have a president who is accused of being soft on russia who is saying we are going to stand up and deter russia when it comes to nukes. >> that's always been part of the triage for our -- the strength of all -- solidarity. defense and most importantly deterrence. the way you deter someone is like one of the dog fights. the one the dog that barks the loudest usually ends the fight. president obama wanted to get rid of our nukes which a lot of democrats would like to because they -- it looks good on paper. hey, if we get rid of ours, maybe you will get rid of yours. that's thought the case. ed: what if the other side of doesn't. >> you are putting yourself in the weaker spot. always want to be the good guy. what president trump is doing is modernizing what we need to do. stuff that russia is doing. they are looking for smaller nuclear weapons they can use take over another nation, ukraine, look at georgia, not the one down south here.
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ed: the republic. >> smaller nuclear weapon might deter us from going. in modernize ours. we want to get more crews missiles into bombers. there is one in a subthat president obama got rid of called the slickum cool name. use with submarines. all about deterrence. we are not trying to get a nuclear war started but peace through strength. modernize it i don't know if you noticed north korea has been advancing, china has been advancing. iran, believe it or not, even though we had a deal with them they are advancing. they you ar are all doing that e need to keep up. ed: obama administration deter iran. >> millions of euros. didn't happen in the middle of the night. todd: if you hear the media or aclu pete would say one in the same thing. you hear them talk about gitmo like it is completely unamerican. be a somebody who has defended our freedom who knows what it takes to keep the homeland safe, why is
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president trump's decision on gitmo so important? >> it's important because even with guantanamo bay, for some reason we can't keep the lawyers out of it we don't win wars simply because of rules of engagement written by lawyers. i have always said with the rules of engagement if you are typing them up, you need somebody to be shooting at you at the time. even when we put guys at gitmo, our own lawyers, navy jags defending these terrorists. we have nowhere to put them. up to me military tribunal. send them to the gallows and we are done feeding these people. we can't -- if we brought them here, solitary confinement, i'm fine with that never know what's going to happen if they get here -- until we can decide what to do with them, keep them there. put them on the battlefield. khalid sheikh mohammed was saying to interrogators do you think you are going to win me over with tea and cookies? he is the a believer. master mind of 9/11. he loves that. rachel: obama let a lot of these guys free. a lot of them. can't we go find them and bring them back and fill up gitmo again? >> we know where a lot of
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them are. traded five of the worst for bowe bergdahl a traitor. that remains to be said. they are right back on the battlefield. they went back to pakistan. they went back to yemen. they went back to somalia. wherever they are. we tried to give them allies. a lot of the allies aren't allies. rachel: a lot of the allies didn't have the security infrastructure and ability. >> agree with the ideology that the terrorists agree with. if we can't kill them, at least keep them somewhere. you know, a lot of these guys have admitted it's better to be in the caribbean. todd: i will forgive your attack on lawyers again. you killed usama bin laden: thank you. rachel: thanks, rob. democrats are slamming republican for releasing the fisa memoranda member of you hillary clinton's independent circle says it's time for independent counsel to look into this. he joins us live next hour. ed: you know about the super bowl. what about the farm bowl? pete, that might be the only place he can actually play. putting farming skills at test. he is live in minneapolis
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ed: tomorrow is game day. pete hegseth live today in minneapolis. todd: we thought he would be showing off football skills. instead of that pete decided to farm. you have got to break this down for us, buddy. [laughter] pete: i'm going to show you my farming skills. first annual farm bowl put on by land o lakes who does a lot of agricultural things in minnesota. of course my grandfather is a dairy farmer. even when it's snowing sideways the farmers are working in minnesota. they put us to the test with some minnesota celebrities, stephon diggs and kyle rudolph. two of the best of the
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minnesota vikings. we took our farming tasks to test. take a look. pete: plans some pass. >> good. >> back field. run up. hit you on the inside. got it? >> absolutely. >> welcome to the land owe lake farm bowl next up we have pete hegseth from "fox & friends," driggs and kyle rudolph from the minnesota vikings. pete: totally geeing out as a minnesota viking fans. two of my absolute favorite players. had you incredible season. you had the minneapolis miracle which we all saw it my heart stopped along with everyone else for a full hour. i didn't stop smiling for an hour. how long does it take to sink in what what happened? >> it still hasn't sunk in all the way. gave the grace of god that he put me in the position to
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make a play. pete: season over what's on tap for the next couple months. >> training. i will spend time with my daughter. >> he is talking about draining i will be relaxing. going on 8. >> feels like 11. pete: you guys did the farm bowl. what are you doing here. >> some speed. and strength. >> i got strength, i got speed. i got neither. [buzzer] pete: get low. >> that was way faster. you should have been my real partner. i feel like we got some team work here. pete: dropping them. feel like ralphy from the christmas story on the side of the road. i really do. >> get the far corner. >> got the far one? all right. all right. what have we got? >> right now trying to drop it right in the middle.
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pete: almost there. reminds you of "star wars." almost there. almost there. push it forward. oh my goodness. that's what they call dead center. [buzzer] all right. you want to drive? do you want me to drive. >> you can drive. >> show them how to do it? >> you just want me to mess up. pete: i just want you to mess up. yes, yes. >> still not going straight. pete: don't run them over. that would not be -- vikings would not approve of you running over kyle rudolph. right there. whoa,. [buzzer] pete: all done. rachel: nice job, pete.
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pete: i made stephon diggs drive it backwards whether you have a trailer on the back you don't know which way to turn. i made him do it. kyle rudolph bailed us out. farm something difficult. rachel: would your grandpa be proud of this? pete: no. not at all. rachel: that's what i was thinking. todd: just to review, no vikings were harmed in the making of that piece? we're all good for our fantasy teams? pete: i was afraid that kyle rudolph would get run over for diggs and i would be the ire of all fans. caribou coffee brought up bucket loads of coffee. if you are from minnesota you know about caribou coffee. we are enjoying it. ed: we are just glad that the minnesota vikings have found something they can win. pete: oh my goodness. i'm done. ed: i will let you respond next hour. we got to go. washington dealing with the aftermath of fisa memo release. house chair devin nunes says this is just the beginning. we will get reaction from
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the white house live next. rachel: and the president paying tribute to this 12-year-old boy at the state of the union for going above and beyond to honor our fallen heroes. buwhat was that like? we're going toou ask him next live. in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. with its historical ance records...test ...you could learn you're from ireland... ...donegal, ireland... ...and your ancestor was a fisherman. with blue eyes. just like you. begin your journey at ancestry.com i thought i was managing my moderate to severe crohn's disease. then i realized something was missing... me. my symptoms were keeping me from being there. so, i talked to my doctor and learned humira is for people who still have symptoms of crohn's disease after trying other medications.
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about diabetic heart disease. and find out more at heartoftype2.com. your heart and type 2 diabetes. make the connection. >> only one day since the fisa memo released already a mess of names, faces. devin nunes brought a lot to the table here. >> i didn't want to have to do this. but the sad part is that i have an obligation to the american people when we see fisa abuse. >> james comey wasting no time attacking the newly released fisa memo. todd: that's it dishonest and reckless memo. >> this is the guy who is supposed to protect the bill of rights protect the first amendment yet he says that's it? the donald trump team was spied on. no question most political scandal in american history. >> the dow worst week in two years. when so many signs of strength in the u.s. economy, the reaction was
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puzzling. u.s. employer hired more people in january than economists had forecast. adding 200,000 jobs. >> downtown minneapolis has never seen this much security. strategically parked national guard humvees and hundreds of soldiers crowds and party venues ahead of sunday's big game. ♪ ♪ ♪ oh ♪ i just want to feel this moment ♪ oh. ed: what a moment. release the memo. memo day. now the day after memo day. rachel: memo day. ed: great to have you here, rachel. glad you are safe and sound you were on that train headed to the retreat with your family. someone lost his life. rachel: absolutely. another one in critical condition. we are happy no one else was hurt. ed: glad you are safe and sound on the couch here as well. todd: huge week.
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not the least of which was memo. we have so many take aways focus on four right now. first of all, the dossier was the key to the fbi's application to spy on members of trump's team. two, the court never told about the dossier's political roots. court never told christopher steele was passionately anti-trump. and andrew mccabe teferred a fisa warrant resulted from the steele dossier. break all this down we will bring in raj shaw white house deputy press secretary. raj, when you saw this memo, what were you thinking? >> well, good morning, guys. and thanks a lot for having me on. rachel: good morning. >> we think it's a pretty big deal, frankly, you know, to show that in the middle of a presidential campaign the fbi and the department of justice would rely on campaign opposition research, shoddy opposition research i will add, to justify a warrant for spying on the other campaign. it's pretty -- it's a pretty
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big deal. it's pretty outrageous. i love how democrats are saying it's a dud. it doesn't mean anything. they have used argument after argument. and it doesn't really stand up. this is a pretty serious allegation here that's laid out in this memo. and they aren't actually arguing the facts. they are saying there are other facts. but, you know, it lays out a very serious charge. if this is going on, frequently within the doj and the fbi, it's something we really need to look at. ed: raj, very serious charge as you say. not just about political fallout. as the memo itself says in the first paragraph, there are legal questions here about whether some of our most senior government officials first in the obama administration but then carrying over to the trump administration broke the law. whether or not people at the fbi and the justice department followed the law. so my question to you is, what is going to be the fallout from what you just said is so serious. is rod rosenstein's job on the line? >> well, rod rosenstein's job is not on the line. we expect him to continue his job as the deputy
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attorney general. but there is a department of justice inspector general investigation going on that's looking at how the senior leadership at doj and the fbi may have played politics with this investigation, the hillary clinton email investigation. and certain other investigations. some of the steps that they had taken, which may have raised a lot of, you know, questions about their conduct, about politics influencing these investigations. we're expecting that to come out in the next few weeks. it's going to shed light on a lot of these questions. ed: raj, i want to share the ball here with rachel super bowl weekend. i want to get one more quick one in there why isn't rod rosenstein's job on the line. i'm hearing some of the president's supporters on social media say saying this was cooked up by obama officials. another one of these warrants was continued by another 90 days by rod rosenstein, the man nominated by your boss, the president of the united states. how can he justify that? why should he keep his job? >> well, we don't think that making a mistake in this instance necessarily, you
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know, should lead to somebody losing their job. rod rosenstein has served as a deputy attorney general. we want him to continue his role on that front. and, you know, we want to just -- one thing, a point i really want to make is that you have heard from democrats, this is unprecedented. the house intelligence committee has never done this before. they have never tried to release classified intelligence in this manner. this went through a process. it was voted out of the house. it went to the president. he allowed the intelligence community and legal community to weigh in. what the democrats do, they just leak it straight to the "new york times," the cnn illegally. so, this went through a process. we're happy to see it out. we would entertain other memos or documents. it raises serious questions. it went through a formal process. we're happy to see that it's going to be added to the debate. rachel: raj, representative devin nunes says this is just the beginning. take a look at the sound and see what you see on the other side. >> we are in the middle of what i call phase ii of our investigation, which involves other departments,
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specifically the state department and some of the involvement that they had in this. that investigation is ongoing. and we continue to work towards finding answers and asking the right questions to try to get to the bottom of what exactly the state department was up to in terms of this russia investigation. rachel: so, raj, you expect more to come out. >> we already have seen -- this is partly part of a pattern. why saw investigation peter strzok and the text messages that got him taken off the case. we saw all sorts of questions raised about how former director james comey, who you had in the lead how he handled the hillary clinton investigation if there are other departments or other individuals involved with mishandling this investigation. others like it. you know, we support congressional efforts and their oversight and support chairman nunes and his efforts. todd: while the memo was the huge story, the business of the government goes on. of the business of the president goes on. president headed to ohio on monday continuing his agenda
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following the state of the union. why ohio? what are we going to learn from the president? >> ohio is a big state. it's a great state. you know, to get our message out. look, the president's message on tuesday that tens of millions of americans saw was pretty clear. we have an economy that's moving in the right direction. it's booming. you are seeing great gains in jobs. we had a great jobs report on friday. you are seeing wages rise for the first time in a decade. you know, all the signs head toward success. and you are seeing the tax bill and jobs being crated from the tax bill. you are seeing annoyancement of investment of 401(k) benefit of bonus. we wants to keep that momentum going. a few of the issues appointing to are infrastructure, immigration reform and other areas we can reach across the aisle. raach raach raj, any regrets about releasing the memo now because it stepped on the state of the union which was well done and unifying and well-received by the american people. >> we don't get to control the process entirely. the house intelligence committee voted this out.
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they had a five-day window so the president acted when did he to declassify it. ed: where are we on the daca deal because the president in the state of the union spoke about this. hotel rnc event a couple nights ago he spoke at the republican retreat that rachel was family with her family to, he is trust straited because he doesn't think democrats actually want a deal. >> it's an open question whether democrats want a deal. this president has shown leadership. reached across the aisle and offered a plan that democrats can and should be able to embrace. it's offering a pathway to legal status and eventual citizenship for people brought here illegally as minors by their parents. in exchange for that, wants a southern border wall that he campaigned on and he wants additional border agents. he wants to end the visa lottery program which is essentially playing russian roulette. your host said this to me on another show. russian roulette with american lives. great analogy. family chain migration and protecting the nuclear
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family. these are reforms that a bipartisan group at the white house two or three weeks ago agreed to. and democrats, if they are serious about reforming and not just demagoguing the issue, need to come up with solutions, need to come to the table and negotiate on these terms. otherwise, they are making clear to the american people they're not actually interested in the solution. rachel: if they don't step up before this deadline, is the deal gone? it's over? >> look, this is the president's proposal he wants action on it. he believes if we can give legal status to individuals, while protecting the border and fixing the immigration system, that's the right path forward. he would sign it tomorrow, before or after the deadline. todd: raj, i need to call you out on the carpet for something. i believe you told our producer fake news earlier and this is unacceptable from two giants fans here you are a jets fan? [laughter] >> tried and true since the day i was born. it can be a miserable existence sometimes. todd: yes, it can be. ed: who is the president rooting for. >> i will be rooting for the
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eagles this weekend. ed: anti-giant. >> it's anti-patriots pick. rachel: have to leave it there. thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me on. rachel: deadly flu taking more lives showing no signs of slowing down especially for children. 16 kids have died in the last week alone, according to the cdc report. oh my goodness. bringing the total to 53 flu-related pediatric deaths this season as hospitalizations sore. health experts strongly encouraging everyone who hasn't had a flu shot to get one. a judge says he will not punish the father of three girls sexually abused by michigan sports doctor larry nas sar afte charged towards him in court. >> grant me five minutes in a locked room with this demon. i'm happy. [shouting] rachel: apologizing after a judge said quote there is no way she would fine or jail
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him. the sheriff's office still is investigating. >> i am no hero. my daughters are the heroes and all the victims. and the survivors of this terrible atrocity go fund me page set up for the family already raising more than $24,000. more proof president trump is making america win again. best buy now giving out bonuses to more than 100,000 employees joining a growing list of companies sharing a portion of their windfall from president trump's corporate tax cut. the electronic retailer saying it will pay one-time bonuses of $1,000 to full-time workers and $500 to part-time workers. wow. for the first time in 30 years, the marines are airing a super bowl ad. targeting tough young recruits who are looking for a challenge. >> and determination to win
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found inside each and every marine. it answers a nation's call. rachel: looks like a movie. in an effort to attract 18 to 24-year-olds the commercial will only air online for those streaming the game. that's a look at your headlines. ed: those are your headlines. meanwhile, democrats slamming republicans for releasing that fisa memo. even a member of hillary clinton's inner circle says it's time for an independent counsel to look into all of this. he joins us next. todd: plus a hit movie based on the true story of the gentlemajamaica bobsled team. one school is putting "cool rungs" on ice because it's racist? ed: oh, boy. rachel: pete is live with the minneapolis drum line gearing up for so super bowl lii, you will not want miss
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that.
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>> i think it's terrible. you want to know the truth? i think it's a disgrace. what's going on in this country i think is a disgrace. the memo was sent to congress. it was declassified. congress will do whatever they are going to do. but i think it's a disgrace what's happening in our country. ed: president trump making clear where he stands on the controversial findings detailed in that fight memo. the memo claims that the trump campaign wouldn't have been spied on if it were not for the largely debunk steele dossier funded, yes, by the dnc and hillary clinton campaign. rachel: former hillary clinton chief strategist mark penn is calling for a new independent counsel to look into this and he joins us now.
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welcome, mark. >> good morning. rachel: good morning. so you are a democrat. you think that the information contained in this memo requires a special counsel and other investigation into this. why are not more democrats jumping on board? i mean, there are clear violations here. >> well, look, this is obviously not been a moment of bipartisan. i'm pretty surprised. i was most surprised, frankly, that the newspapers, the "new york times" and "the washington post" didn't want this memo printed. and both did editorials basically calling for prior restraint. look, i think the memo really does raise some serious questions. there are been six members of the either the justice department or the fbi who have either had to quickly resign or be fired here. and that just can't be over nothing. at the same time, the very people named in the memo were actively going to the hill to say don't publish this memo. what greater conflict of interest could there be than that. ed: mark, you make important
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point about hypocrisy about the "new york times," "the washington post." i remember covering the bush white house. when a lot of this government surveillance was revealed in terms of fighting al qaeda, they were screaming up and down and with some good reason about government secrecy and we needed to know. we needed to hold these government officials accountable. number one, they are not doing that now. but, number two, i want you to bring into this james comey. some of your fellow democrats were not mad about how -- were not happy with how he handled the hillary clinton email matter. we should put that on the table. but then here he is telling president-elect trump in january 2016 hey, there is this dossier but it's unverified. but a couple months earlier, james comey used that unverified dossier to get the government surveillance. >> well, not only that, but he has this very odd one-on-one meeting with president trump that he initiates. he initiates the first one-on-one and he doesn't tell president trump that it's paid for by the democrats. had that single fact been
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communicated, this whole thing might never have gone anywhere. so he concealed that from the president. look, you know, comey's recent tweets and actions here really show him to have been a national embarrassment as director of the fbi. ed: where do we go from here? because rachel said special counsel is something have you talked about. rachel: right. they are saying putting out this memo and questions that people have had on the republican side about what the doj and fbi were doing is damaging the reputation of the fbi and the doj. but, wouldn't cleaning it up be the way to regain trust in those institutions? >> yeah. look, i think this is clearly not about the rank and file of law enforcement. this was clearly people at the top. in fact, the people at the top deliberately brought the investigation under their control and took a number of actions here on all fronts that raise a tremendous amount of questions. i'm really puzzled not whether rod rosenstein did anything right or wrong, i'm puzzled how he can continue
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to supervise the special counsel when he was a witness to this. he used the dossier. >> rachel: right. >> he had to understand what was going on. he had to know whether it was paid for by the democrats or he didn't ask. either way, he is now a witness. all the people around him have either, you know, had to resign or be fired. and how key stay as supervisor? i don't know that means he has done anything wrong, but he has a real conflict of interest now. rachel: good point. ed: mark penn one of the sharpest minds of this generation. thank you for coming in. >> thank you. ed: we have david bos david bos, geraldo rivera, our own neil cavuto here live. rachel: this little boy got the president's attention going above and beyond. the president paying tribute to him at the state of the union. what was that like? that boy preston shard joins us next live next to tell us all about it. ed: there he is. welcome. ♪ courtesy of the red, white, and blue
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♪ ed: some super bowl news by the numbers. first, 51.7 million. that's how many cases of beer are sold on super bowl sunday. next, 14.5000. that's how many tons of chips will be scarved down at super bowl parties down. 1.3 billion with a b that's how many chicken wings will be eaten during the big game according to the national chicken counsel. we should probably check that out. that number up by 2% since last year. all of these super stats according to wallet hub.com. rachel? rachel: all right. a young patriot is gaining national attention. todd: after visiting his grandfather's grave 1-year-old preston sharp noticed that there were hardly any other flags on grave sights for other veterans on veterans day.
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that's when he took it upon himself to organize flags for more than had 0,000 grave sites. rachel: this patriotic act got preston an invite to the state of the union where president trump paid tribute to his service. >> preston's reverence for those who have served our nation reminds us of why we salute our flag, why we put our hands on our hearts for the pledge of allegiance. and why we proudly stand for the national anthem. [cheers and applause] rachel: preston, welcome to "fox & friends." we are so excited to have you. >> hi. thank you for having me. rachel: tell us really quick how flags and flowers got started. >> okay. so, flags and flowers got started veterans day of 2015 right after my tenth birthday. i went to a local cemetery near me. and i went there thinking
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that it was veterans day and i would see a lot of flags out on the veterans' grave sites and there wasn't. and it wasn't really well taken care of cemetery. so i got frustrated with that and i wanted to honor veterans and i just started honoring them. todd: preston, not to attack all your fellow 12-year-olds. most 12-year-olds i know playing video games and not focused on honoring our heroes. why are you different? >> well, my mom taught me if you see something wrong to do something about it and not let it get worse. the cemetery had really really high grass. it wasn't well taken care of. rachel: so good parenting it sounds like. preston, first of all, i'm obsessed with melania trump and you got to sit next to her. tell us what she is like. >> well, she is really nice
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and and it was a huge honor to be at the state of the union sitting next to melania trump. it it was amazing. rachel: how did you actually find out that you were invited to the state of the union? >> my mom got an email one night when we were eating dinner. the white house just emailed us. todd: did you meet anyone else while you were down there? >> i met the vice president, the secretary of the v.a. the undersecretary of the v.a. and i think that's all who i met. todd: that's still a pretty big cast of characters there. >> yeah. rachel: preston, i have been to the state of the union. it's an awesome experience. what can you tell other kids about that experience that you had sitting in the gallery? >> oh, it was amazing seeing
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everyone there. because i recognized a lot of congress people. and it was just amazing. rachel: yeah, there is a lot of sort of ceremony about it it's a beautiful room, too. todd: any message to your fellow preteens or anyone else who wants to get involved with the mission? how do they go about doing that? >> so i have a facebook page that i post when i'm going to be at the cemetery and where. so, preston c. sharp. rachel: preston, is this catching on so other kids can do this in their own community? >> um, yes. it is starting to get more kids. because i'm going to all 50 states now. rachel: wow. todd: awesome. what do you think your grandfather would say about your efforts? >> i don't really know because i never met him. todd: do you think he would
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be proud though. >> yeah. i think he would be pretty proud. rachel: we are proud. you are a great example. i'm glad that president trump picked you because you really deserved it thanks for joining us, preston. >> yeah. thank you. rachel: you are a great, great role model. >> yeah, thank you. rachel: you got it all right. still ahead. former fbi director james comey ripping apart the fisa memo tweeting "that's it?" congressman jim jordan is fired up about that. you are going to hear from him next. todd: and tomorrow is game day. are you ready, rachel campos for your super bowl party? we have the best burgers, wings and snacks to win over your guests. it smells awesome in here. we going to eat ♪ let's get it started ♪ let's get it started in here ♪ let's get it started ♪ let's get it started in here selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide.
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♪ >> somebody first reads that dossier i think you would come away from that and say okay, this is wild stuff. let's not forget where the dossier came from. it came from russians. so there's clear evidence of collusion with the russians. it just happens to be with the hillary clinton campaign and the democratic national committee that the news media fails to talk about or fails to even investigate. >> we are in the middle of what i call phase ii of our investigation which involves other departments, specifically the state department and some of the involvement that they had in this. that investigation is ongoing. and we continue to work towards finding answers and
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asking the right questions to try to get to the bottom of what exactly the state department was up to in terms of this russia investigation. todd: couple things there. devin nunes, really talking about a complete 180 from what you would hear in the mainstream media. the mainstream media says it's all about the russia collusion narrative with the president. rachel: oh, no, no, no. now it's obstruction. todd: if you hear devin nunes talk about it it's beyond that the russian collusion with the clinton campaign and oh yeah this memo which quite frankly is the tip of the iceberg. ed: man in the center of that narrative would be james comey. he was one of the officials who signed his name to get the initial fisa warrant. and use the dirty dossier which, you know, that's in late 2016. and then in early 2017, he goes to president-elect donald trump and says oh, there is this dossier that's unverified. rachel: and salacious. ed: even though he used it to get surveillance.
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interesting, james comey reacting yesterday. that's it, he says, about the republican memo? dishonest and misleading memo wrecked the house intel committee. destroyed trust with intelligence community, damaged relationship with fisa court. and inexcusablably exposed classified investigation of an american citizen carter page. for what? doj and fbi must keep doing their jobs. two quick points. one, james comey does not push back on a single material fact in the memo. no fact is challenged. it's just all talking points. number two, we had jim jordan, the republican congressman that's been at the center of this pressing. he told us not only does he want a special counsel but he wants james comey and a lot of the other senior officials looked at. rachel: i think what's also interesting. this memo is based on information that devin nunes and the house intelligence committee got from the doj and fbi. so now the doj and fbi saying this is nothing. you know, this is a nothing burger. you know, but, remember, devin nunes had to fight for months to get this information. the doj and fbi did not want to turn it over.
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and didn't turn it over until there was a contempt from congress threat by devin nunes and the committee. so if there is nothing there, if this means nothing. if it's a nothing burger as comey says. why were they fighting to give that information over to the nunes? ed: absolutely. todd: you mention the word fight. he also had to fight his good name being drug through the name on every network out there by the way besides ours. ed: demanding the bank records that's how he found out that the dnc and the clinton campaign paid for this dossier which by the way was not told to the fisa judge. rachel: this is a try discredit nunes. is he coming out vindicated from this memo and looks like what he says more to come. todd: i will put lawyer hat hun for a second here. i love doing that because it's really the only contribution i can make. but if you sort of went to a different country, nobody knew any of the players. nobody knew any of this stuff and you just presented
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these facts as is just the facts in the memo, mind you, i think a jury would convict the bad guys in this 99% of the time. which shows everything that's in the media right now is just so politicized because of the names involved. rachel: and the lack of curiosity on the part of the media. todd: exactly. ed: what do you think? friends@foxnews.com. we will be readings those the rest of the show. rachel: turning now to headlines. indiana is adding a work requirement to adults on medicaid making it the second state behind kentucky to tie healthcare coverage to employment. the change could lead to more than 130,000 people losing coverage if they fail to complete paperwork for the program. enrollees most show that they are working an average of 20 hours a month. those who don't submit paperwork will be locked out of enrollment for three months. a new mandate goes into effect next year. a woman missing for months spotted in a rather visible place, the bachelor. about. eka martinez's mom says she hasn't heard from her since
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november after allegedly working on a marijuana farm. fans of the dating reality show noticed a picture of her in a missing person's article in california. and instantly recognize her. martinez now speaking out on twitter writing, mom: how many times do i have to tell you i don't get cell service on the bachelor? no artificial feelings, whole food employees say strict store policies are so stressful, cr crying on the job is the new norm. empty shelves doesn't allow them to keep extra food in storage. one employee the policy gist her nightmares. employees say they hope amazon will make changes after buying the growersry store in billions for august. those had your headlines. ed: last minute party food tips that will wow your super bowl guests. todd: owner of black tap burgers and beer. we are going to rock this. let's seat. >> we have a big super bowl spread for you.
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friday motz with chipotle tomato sauce. award winning buttermilk wings. chili cheeseburger. carolina burger, texas burger, classic burger. we have it all. we are the burlinger bash champs and we are here to make it. rick: are you really? >> three years in a row. sick. rick: serious competition. burgers are amazing. >> it's a fight and a half every year. go for the pickles. rachel: i'm not pregnant. i just really lo friday pickles. todd: have you been pregnant? rick: a few times. she has eight kids. can somebody make friday mozzarella at home. >> low moisture one, bread it with bread crumbs. fry it in a pan and serve it with tomato sauce. favorite barbecue sauce with spice. motz it out. friday moz. carolina burger.
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got one going already. it's got some american cheese on it. place it on a bun. and then we are going to start to pile it up high. we have got. rachel: all about the fixings, right? got some pulled pork. we have some coal slaw. i'm making a mess over here on purpose by the way. that's it. and that's some carolina barbecue sauce. mustard based sauce. every burger place has a special sauce but ours is really special. todd: can you say what's in yours? >> it's a secret. special. >> sthow thousand island, right? >> can't give away all the secrets. kicked up thousand islands. rachel: what's the most important tip for grilling burgers at home. >> everything thinks grilling cast iron pan is the best way. nice sear. two pieces of cheese. never one. cheddar makes everything better. do you want to eat some stuff and grab a burger? todd: thank you chef joe and party city for all the game day decor. rick: you guys just opened
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up in las vegas. >> venetian hotel in vegas. rick: opened up in disney land downtown. >> disneyland downtown. come to a neighborhood near you soon. todd: or dominate new york city. going global. >> that's it worldwide. thank you very much. thank you. rachel: happy super bowl. >> happy super bowl that's it. ed: coming up is the fisa memo a vindication of the trump campaign or more attacks from the left? would ask former trump campaign manager david bossie next. todd: nfl set to salute 15 medal of honor recipients at the super bowl including world war ii veteran who fought at the battle of hiro jima. you don't want to miss that coming up. in my freezer here. so check back for that follow-up vid. this is my cashew guy bruno. holler at 'em, brun.
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kicking it live and direct here at the fountain. should i go habanero or maui onion? should i buy a chinchilla? comment below. did i mention i save people $620 for switching? chinchilla update -- got that chinchilla after all. say what up, rocco. ♪
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>> what's going on this in
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country i think is a disgrace. the memo was sent to congress. declassified. congress will do whatever they are going to do but i thinks it a disgrace. todd: president trump not hiding how he feels about the bombshell revelations in the newly released fisa memo. the big question right now is this a vindication of the trump campaign or just the beginning of these attacks from the left? ed: here with reaction david bossie former trump campaign manager and author of best seller "let trump be trump." david, great to see you. i wonder what is your big picture reaction to all of this? >> this is exactly what the president was talking about during the campaign. it was a rigged election. it was rigged for hillary clinton who now we are seeing it. this is incredibly important for the american people to understand that this dirty dossier that the department of justice, that these bad fbi agents and these bad apples were using for political purposes to damage this president and to damage
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our campaign during the campaign last september, august, september, october of our election cycle is unprecedented and it is outrageous. this president is exactly right. and i will be honest with you, i don't know how bruce ohr, as i woke up this morning, i don't know how any of them have a job today at the department of justice or at the fbi. ed: i hate to interrupt you but on your very point raj shaw from the white house and maybe he has to give us the official line we will press him and he will give. how does rod rosenstein have a job today he said, raj shaw, the white house spokesman. i know you are on the outside. that rod rosenstein is going to stick around and do his job. how can that happen, david? >> you know, i don't know. and i don't know how anyone can have confidence in anyone who had anything to do with this fisa application to the fisa court. by the way, we're going -- this is the first shoe to drop. and i will be honest with
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you, maybe we don't know what will happen, but the judge involved in the fisa court application should be admonishing these people from the fisa bench. and that's another thing that we may or may never hear about. but the other issue is going to be the inspector general's report. that will be coming out, we expect, maybe within weeks or a month or so. that's going to be another big shoe to drop. that's really going to detail and explain the corruption that was on the inside of the fbi. rachel: it doesn't look like it's cleaning up because peter strzok who we know leaked information during the investigation which is an absolute, you know, almost -- is it a crime to do? it may be. he has just been reassigned. let me ask you this, david, with regard to the fisa judge that you brought up, do you suspect that the judge is going to -- i mean, how does he admonish them? what do we ever find out about that? he has got to be mad. >> of course. look, we don't know what
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goes on inside of that courtroom. it's a classified court. it's classified information and it should be. this is an abuse of power. that's what this is. this is using a dirty dossier and not telling the judge that somebody on the dnc and hillary clinton payroll were using the information that a political operative brought to us for political purposes, with a political end in sight. to defeat donald trump and that's the essence of which this entire thing has been born. and i think that it stinks, and it is unfortunate, it's not unfortunate, it's a disgrace to the american political process that this happened. and i am outraged by it and none of these people that had anything to do with this should be employed by the department of justice or the fbi. look, the fbi is america's premier law enforcement agency. it is an outstanding organization.
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i had the honor of working with alongside a lot of those people over the years. and they are great men and women. and they don't deserve a few bad apples ruining and tarnishing their reputations. todd: david, we have got to go. thank you very much. great inel sight there. not the last we will hear from david bossie. rachel: no it's not. ed: we will hear from will heard cia officer turned congressman who voted to release that memo. he will tell us why next hour. rachel: nfl set to salute 15 medal of honor recipients at the super bowl. including this world war ii veteran who fought in the battle of iwo jima. herschel woodrow woody williams is here next.
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rachel: the nfl will salute 15 middle of honor recipients at the super bowl tomorrow night. todd: one of them is world war ii veteran herschel woody williams who received the medal of honor for bravery and courage during the battle of iwo jima. ed: pete hegseth has been with us live from minnesota is he there with herschel williams. take it away. pete: forget the nfl when you have a medal of honor recipient. hey, woody williams. gunner woody williams. the lone surviving marine medal of honor recipient from world war ii. also the only survivor from the pacific theater. sir, you earned your medal of honor on the island of iwo jima as a flame thorough as a corporal in the marine corps. tell us what it was like to be there for 34 to 36 days on the island. >> every combat situation is about the same except this one was different because we were on enemy territory. and that changed the whole structure. you know, this was the first
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enemy territory that we were going to capture. all the other islands belonged to somebody else. they didn't belong to japan. pete: great point. you know, you wear that medal that represents what so many have done. but you yourself had the heroism to go behind enemy lines with a flame thrower and take out seven pillboxes. what motivates a guy to take that kind of initiative on the battlefield? >> we had a great cause. our freedom was at stake. so we had a great cause to save our freedom and our country. so i was certainly inspired by that but i was doing the job that the marine corps trained me to do. if they hadn't of trained me, i couldn't have done it. in the process, i wear the medal by the way in honor of two marines who sacrificed their life that day protecting mine. so i, perhaps, wouldn't even be here had it not been for those two marines. pete: amen. i have a feeling you will be thinking about that when you are on the 50-yard line tomorrow. you will be part of the coin toss. flipping the coin. i believe you are the man who will be flipping the
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coin. what will that mean to you and what will you be thinking about? >> well, it's certainly a once in a lifetime experience. it will never come again. we know that you don't get to do it a second time. [laughter] but, to have this honor, and to be selected by my fellow medal of honor recipients to represent them and all of those who have gone by already gone, to represent them is a tremendous honor and a great responsibility as far as i'm concerned. i'll be thrilled, absolutely i will be so nervous i don't know what i will do. [laughter] but i have been practicing. [laughter] pete: gunner woody williams we will be looking for you at the 50-yard line. we are honored to be americans alongside you, sir. >> thank you. pete: thank you very much. we got the philadelphia eagles drum line here. why don't you play it out in honor of this world war ii. maybe the marine hymn if they have it. what about that? ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ rachel: wow, that looks like fun. ed: an american hero. i'm glad we are honoring him today. the whole world will see him tomorrow. todd: doesn't get better than that back to the news. do democrats even want to make a deal on daca? the president doesn't think so. geraldo is here. ed: speaking of democrats, are they getting too confident about a takeover in the house mid terms. new poll shows it won't be as easy as they think. a new look at the numbers just ahead. [cheers] ♪ ♪
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>> only one nation the fisa memo is released it's already a mess of names, faces devon nunes brought a lot to the table here. >> i didn't want to have to do this but the sad. >> liz: sad part is that i have an obligation to the american people when we see fisa abuse. >> james come it wasting no time attacking the newly-released fisa memo. pete: that's it dishonest and misleading memo wreck the house intel committee? >> here is a guy protecting the bill of rights and the first amendment and yet he says that's it. rachel: the dow logged its worst week in two years, when there was so many signs of strength in the u.s. economy the reaction was puzzling. u.s. employers hired more people in january than economists had forecast adding 200,000 jobs. >> pete hegseth live today. >> i'm going to show you my farming skills the first annual farm bowl.
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>> ♪ ♪ ed: he's not on the couch to defend himself he's live in minneapolis all morning. rachel: you're right the farm bowl, i'm not sure he says he's from the midwest, comes from a dairy family, but it's sketchy. todd: he was really by like connell who ran the show over there. ed: do you know who is a man of the midwest now believe it or nod? geraldo rivera. he's like straight out of new york city, you know the move is straight out this guy is straight out of new york city. he loves the big apple but there he is in cleveland and there's so much going on we've been waiting in anticipation of this republican memo and it's great to have you here because, you know, you had even republicans saying in recent days oh, maybe this thing isn't going to be a d
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ud. geraldo: either do i, ed and good morning and happy saturday everybody, from the midwest i came for love and so far so good what the memo, i think, leads everybody to the inescapable conclusion that there was the weapon of this partisan opposition research done by christopher steele, the former british secret agent and they used it as if it were factual without ever checking it out and without properly explaining to the fisa judge that it was op research and not fact so by doing that i think they colluded the sacred process of the fisa warrant and i think that it is an indication that the fbi and their colleagues in the broader doj are operating more as a kind of j. edgar hoover style fbi, that's just my take. rachel: geraldo it's rachel i also moved to the midwest for love and it's working out great for me too but listen i get a lot of feedback.
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what people are saying to me on twitter and through my social media is okay this looks bad but what's going to happen because everybody feels like there's these scandals and nothing ever happens as far as repercussions for it. geraldo well geraldo: well if you go back to the essence of what's going on here maybe we should do a reality show by the way our two midwestern families when you go back to the essence of what this was supposed to be about, the russians, everyone agrees interfered with our election. the allegation was that donald trump and his cohorts somehow assisted the russians in their interference, colluded with the russians in their interference with the american election. as far as anyone can tell there is no evidence of that whatsoever, when you look at what mueller has at least publicly so far achieved, you have the fisa warrant on carter page that's kind of dizzy, you know i don't want to call them s
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chmuck, because i don't know them well but nerdy wandering guy mumbling around one of those characters that just doesn't seem to have real substance to him, he's not even indicted yet. you have george papadopoulos who comes from the d-league and pleading guilty wearing a wire in the summer of 2017, no one knows what has happened to george papadopoulos and then mike flynn, general michael flynn who was the head as you guys know of the national intelligence under president obama until he had gotten fired he got in a jam and was doing business on his own, he lied to the fbi and so he got indicted for lying to the fbi. none of these things, these three gentlemen none of them have anything to do with president trump or his administration. todd: geraldo it's todd i moved to connecticut for love and earlier in the show, we as press
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secretary raj from the white house is this a big deal and here is what he had to say. >> to show that in the middle of a presidential campaign, the fbi and the department of justice would rely on campaign opposition research, shoddy opposition research i'll add to justify a warrant for spying on the other campaign, it's pretty, it's a pretty big deal. it's pretty outrageous. i love how democrats are saying it's a dud. it doesn't mean anything, it's argument after argument and it doesn't stand up. this is a pretty serious allegation laid out in this memo todd: geraldo for the last week we heard oh, the sky is going to fall the national security implications of this memo coming out are going to be unfathomable , what do you say? geraldo well obviously, todd that was pure hype. it never came to pass, you know, the passion of the democrats and the progressive left to keep this memo from ever being
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released so so ironic. you just had the post the movie where they extole the virtue of reporters and editors who stand against the man and we're going to release this and suddenly it's a memo that that's the president and they say oh, no no no if this is released i'll have to tear my eyeballs out so i think that this whole saga strengthens my opinion more than ever before that there is no way on god's green earth that the president of the united states should sit opposite special counsel mueller unprotected and give statements because that, to me, is his only exposure to real legal peril. the puerto rico jury traps perjury traps, who knows what the special counsel will ask him he could bring up were you with this person or that person, he could bring up gossip from tabloids and trap the president in some kind of statement like martha stuart whose also in the
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clear and she sat opposite the fed's and gave her side of the story and one decided she misrepresented or lied and she went to jail. the president has nothing to fear but too much of his own commentary. ed: geraldo you make such a great paper and the new york times and washington washington post saying yeah, we're with these government officials at the fbi and justice department who want to conceal information and tell the public less but i would argue there would be some strange things as well you and david bossie who don't agree on a whole lot but here is what he just said and we'll get you to react. >> it's a disgrace to the american political process that this happened and i'm outraged by it and none of these people that had anything to do with this should be employed by the department of justice or the fbi look, the fbi is america's premier law enforcement agency. it is an outstanding
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organization. i had to honor of working alongside a lot of those people over the years and they are great men and women and they don't deserve a few bad apples, ruining and tarnishing their reputations. ed: he makes a fair point geraldo which is the president's critics say look if you're for releasing this information you hate the man or woman fbi agent out on the street fighting terrorists when instead what's going on here is trying to hold accountable the officials at the top who may have lied to this fisa judge. geraldo: you know, ed, when david bossie says it's saturday, i say it's sunday because we don't agree, i think he's, you know, his actions during the clinton reign were really below the belt, in my opinion and president obama as well, but i have no objection and no contradiction to anything he said in the interview earlier this morning on fox & friends. i think that he is absolutely right.
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i have worked with and known many fbi agents. i think they are a nobel core dedicated to keeping the country safe against terrorism. i think, however they're not immune to being politicized at least certain cells within the grand organization and within the department of justice more generally. i don't think there's any doubt now with the e-mails of the lovers and the fact that they detest trump and they're the last offense, you know, it's dun kirk and they will be there and protect the world against coming of donald trump. i think that there is no doubt but that this president, the 45th president of the united states, has been given the short straw by the fbi and by the department of justice. i can totally understand why he is upset. i think the american people should be upset by the fact that we have now been distracted by this for over a year. they've come up with nothing but the three individuals that i've
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already mentioned. it doesn't come close to the president. there's not a single allegation. we must remember this is about an allegation that president trump help helped sabotage the american election and fix it in his favor by his collusion with our arch enemies the russians. there is no evidence of that and i think it's time for the american people and the department of justice and the justice system to move on from this. rachel: so geraldo i can't let you go without talking about daca. both you and i agree this is a pretty generous deal three times the amount of dreamers or daca recipients being offered citizenship than obama offered. do you think the democrats want a deal? why aren't they at the negotiat ing table? geraldo: i think that what's happening here, rachel, is that the extremes in both camps are now exercising their muscle and i think it's unfortunate because i believe there is a deal there to be had and we should take the president up on it as long as it
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is out there and as long as it exists. here is the deal. the deal is the 1.8 million dreamers, you get the left gets the dreamers, the right gets the 25 billion trust fund to start construction on the southern border wall. i want that to be the parameters of the deal in the short-term. in the broader world, we'll get to comprehensive immigration reform eventually in the normal order, but because of the, you know the government running out of money again, because of the urgency, because of the focus on the dreamers, i think we've got to grab this whole opportunity now to free these young people from being deported despite the fact they've lived here their whole lives and despite the fact that they now have citizen born children and on the other hand we've got to solve the urgency, we've got to soothe the right
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that has made the border wall an object of not only a physical being but almost an intellectual psychological exercise. that wall must be built now. everybody agrees to that virtual ly. rachel: we're losing your shot, geraldo. thank you, geraldo. ed: we had a little problem with your shot there i think it was because he was going to give a super bowl pick. rachel: you're back, geraldo. geraldo: oh, good. rachel: but we've got to go, [laughter] geraldo: okay. todd: have a good one. we didn't get a super bowl pick. rachel: no. todd: are democrats getting too confident about a house takeover during the midterms? a new poll shows it won't be as easy as they think. our next guest breaking down the numbers when fox and friends on a saturday morning returns. before you and your rheumatologist move to another treatment,
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ask if xeljanz xr is right for you. xeljanz xr is a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. it can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz xr can reduce the symptoms of ra, even without methotrexate. ask your rheumatologist about xeljanz xr.
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ed: more big news this week in congressman trey gowdy becoming the latest in a long line of house republicans not seeking re -election causing concern that gop will have difficulty stopping democrats from gaining the seats necessary to take power. rachel: this is new polling reveals a close rate in a generic house ballot so can republicans hold on in 2018. joining us now is more host of the faith station on cbn, jenna broader welcome. >> good morning thanks for having me. rachel: so tell us can the gop hold on in the midterm? >> i think the biggest thing the democrats have to worry about is that the republicans continue to deliver on results especially when it comes to the economy, the booming economy and also the democrats seeming a little bit out of touch at some point. you know, nancy pelosi making her crumbs comment about bonuses , or, you know, hillary
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clinton talking about deplorable s. these all make democrats seem a bit out of touch so there's some factors that these democrats are going to have to work against and if republicans can continue to deliver that will work well for them come this fall. ed: all true, jenna, what the big issue for republicans is simple math and history as we look at the balance of power in terms of how many house members we have right now, you'll see 193 democrats, 238 republicans there's four vacancies, the number of house members not seeking re-election keeps climbing as we've been noting and basically, you see right there, 34 seats in terms of republicans not seeking re- election, 16 democrats not seeking re-election, so the democrats need 24 seats to gain power. the average since world war ii for the party out of power in a midterm like this is to lose 26 seats, so what that suggests at least history wise is that the democrats would win a narrow victory and take back the house.
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>> yeah, look, history might be on the democrat side but i think if you take the pulse of the country and what people in middle america are feeling, they're looking down at their paychecks. a lot of people yesterday looking down and realizing that i have more money in my paycheck or getting their 401 (k) statements and saying this isn't so bad, so, you know, i think that that could be if republican s like i said continue to grow the economy, drive down unemployment, that bodes well for them and we'll just have to wait and see what happens. rachel: you've got your pulse on evangelicals why are they hanging with trump still what do they like about him? >> yeah, you know president trump and this add money it separation continues to deliver on key issues for evangelicals we're talking the federal courts and the supreme court, we're talking moving the u.s. embassy in israel to jerusalem so a lot of key important issues, abortion and the president's stance on that. again, if he continues to be pro
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on a lot of these issues, that bodes well for him and for republicans. ed: jenna, last question is that a hidden factor in here that the mainstream media doesn't want to talk about is that we hear so much about the energy on the left from the resist movement but is there maybe a quieter movement that was there for donald trump in 2016, the media lasted off the polls didn't show it, could the evangelicals and others help donald trump and the republicans hold on in the midterms? >> i think so, and from sources, from some of my sources, there are already efforts, there are conversations underway between republican leaders and evangelical leaders to make sure that these two groups are on the same page. ed: interesting jenna browedder with face the nation we appreciate you coming in. rachel: thanks, jenna. ed: coming up will hurd is a congressman he voted to release the fisa memo, he will tell us
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why. rachel: plus the hawaiian official who sent the false alert is speaking out for the first time who says it's not his fault.
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it's ok that everyone ignores me while i drive. it's fine. because i get a safe driving bonus check every six months i'm accident free. and i don't share it with mom! right, mom? righttt. safe driving bonus checks. only from allstate. switching to allstate is worth it.
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you know what's not awesome? gig-speed internet. when only certain people can get it. let's fix that. let's give this guy gig- really? and these kids, and these guys, him, ah. oh hello. that lady, these houses! yes, yes and yes. and don't forget about them. uh huh, sure. still yes! xfinity delivers gig speed to more homes than anyone. now you can get it, too. welcome to the party. rachel: the fisa memo has been released and it is making waves across the swamp but what does this mean for the lawmakers who voted to release that memo? todd: let's ask one now joining us is republican congressman will hurd of texas. congressman thank you so much for being here. all week, we heard the sky was falling when this memo was going to be released because of the national security concerns, as a former cia officer, i ask you, is our country less safe today
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following the release of this memo? >> no, it's not, and one of the reasons i voted for this, you know as an undercover officer for almost a decade it was my job to tell the difference between information and intelligence and it was my opinion that there was nothing in this memo that was going to have an impact on national security and to be frank, there was nothing in this memo that hadn't already been leaked to the press. i don't think anybody saw anything new that they hadn't seen, with maybe the exception of the fact that a newspaper article was used in one of the fisa applications, and so for me , this is about congress exercising its informing function, to educate the american people to show, you know, sunshine on the process, to have transparency. one of the great things about our country and why this experiment called america has worked is because we have civilian oversight of our law enforcement entities. not everybody, a lot of countries don't have that and
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this is congress doing its role. rachel: that's right. i want to ask you also about the fisa memo, the fisa application. what are the implications, the memo says that it was false information, or the dirty dossier that was used to release that. what does that say? what is congress going to do now that that information is out? >> i think it's important when we look at this information let's removal of the pronouns. the fact that the concerns that i have is that unverified information, circular reporting and rumors were used in a title three court in order to ultimate ly get a teletap, so we need the congress needs to continue to exercise our oversight role in looking at this process of what is provided at a court, how does those judges review this type of information, and this is in my opinion a pretty big deal when
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it comes to protecting the civil liberties of american citizens. americans should be comfortable that if a law enforcement goes to a court that they're going to have credible information, not rumors circular reporting or un verified information. ed: so congressman let's assume everything you've said the last couple minutes or so is 100% accurate why should rod rosenstein the deputy attorney general have a job come monday morning 9:00 a.m.? >> it's a good question and something that has to be evaluated. we also have to evaluate the political situation in which we're in and, you know, if this becomes a, if this was a one-off , is this a chronic problem, was it more of an acute problem? i also think that we got to look at the inspector general report that's coming out from department of justice. we know there's one going on, i'm pretty confident that the head of the fbi has already seen that, i'm assuming that general sessions has seen it as well and
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so let's see what the inspector general says also. todd: in light of these revelations the $64,000 question , should we still have a russia investigation following the revelations? >> yes, i think we do. i don't think this has anything to do with robert mueller. i font think this has anything to do with the rankin file members of the fbi. mueller should turn over every rock. he should pursue every lead, and this is a focus on what kind of information should be or should not be presented at a title three court. rachel: well thank you congressman. always insightful especially with your background in the cia thank you very much. thank you all. rachel: the dow jones plunging more than 600 points, did the memo have anything to do with it we'll ask neil cavuto next. todd: hardest working man in show business there, and one way to enjoy the super bowl with your own man cave, from tv's to surround sound we've got you,
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everything you need to make your game day a hit, that's coming up next. >> ♪ ♪ i promise, to have and to hold, from this day forward
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todd: a lot of things happened yesterday there was a memo, a good jobs report which was counterintuitive and we've got weird earnings from some huge companies like the alphabet companies. do you have any one reason or is it a combination of the three that the market fell 600 points? neil: well i would just say all of the above being good news, and good news was finally greeted as bad news, the fact that the economy i know it sounds kind of perverted guys but it's picking up steam and a little bit more steam than most thought it would and that's why interest rates have been backing up, nothing to the degree i can remember when let's say i was your age, but, you know, if you're getting used to like a 10 year note or bond that was around 1.5% all of a sudden looks like 2.8% never mind there was a time when it was well into the teens. people follow that trend and they get worried about it thinking we'll see more of the same so ironically a lot of this was used as an excuse to sell based on good news. ed: and it's interesting neil because people like to forget these basic ten enters of the
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economy, markets go up, markets come down right? is that a risk for this president as well? big picture? the dow has come off big time but when it goes down, it's also going down on his watch. neil: you know, you followed many presidents, ed and you know that ronald reagan was very spooked by quoting the market because he always feared they could reverse themselves suddenly and they doubled under his watch, but of course, the 1987 crash happened under his watch and he is famous for saying stocks go up stocks go down but you don't want to align yourself too much to them because someone will always pull out a bite or a clip or a remark you made when they were going up and forever tie it to you. now this president has tied much of his success to those soaring markets, as he should, but it's going to be going your way he might as well quote it but the flip side of that is when they reverse suddenly and they correct, and we're not even approaching even a minor correction right now, you're going to have to deal with that too. rachel: hi, neil it's rachel.
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neil: hi, rachel. rachel: from my second home at fox business, [laughter] so listen -- neil: that was the home that mattered by the way. rachel: it will always be my first home. so 15,000 of those 200 jobs that were added are manufacturing jobs, now these are jobs that democrats said would never come back, kiss them goodbye. what is trump and the republican s doing that are bringing manufacturing jobs back to america? neil: well i think the first thing is enticing money that a lot of those manufactures held abroad back home. apple is probably the biggest and most familiar company to say , you know, because of this, one-time tax forgiveness you're paying at a one-time rate of 15.5% to bring the money home and it behooves them to do that and apple is doing that and now it's investing about $350 billion in this country over the next 10 years so think saysers say they would have done it without the tax cut so they weren't doing that but having said that rachel i think what a lot are saying is it is now most cost effective and productive to
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do a lot of stuff here so we're probably going to see a lot more of that. todd: neil if anyone deserves to be tired of winning it would be you because you just started this show. neil: well i think i have a very good opening act to follow. you guys seem so caffeinated. it's like how are they like that early in the morning? ed: well we don't want to boast but we get up a few hours before you this is like a mid morning show but you're rocking it. its been awesome. the news obviously is driving all of this as well so who do you have on the big show today? neil: we're taking a look at this memo fallout, because a lot of people say there's no connection between the memo and the markets and i readily agree with that, ed and we'll raise this with bob goodlatte the chairman of the house judiciary committee because some in the markets are afraid this could drag on and on and on and this constitutional back and forth especially talk of a phase ii of its investigation whether other heads could fall, so we're going to talk to them about that what
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the fallout could be. we're also going to get a read of the markets as well and how the small business guy is doing from the woman who runs the fbi, linda mcmahon is with us. so we've got a lot going on here and also joe nameth. apparently there's some big football game but fox isn't doing it so i don't care. todd: you've got joe on? neil: yes. he was a football player right? i was going to ask him about the bond market. ed: have a good show buddy. todd: neil always says it's not about the blue team or the red team it's always about the green team. rachel: the green team. i love it. turning now to your headlines. an arizona man is charged with selling amunition to the las vegas shooter who killed 58 people, wounding more than 500 others at a concert. douglas hague, who els amox as a hobby facing a maximum of five
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years in prison for manufacturing and selling bullets without a proper license >> i feel terrible about what happened. again, i keep racking my brain what did i miss what did i miss? rachel: it's unclear if any of the 720 rounds of amunition sold were actually used in what is considered the worst mass shooting in modern american history. take a look at this horrifying video three women violently attacked by a car jacker. a man punching and kicking them as the women fiercely fight back inside of a nail salon in southern california. one of them smacking him right in the face with the chair. employees from a neighboring business finally rushing in taking down the suspect before police arrested him. authorities are saying they have no idea why he attacked in the first place. the hawaii official sending the false missile alert sparking statewide panic is now speaking out claiming he was 100% sure that the threat was real.
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>> the message that i heard was this is not a drill. i didn't hear exercise at all from the message or from my co- workers. rachel: a preliminary report finding the drill had no procedures in place to prevent a person from mistakingly sending an alert. the terminated worker now firing back putting the blame on the state emergency management agency. now, this will melt your heart, a soldier, returning homerly to surprise his son on his birthday . sargent david meyer hugging his son and meyer had been deployed for about a year and the boy's classmates sang happy birthday to hip as hi stood at his father 's side and those are your headlines what a beautiful story rick where are you at?
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rick: i'm outside and i thought i was going to be inside so i went to the studio like not in my coat and they're like run outside, it's 19 degrees so not that bad if only out for a few minutes. what's the limit that you will go outside? yesterday i was walking next to this guy in his shorts walking out from the gym, it was like 1o with shorts on or without a coat in the middle of winter. here is your precipitation right now snow moving in across parts of the northern planes and that tomorrow will meet up with parts of texas and make for a big storm for much of the eastern part of the country, and get ready for that right now it's chilly feels like 1 in boston, 1 in buffalo, 32 in mobile and 25 in atlanta you get the idea the cold has settled in all across the south and the coldest day across parts of minnesota towards minneapolis will be tomorrow, for the super bowl 6 degrees for your high temperature for the day overnight minus 4. guys back to you inside. todd: all right if you can't be
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at the big game there's no better way to watch the super bowl than in your man cave. ed: here to tell us all about the one he's setting up for us this morning dan silverman, president of man caves new york. that name says it all how cool is that? rachel: am i allowed to be here? ed: do you call it person caves or not? >> girl caves whatever you want to call it. ed: walk us through it. >> first of all i'd like to say we specialize in aligning ourselves with u.s.-made products. trump approved. ed: that's good. >> so we focus man caves focuses on the luxury market we try to give people what they want for home automation. basically one app that will control the whole house. todd: so you've got an app that controls whether my feet go up and other stuff? yeah, we can control the seats absolutely. we do home automation with lighting, gate control. rachel: is that what this stuff is here for? >> these are buttons you can control the seats as you go up and down. todd: i'm just pushing a button.
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ed: i love there's a button with a little light so if i've got my beer here and it's dark there's a light that lights it up. >> correct the best part they're very quiet. you don't even hear it. so savant is the best automation company there is within the world actually. they've surpassed everybody. the engineering behind savant is just in credible. it starts off with a $500 remote and basestation which is right her and this will control one room flawlessly. todd: connects to your wi-fi? >> yes and it's user-controlled it's very easy. anybody can set it up. ed: and what about the tv's over there? todd: you can't have a super bowl without the huge tv. forget the millennial stuff, this is the real deal. >> that is a samsung qled tv. it's a 7 series an incredible tv for about a little over $3000. you just can't beat it.
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rachel: you can buy this with all of the crumbs you get from your company. >> over a billion colors, it's precise and really what you'd want. todd: so if someone got a bonus from the trump tax cut where do they find you online if they want this here? >> mancavesny.us. todd: we also want to thank our friends at party city for all these great decorations we'll give them a round of applause. ed: they will be partying tonight and tomorrow thanks for coming in dan. todd: coming up the president just tweeted about the fisa memo , we'll bring it to you. pete live in minneapolis getting ready for the big game too where the snow is coming down, pete? pete: it's coming down. it's warm inside u.s. bank stadium which is right over there, but it's cold out here. you know who doesn't care the philadelphia eagles. we've got the pep band, the drum line and the cheerleaders. you guys have played a fight song for us here? take it away guys. >> ♪ ♪
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[burke] vengeful vermin.
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seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ ed: well the president is weigh ing in and tweeting this morning hadn't done it yet all about this memo saying "this memo totally vindicates trump but the russian witch hunt goes on and on, there was no collusion and there was no obstruction . the word now used a good after one year looking endlessly and finding nothing collusion the president says is dead. this is an american disgrace. rachel: you got to understand why he's upset. i mean, he genuinely believes there was no collusion. i think so far if there was, we would have seen some leak, some evidence that's been how long over a year investigating so i understand his anger and i don't blame him for tweeting about it. todd: one thing that really confused me over the course of the last couple days and there's something in the tweet that reminded me of it, james comey
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referenced joe mccarthy, step back, joe mccarthy is known for a russian witch hunt. rachel: right. todd: which is exactly what they're doing to the president so i thought comey was supposed to be a bright guy regardless of what you think of him. ed: i heard republican lawmakers say there aren't a lot of schools named after j. edgar hoover, something james comey might want to look at as well but yeah the president clearly frustrated about all of this we've known that for a long time yesterday his comments at the white house were direct and he also called it a disgrace and he gave it kind of a luke warm response to say the least to rod rosenstein to say you still have confidence to rod rosenstein and said what do you think, he didn't say yes, i do have confidence but we had raj shah on earlier and he said they're still behind, rod rosenstein the deputy attorney general whose overseeing the robert mueller probe we'll see if that holds or not. rachel: well a lot of people left their positions in the doj or the fbi.
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why is peter strzok still there? a lot of people tweeting me. they just kind of reshuffle them todd: but to ed's point i know that's what raj shah said obviously we're doing an interview on fox news i kind of feel that rosenstein got a little bit of the kiss of death from president trump. and when he says stuff like that typically going forward, that person is done. ed: interesting and it's clear that they have to figure this out because they're under great pressure. you have democrats saying that this memo was put out by devon nunes to kind of set off some sort of a saturday night massacre where at the very least , rod rosenstein is fired if not robert mueller but on the flip side of that democrats have been trying to fan those flames for months and months with leaks and saying oh, the president wants to fire robert mueller, it has not happened. rachel: and most republicans are saying this, the memo released does not mean we want the mueller investigation to end. let it go. i think what people want is let the mueller investigation go but had it come to a conclusion soon
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so we stop having this cloud over the president so the president can talk about all the great things he's doing for the country economically and frankly i think it really exposes what the democrats want to do. they want to not just muddy the waters on this investigation but stop the good news from coming out. todd: i want to ask the two of you this because you're in d.c. and you know d.c. do you think there's going to be a second special counsel and if so what does that mean for our nation? ed: its been talked about for a long time and it hasn't happened yet. rachel: i'm so sick of special counselors. todd: do you know who we're not sick of? pete live in minneapolis gearing up for the big game went one on one with a former super bowl star and great wide receiver. i can't wait to see this get your popcorn that's next. >> about what you've done on the football field. ru lane. but what a powerful life lesson. and don't worry i have everything handled. i already spoke to our allstate agent, and i know that we have accident forgiveness.
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which is so smart on your guy's part. like fact that they'll just... forgive you... four weeks without the car. okay, yup. good night. with accident forgiveness your rates won't go up just because of an accident. switching to allstate is worth it. he gets the best deal on the perfect hotel by using. tripadvisor! that's because tripadvisor lets you start your trip on the right foot... by comparing prices from over 200 booking sites to find the right hotel for you at the lowest price. saving you up to 30%! you'll be bathing in savings! tripadvisor. check the latest reviews and lowest prices.
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ed: our buddy pete has been live from minnesota and went one on one with a football favorite. pete i saw you during the break by the way, maybe dancing to keep yourself warm. pete: i'm throwing the flag on that. pete: no i was enjoying it. you know, we almost made it but you reminded me. rachel: all day. pete: so it's snowing so i'm feeling at home here, you know you feel me rachel. it feels like the midwest. it feels like winter here but we're inside radio row over at the mall of america yesterday and we happened to run into one of the best wide receivers of all-time, terrell owens and we asked him hall of fame or not this year, he was blocked twice, this is what he had to say. >> it's not a popularity contest you know, it's a hall of fame it should be about what you've done on the football field. you're a body of work and a lot of people that are in it there are a lot of people on the outside looking in that are very deserving but when you consider
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my statistic and think about where i am in history behind the greatest of all-time there's no reason i shouldn't be in. pete: how does it make you feel to be in minnesota as a former eagle watching your team you were there once with a great game, super bowl xxxix, the eagles, patriots you've got a little check for revenge. just to be here and understand and it feels like the rematch and it gives philadelphia another opportunity hopefully the third time is a charm. pete: are they going to have to declare marshall law in philadelphia if they actually win? >> oh, my god i can't imagine what philadelphia will be for the rest of the week if they win oh, my gosh they will tear the city down. pete: i think you're right. >> and i'm sure the mayor will give them a pass. pete: well its been an interesting year for the nfl, you know, from loosening the rules on celebrations to the hits and the calls on the field to national anthem and kneeling. what do you make of sort of the culture around the nfl right now >> i'll just tell you how really how our world is evolving, you think about people speaking out and taking their stance on social issues.
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again, the social media platform s in which, you know these guys are using their voice to stand up for what they believe in, so again, it's just an evolution of the game and evolution of times and you think about the safety issues of the game and everybody is getting bigger faster stronger and they're trying to make the game safe as they can but again, like you said, football is a grown man's sport. pete: you're a cool guy. you carry yourself well people follow you. if you were to give me a tip on how to be cool, what would it be >> i don't know. i think it has to be in your dna you've got to have some swag. you either have it or you don't. pete: do i have it? >> i don't know. you look a little stiff i don't know. todd: [laughter] rachel: [laughter] pete trying to get tips on being cool. pete: you can't live it to it. ed: you can't compete with pete 's dance moves you can see on my phone, go check your twitter a four second clip that i caught during the break. pete: you're throwing me under
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the bus. you've got moves buddy. pete: terrell owens there was promoting pizza hut. ed: more fox & friends and pete hegseth dancing when we come back. pete: all right [laughter] when you combine ancestry's dna test with its historical records... ...you could learn you're from ireland... ...donegal, ireland... ...and your ancestor was a fisherman. with blue eyes. just like you. begin your journey at ancestry.com
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>> ♪ ♪ ed: pete we've already got almost 300 likes on your dance moves what else you got going on out there? pete: you know we got the cake boss is here. you know these guys. carlos bakery, they've got a spot in new jersey but one in the mall of america as well. >> yes, it is. we've got pastries, and most important fox & friends. pete: they said their favorite segment is the diner segment. >> yeah. on the weekend.
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ed: all right pete we'll see you tomorrow. >> our pleasure. rachel: keep dancing, pete keep dancing. ed: have a great saturday everybody. neil: well all right fox on top of turmoil over-the-top from a market sell off that may or not be overdone the fury off a fisa memo that may or may not be over kill so for the next two hours we're on top of it all welcome everybody, i'm neil cavuto. well here is what we know right now on the markets and yeah the memo. first of the memo the white house says that the president has no plans to fire deputy attorney general rod rosenstein by the way the only official still in place named in that infamous memo, many republicans say the revelations of surveillance abuse are so explosive and is staying on special counsel robert mueller's investigation that they're

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