tv Americas News HQ FOX News March 10, 2018 9:00am-11:00am PST
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i guess it's not all that surprising. by the way, we have complete coverage of trump's rally in pennsylvania for republican rick saccone at 7 p.m. tonight. and i'll see you on "after the bell" weekdays 4 p.m. on fox business with my good friend melania francis, have a great week. eboni: remembering three great women who lost their lives doing what they love, caring for veterans. we'll go live to yountville, california and the community that was left devastated. leland: president trump praising china for continuing to help, sitting down with the north korean dictator. how the white house is looking at this week. eboni: and florida's new gun law, some calling it an attack on the second amendment. ♪
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so good to be with you this afternoon. welcome to america's news headquarters, i'm eboni williams. leland: hope you're having a great saturday. i'm leland vittert. investigators in california still don't know why a former soldier opened fire, killing three at a home for veterans. adam housley in yountville, california in the nap p p nappy- napa valley. >> the building was rented by the group pathway home. it housed veterans with extreme ptsd. we had been here to highlight the program and subsequent highlights, a movie "thank you for your service" that showed this program and a smithsonian, as well. and unfortunately a man who used to be a part of the program came here 10:30 opening fire, killing himself. as part of this program, we knew
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two of them, we most recently talked a couple of months ago about coming up and doing a follow-up here, jennifer golick, a clinical director. christine lobar was 48 years old. the executive director. jennifer gonzalez, 29 years old a clinical psychologist. the three women were killed by the gunman who had been here for ptsd. we believed he'd left without completing the program. we covered this program four years ago because of the extreme success they'd been having. many of the men who'd come through this program and they were going to start a women's program as well, had come here after the va had basically given up on them. they had some of the most extreme ptsd cases out there and they had a success rate here of nearly 100%. in the high 90%. and they had almost 500 men come through the program in yountville, the middle of the napa valley. and law enforcement was here responding to the scene and the idea is to get these men and
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women-- men, actually and soon to be women, back into society and trying to help treat their trauma. this changes a lot in the program. we're not sure how it goes forward at this point, but the president did tweet about this, and with the president, his statement quote, via twitter, we are deeply saddened by the tragic situation in yountville and the loss of three of the women who cared for our veterans. we talked to two of the three women, and we were doing a story and they approached us to come back and talking about their success. we went out with them when they were bowling in the community and they would go to a chiropractor and the idea was reintegrating them into society. there were so many people we met from the sheriff's department, to the high schools and businesses in the napa valley that would help these men by volunteering time and inviting them over and to their businesses and go i having them a chance to go bowling and this,
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obviously, changes, possibly changes everything, leland. we're not sure how it goes forward, but behind me was the scene of the crime yesterday and the sad part about this the man opened fire at 10:30 a.m. and according to folks that were here, some i grew up with since i was six years old, they basically said they had no more contact with him, an exchange of gunfire until they went in 6:00 local time and discovered the horror within. leland: it's hard that this would end a wonderful program. about the program, pathway home, you said it was folks that the va essentially had given up on. is it public or private money? >> it's private. the home was where civil war veterans were. yountville has been here over
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100 years, over. this building was rented by them. a private program helping a public problem. the community basically supported it and the va actually supported it. a lot of these men were kind of given up on because they were so affected by ptsd and you hope it doesn't end the program, but when i tell you this is a gun-free zone and the man came on the campus with a gun and took three of the women from us who have been doing amazing work here and we're hearing from a lot of the veterans going through the programs and what they've gone through and talked about how this program saved their lives. a lot of the programs with ptsd are considered success if they have an 80% success rate. they were like at 98%, an incredible number when you think about it. nearly 500 went through and they only lost like two until yesterday. >> as you said, until yesterday. adam housley, yountville, california. more from adam throughout the day and week on this story. eboni. eboni: president trump is headed
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to steel country to rally his base ahead of a special election in southwest pennsylvania. at the same time the white house is i can ma -- is making plans for a possible visit between president trump, and north korean leader kim jong-un. alison. >> president trump is leaving for pennsylvania a little later today. yesterday, the president spoke to chinese president xi jinping. and they welcome the dialog between the united states and north korea and committed to maintain pressure and sanctions until north korea takes tangible steps towards complete verifiable and irreversible denuclearization. the president talked about the call and that china continues to be helpful. on thursday, south korean officials announced that president trump agreed to meet north korean leader kim jong-un by may. if the meeting takes place, it will be the first time a sitting u.s. president has met with a
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north korean leader. white house president secretary sarah sanders accepted the invitation to meet as long as the administration sees concrete and verifiable actions on the part of north korea. >> the maximum pressure campaign has clearly been effective. we know that it has put a tremendous amount of pressure on north korea. and they have made some major promises. they've made promises to denuclearize. they've made promise to stop nuclear and missile testing. and they've recognized that regular military exercises between the u.s. and its ally, south korea, will continue. we want to see concrete and verifiable action on that front. >> the same day he made news on north korea, president trump signed new tariffs on steel and aluminum, despite punishback from members of his own party and allies abroad. an of 15 days, the european leaders say they're prepared to impose counter tariffs and u.s.
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goods if they go into effect. the president says these are vit tal for national security and hasn't backed away. he talked about what he sees as a trade imbalance for years and discussed it often on the campaign trail. the white house says his actions should not be a surprise to anyone, but they are controversial, even here in the white house, trump's top economic advisor gary cohn resigned. reportedly his resignation was due in part reportedly to the fact that he disagreed with the tariffs. leland: more on the tariffs in a minute. back to north korea. thursday's decision caught almost everyone in the u.s. government by surprise. as for negotiations begin with how a meeting would take place, here is a little more from sarah sanders, laying down the ground rules. >> let's be very clear, the united states has made zero concessions, but north korea has made some promises and again, this meeting won't take place without concrete actions that
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match the promises that have been made by north korea. leland: late friday afternoon, the white house clarified again, seeming to walk those requirements back a little. with that, let's bring in the congressman from florida. nice to see you, sir. >> great to see you, leland. leland: you're the chairman of the house foreign committee on asia and pacific. has the white house briefed you more on pre-conditions and how this meeting is going to take place. if they haven't, should there be pre-conditions, in your mind? >> the first question, no, they haven't briefed us prior to this. i would think we would have negotiations and that we would be part of that. you know, it's up to the white house to start the negotiations and this is monumental. so we look forward to see where this goes and hopefully we'll have a hand in this. leland: so, if you're to give your advice to the white house, ins an area you've studied a lot, what should be the pre-conditions before the president and kim jong-un sit down? >> i think the best thing is to
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go in there with the understanding that this is the beginning of the negotiations. we will not back off on sanctions, we will not back off on a relationship with south korea. south korea is our sixth largest trading partner. we've got a strong military presence and we intend to keep it. to that point forward, unification ideally with denuclearization. leland: as you know, we've been down this road many times. >> we sure have. leland: and others have walked down it. the north was promised in the past to denuclearize a couple of times, as a matter of fact, never kept those promises. out of 100%, what's the chance, you think, that the north agrees to denuclearize as a result of these talks? >> i think what you're going to see, we all know about president trump, his skill of negotiating, it's been the sanctionses the tough sanctions and we have a hand through our submarine committee on asia pacific to put those sanctions to make sure that all nations apply those to put the ultimate pressure on
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that. leland: somehow in that answer i didn't hear the answer to the question. what's the percentage chance you think they'll agree to this? >> you know, if i was good at percentages, i would be in la l vegas. i think it's high. i say that seriouslily. north korea has nowhere to go. the only way they can do this is to go through negotiations and denuclearizing and i would call that well over 50%. there is no other option. leland: well over 50% that they'll agree, whether they keep the promise, a whole other thing. >> that's exactly right. leland: this is the concern from the member of the upper chamber from your state. take a listen. >> the other thing that might be happening is he's luring us into these negotiations, but then he will make demands that he knows we can never agree to, like the u.s. abandoning south korea, at that point he will go to the world and say, look, i've beeen very reasonable, i've met with the president and i've been flexible and that's designed to
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get the international community to back off sanctions and not support action. leland: senator rubio has a reason to believe that. they've played this like a fiddle. why is this time different, sir? >> first of all, i've got a lot of respect for senator rubio. this is going to be different because we've got a track record of the previous three administrations where they entered negotiations, were done and before the ink was dry, north korea kept building their nuclear arsenal. it will be different this time because the sanctions, my bet is, you will not see any sanction relief until there is legitimate, concrete evidence that they're earnest in what they say they are, and i think you're going to see this president negotiate stronger than you've ever seen before and i've heard people criticize him because he is spur of the moment, this is not spur of the moment, it's unusual because in the past, we've always used a career diplomate, that has worked through these things and
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my question to you would be, how well has that worked the last 25 years, and i think this is a way to step outside the box and negotiate strong. leland: we'll see if it's deja vu all over again. >> we don't want to see that. leland: you point out the 1994 deal that fell apart. there was concrete relief and it fell apart and they ended up with a nuke. great to see you. >> thank you. leland: as you can imagine there's a lot more to discuss when it comes to north korea. next hour, we'll talk to ambassador to the u.n. bill richardson about the implications of that meeting between president trump and kim jong-un. >> the announcement that president trump will talk with kim jong-un, along with the movement on tariffs have led to very busy week at the white house. abigail tracy is joining us. >> thank you for having me. eboni: you wrote a piece "not exactly the a-team. is trump getting played by kim
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jong-un", abigail, is he? is is the president getting played here? >> i think one of the things when you look at negotiations and those who spoke before me kind of touched on this. the idea that in the past the north korean regime has made the promises, and one question as we look at the potential meeting between donald trump and kim, in talking about the a-team, one of the issues, we still don't have an ambassador to south korea and we lost one of our chief negotiators last week who resigned. so one of the questions is, as we move forward, who do we have alongside donald trump as he creases these potential talks to make sure we're not going to fall into a similar set of circumstances, where the north korean regime kind of walks back those promises of a denuclearizati denuclearization.
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eboni: sure, a lot has been made of low level talks and high level talks. and historically, as leland was talking in his interview as well, the past administrations have had low level talks up to that level. president trump is doing something totally different here. he's starting at the very top. from what we know historically, abigail, could there be a benefit from starting from the top down here? >> well, i think one thing when you're looking at the history of this, you know, as they've touched upon as those guests before we have touched upon. in the past these talks haven't worked and tactics haven't worked. while, yes, trump has received criticism for what some describe as a spur of the moment decision to accept this invitation, if you look back at history the past couple of decades, what's been tried hasn't worked. while we're at this point, one of the ideas to take these back and discuss the issues and the promises that the north koreans have made at this point. and the testing of ballistic missiles for one and also not
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interfering with planned u.s. and south korean military practices, that are upcoming this spring, and also, this idea of denuclearization and what it means to the north koreans versus what it means to the united states and i think that's where, you know, we take those talks a step down and we kind of include some of those diplomates and whether it's the foreign minister to north korean and-- >> abigail, back to the president doing something remarkable and unprecedented here, could president trump indeed be the best diplomate that america has at this point based on what we've seen in the past that hasn't worked? could coming from the president of the united states be something different that gives us a different result? >> well, i do think there is something to be said that it's coming from him and it does send a message that this is serious and also, you know, flipping the script might absolutely be a good thing. and we'll see. there's still a lot of runway, obviously between now and may, but i think it will be interesting to see how trump fares relative to his predecessor. eboni: absolutely, we know what's worked in the past, has
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not been so successful, rather. so perhaps the president is on to something here, we'll certainly see. thank you, abigail. >> thank you. eboni: leland. oh, that's me. john roberts is filling in for chris wallace. he'll talk to massachusetts senator elizabeth warren about president trump agreeing to meet with kim jong, you know. tune into media buzz, 11 a.m. eastern, howard kurtz will talk exclusively with jenny willoughby, one of the ex-wifes of rob porter. we'll talk about the media coverage of the story and as the press moves on. mark levine talks to president benjamin netanyahu. and coming up, we'll go live, from ohio to pittsburgh. where president trump is holding a rally. we'll hold it in its entirety
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beginning at 7 p.m. eastern. as congress works to fix the broken immigration system and attorney general jeff sessions battles california over its sanctuary laws. we'll talk to a border state congressman trying to work out a solution. and fallout from president trump's brand new tariff on steel and aluminum. we'll talk to a business leader who says protecting these vital industries is key to bringing jobs back to america. . >> by unfair foreign trade practices leading to the shuttered plants and mills, the laying off of millions of workers, and the decimation of entire communities. and that's going to stop. thank you. ♪ imagine if the things you bought every day... earned you miles to get to the places you really want to go.
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>> well, the white house continues to negotiate this weekend without allies around the world for side deals on new aluminum and steel tariffs. mexico and canada will be exempt. australia looks like they get a waiver as well. this morning the president had a call from the french president, with the status of the oldest ally. and here it is from the coalition, michael, appreciate
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you being with us. you put together that exemption for mexico and for canada. you get to 25% of the imported steel into the united states is now exempt from these tariffs. are you okay with that? you're for the tariffs. are you okay with the carve-outs? >> yes, canada and mexico are our allies and i trust the judgment of wilbur ross and the trade ambassador. the big problem here is china has with its government-owned steel companies has overproduced for 20 or 30 years and conducted a trade war against us and we're responding. leland: i get the china argument. china represents a whopping 2.2% of steel imports into the united states. in a lot of places you'd call that a rounding error. why have all of this, why risk a trade war for 2.2% of imported steel? >> we're not risking a trade war because we know from experience, from past tariffs and from the 2002 tariffs on steel, which
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lasted a year or two then. there was no trade war and there was not economic harm as found by international trade commission study. so what's happening, as china fills up the global market with steel, there's trans shipping and the basic osmotic pressure. it pushes the other country or pushes their steel to us, they're going to have to manage this problem as they, on a country by country basis as the president is doing right now. leland: you say this isn't going to be a problem. a lot of folks disagree with you. we'll put one of your views on the screen. this from the national farmer's union. his tactics, meaning that of the president at this point has insulted and alienated our closest trading partners instead of countries who are dumping or violating trade rules, the president is proposing to sanction the entire world which adds more volatility to already disrupted trading relationships. that's the national farm union. i realize this is uncomfortable for you because they're one of your supporters.
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>> right. leland: why are they wrong? >> we're not going to have a trade war right now because, number one, europe has to-- if they have a challenge to what the u.s. is doing, they have to bring a wto complaint. the with wto allows tore national security reasons to take action against imports. they would have to bring a complaint, we're 18 months from a decision on that complaint, and then they would have to decide proportionate tariffs thereafter. so we're 18 to 24 months away and europe says they're using the process, we're not talking a trade war next week. leland: we shall see and speaking of negotiations-- >> no, the europeans have said that, they've confirmed that. leland: they've confirmed that, others said that they may slap tariffs on a little sooner. important to get this breaking news in. speaking of negotiations, the president now saying he just talked to the prime minister of japan, shinzo abe, he has a great relationship, discussing
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opening up japan to much better trade with the united states, currently $100 billion trade deficit, this from the president, not fair sustainable, it will all work out. so in that sense i guess you and the president agree. appreciate you being here, michael, thank you. >> thank you. leland: all the best. eboni. eboni: the national rifle association has filed a federal lawsuit over florida's push to raise the minimum age to buy guns from 18 up to 21. the group says the proposed law violates the second amendment. garrett joins us with the details. >> eboni, good to be with you. this new law does a number of things. it creates a three day waiting period and bans bump stocks and allows schools to arm teachers something the n.r.a. has been advocating for for years and raises the minimum age for gun pushes from 18 to 21. that's what the n.r.a., in the
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announcement to challenge the law, it says that florida's ban is an affront to the second amendment, law abiding adults between ages of 18 and 21 to keep and bear arms. swift action is needed to prevent young adults in florida from being treated as second class citizens when it comes to the right and keep and bear arms. it's a diversion from federal law, generally doesn't allow handguns until 21, but does allow rifles and shotguns at 18. the governor was clear, while the new gun control measure isn't perfect, it does some of the key things that both sides were looking for. >> would this bill make a huge investment and dramatically improve school safety in hopes of in he ever seeing a tragedy like this again. would this bill provide more funding to treat the mental i ill. would this bill have for more it
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was people who shouldn't have them. the answer to all three is yes. >> and targeting bump stock devices which allow semi automatic to automatic. and attorney general jeff sessions that's president trump is absolutely committed to ensuring the safety and security of every american and he has directed us to propose a regulation addressing bump stocks and to that end the department of justice has submitted to the office of management and budget notice of a proposed regulation to clarify the national firearms and control act and machine guns to include bump stock devices. the national push for stricter gun control measures is not letting up. activists are planning march for our lives rallies, including in two weeks in d.c. eboni: this is an attempt by the n.r.a. to at least have this current law, this newly initiated in florida temporarily stopped until the court figures
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this out. >> specifically one part of it is what they're targeting. eboni: perfect. thank you, garrett. leland: when we come back, a special congressional race down to the wire in a district that president trump won by 20 points. he's headed there tonight to rally g.o.p. voters in pennsylvania. molly line has spent the week it seems like in pennsylvania and joins us there live. hi, molly. >> that's true, it's actually going to be more than a week when it's over. they are already lining up here in moon township, pennsylvania. this is the pro-trump crowd. the president says he's expecting to draw a big crowd today and not just about his white house ambitions. this time he's here to stump for his preferred choice for congress. more on that coming up. have a homeowners claim last year so allstate is giving us money back on our bill. well, that seems fair. we didn't use it. wish we got money back on gym memberships. get money back hilarious. with claim-free rewards. switching to allstate is worth it.
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here's something you should know. there's a serious virus out there that 1 in 30 boomers has, yet most don't even know it. a virus that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. hep c can hide in the body for years without symptoms. left untreated it can lead to liver damage, even liver cancer. the only way to know if you have hep c is to ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us, it's time to get tested. it's the only way to know for sure. >> president trump holding a rally tonight in moon township, pennsylvania to fire up voters ahead of a special congressional
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election. molly line is there now at the site of the rally with a look ahead for tonight. molly. >> and eboni, they're already out there, wearing their hats and pro-trump t-shirts. this is the 20th rally that president trump has held in pennsylvania and fifth in the pittsburgh area since he began his own race for the white house in june of 2015. this stop has special significance because it's a you will about an election and his choice for congress. he's here to stump for rick saccone trying to win the vacancy in the 18th district. mr. trump has made a quick stop here in january. greeted on the tarmac with saccone, it's been in republican hands for 15 years and it's clear the republicans want to keep it this way. and also stopping here, and boosting chances of rice, mike pence, and ivanka and kellyanne conw conway.
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the suspects have made this race tight. they're counting on conor lamb. former vice-president joe biden was here to back lamb. and he's got a slew of workers, pennsylvania afl-cio largest federation of labor unions in the state and this may very well test the organization of workers and the democrat held the state for decades and as you mentioned, he won this district by nearly 20 points and the question is if lamb does pull off a victory, it may very well be seen as a large upset. eboni, back to you. eboni: thank you, molly. quick question though question for you. do we know what the polling has for democrat and republican going toe to toe for this? >> got a little bit of an audio
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issue. the democrats outnumber republicans by a pretty significant margin, by about 70,000 as far as voter registration is concerned, but this race is considered a tossup right now. the real clear politics average, it's a tossup race so it's considered neck and neck and really down to the wire. it's hard to predict because you never know who is going to show up on special election day. eboni: thank you molly. leland: and heard everywhere on the worldwide web, quite a juxtaposition, the president has got to head back there to try to save a race that's neck and neck, what happened? >> i'm livid that we even have to have the conversation about a special election. leland: you seem quite jovial, if you're truly livid, i will add. i like the disposition of a livid chris. [laughter] >> i'm-- well, i've gotten over it and
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saying it now figuratively speaking now, i guess. i just can't believe we're here. we shouldn't be here, but you've got a dopey congressman named tim murphy, a pro-life guy who got caught counselling his girlfriend to have an abortion. and because that dope lost the seat and poor rick saccone is going to come in trying to win a district, by the way i should mention, here is another fun fact. the pennsylvania supreme court has just redrawn our congressional map. so, in theory, both of these men, whoever wins this thing tuesday, are going to hold this seat for all of maybe a few months, and then by november, lamb, should he win, he's not even into the district anymore, leland. it's an absolute nightmare what's going on with this seat. it should never be this way. leland: and people from outside our country look at american politics and don't understand it. i can't imagine why. we should note the video we had up earlier, neither of those people were tim murphy who you called a dope and said is to
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blame. for all of this though, the democrats seem to be casting this as a referendum on president trump in this district. is that fair or do we need to dig deeper? >> well, no, i mean, tim, again that guy murphy, he didn't run opposed the last time. he's run away with it, as molly said in her report, time and again, republican, even though this is a-- molly did mention a majority democrat district. these are working class democrats who did turn out for trump. so, what he did this week in terms of the tariffs for steel, saccone actually happens to be an expert in north korean affairs, as well as intermediatation with north korea. so, i think that those two things just la this last week, plus the trump visit today should be a real boost for saccone, but it's going to be tight. leland: molly brought up the issue of organized labor and especially when it comes to the steel workers union and some of the other big unions out there. that at times have really
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praised president trump. organized labor didn't typically run with the republicans. how does that play in there in this district? >> well, that's why this week was so key, frankly. you know, i'm not nuts about the tariffs, frankly, but for pennsylvania-- >> you have to think the timing is both, either coincidental or really convenient. >> yeah, you had some good old-fashioned burly men in there, did you see at that signing ceremony, guys with hard hats and the vests that came from steel country, pennsylvanians. there was some imagery there. i don't know if it was for the special election for tuesday, i think that trump really mines what he signed, but it goes a long way to help saccone tuesday for sure. leland: did they turn any of that tape around? is any of that tape from the tariff signing being used in ads and mailers, online yet? >> oh, sure. the republican committee is dumping a ton of money in pennsylvania to let this district know. but again, i should remind you, we have a very activist, fairly
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newly minted democrat supreme court in pennsylvania that's drawn a new map that's going to cut-- should lamb win, itle cut lamb out and saccone will have to run against another democrat in another district because of judicial activism. it's a hot mess, leland, that didn't need to happen. were it not for that dope tim murphy. i'll just say that again. leland: your words, not ours. next time we have you on, we'll catch up with you ahead of time to figure out who you're going to call a dope so we can have a picture of him. [laughter] e. eboni: i appreciate it, good to be with you. >> i'll let you know next time, leland. leland: thank you, and just like chris there will be a lot of people watching president trump's rally tonight and he will have a lot to say, as you can imagine, not only talking about the tariffs, about north korea, and obviously about this special election in pennsylvania. 7 p.m. eastern tonight right here on the fox news channel. our coverage doesn't stop until the president leaves.
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>> on capitol hill, immigration reform and for daca has hit a stand still. after saying daca fix had to be in the budget, now nancy pelosi says that daca should be a stand alone issue. here to weigh in is congressman andy biggs. >> thanks, eboni, for being with you. eboni: yesterday, a maryland federal judge says that president trump scrapping of the
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daca is within his congressional power, but we know that that federal judge ruling is in contradiction with other things coming out of other circuits and different districts from the federal court level. if this ping-pong between the different districts at the federal judiciary keeps going. is this an opportunity for yourself, and your colleagues in congress to beat the judiciary on solving this daca issue? can you all in congress figure this thing out? >> it seems that the courts have got this very tangled. >> they're not the only ones that have it tangled and the court's going to-- the u.s. supreme court. the 9th district is opposite the maryland judge. the problem congress is two fold. number one, we've never done what we promised to do, fund and build the wall, that's a problem. the other part is, nobody seems to be able to define daca. and that's what i find intriguing. you ask people, they all have
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different opinions. every bill that's out there, and there's eight to ten of them floating around, none of them define daca the same way. there's only one that talks about it in the way, in the terms of president obama issued the order. if you can't find that, you're a long way off. eboni: it's hard to fix it. let me ask you this, would you be opposed. first, defining daca would be a way to figure out a solution for it and what should it look like if there's payment for the wall and the other various things that need to be addressed. would you support a stand alone daca bill that lays that out plain and clean? >> i don't like to get into hypotheticals, but i campaigned opposing daca extension, so, i've fought that all along, saying that because right now it's so emotional on the daca and the daca itself does not fix the immigration issues, because you pointed out, there's a host
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of other things that need to happen. so, when we get to this other issue, you've got to build the wall, you've got border security, you've got to end the incentives to come here and amnesty-- >> you don't sound so optimistic about you and your colleagues' ability to get to solutions there. let's cut to the chase, congressman, are we going to have to wait on the supreme court to fix or an address this issue? >> well, yes and no. i think post--- i think this is being used as a wedge issue. i think post 2018 election that's when you'll see people buckle down. i don't think that we're going to get it done until after the mid term. eboni: is that a race to the bottom on effectiveness, i hear what you're saying and accept it as fact the, waiting until after the mid term election or the supreme court addressing it whichever comes first? >> i don't know if i would say it's a race to the bottom, but what needs to happen did i understand. eboni: it's not a race to the
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top on solving the issue of race reform, the signature issue of our president? >> when he talked about immigration reform, he's talking about a host of things including-- >> sure. >> daca, don't forget, he campaigned and said no daca, no daca extension. >>, but we know the president has walked that back himself, right? >> yes, he has, but there's also been a different peg of numbers. so, i mean, you could have the obama proclamation, which is 800,000 less, 110,000 that come off. you could add additional million that people are speculating that every applied for daca. and then when you talk with the daca students, which is what i've done lots of times, you'll find out that they really want parents and siblings, now you're talking additional two to four million and you've lifted from 800,000 to probably about anywhere from four to six million people there. eboni: i don't disagree with you, congressman, the numbers add up and thanks for joining us
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from arizona. >> thanks, eboni. leland: a former russian spy and his daughter in critical condition. why the british military is now being brought in. my mom's pain from moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis was intense. i wondered if she could do the stuff she does for us which is kinda, a lot. and if that pain could mean something worse. joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop further damage enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections,
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the kremlin, for what it's worth, say they weren't involved in the case that left the pair fighting for their lives after being exposed to a rare nerve agent. ryan is live in our london bureau with more this saturday. hi, ryan. >> hi. the u.k.'s top law enforcement officials just finished a meeting with a number of government officials here in london. the defense secretary was there, a very large number of members of the intelligence community, and they were all, of course, discussing the investigation and where we are with it. meanwhile, about 90 miles to the southwest of london in salisbury, where this nerve agent attack took place, there was a very large number of troops in the cemetery where the spy's wife and son are buried, and you could see those troops throughout the day removing a lot of items, including flowers from their graves. now, the reason for that is the supposition is that the spy and his daughter, who were targeted
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in this attack, may have gone there without realizing it and contaminated the scene with the nerve agent before they succumbed to it. there have been troops, in hazmat uniforms, at the spy's house and the supposition is that they may have been poison at their house or at his house, possibly something that he ate laced with a nerve agent or a gift from his daughter, just arrived from moscow, may have brought with her. this is supposition at this point. today we also got some background on the spy himself from the times newspaper, and they are reporting that he had monthly meetings with a handler from mi-6. that, you would think, would give some credence to the idea that even though he came to the u.k. in 2010 as part of a spy swap, he was, in fact, still
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active. though you have to saw it's common practice for handlers who meet with their agents. and it's a mystery even though it took place six days to go. leland: a lot more on this and the russian denial in the next hour. eboni. eboni: when we come back, for fallout from ice raids in oakland as attorney general jeff sessions sues california. and getting ready for an appearance tonight ahead of the special election. . .
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leland: so much news the first hour, some breaking from president trump, we decided to do another hour for you, i'm leland vittert, good to be with you. eboni: i'm eboni williams. here is what's making news right now. president trump praises china for its help to dealing with north korea as he prepares for unprecedented face to face talk with kim jong un. we are live at the white house. leland: breakdown the legal battle brewing between california and attorney general jeff sessions, can the golden state keep protecting illegal immigrants? eboni: and we are live at veterans home shooting in california, new details that we are learning about a possible motive. after announcing a meeting with
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north korean leader kim jong un president trump will shift his focus to southwest pennsylvania tonight. that's where he's expected to hold a campaign rally for republican congressional candidate, ellison barber is at the white house with much more, ellison. >> hi, eboni, president trump is set to leave the white house in a few hours. the trump campaign says that they expect about 6,000 people to attend that event in pennsylvania, it's been incredibly busy week here at the white house, on thursday the president signed new steel and aluminum tariffs and the same day south korean officials announced that president trump agreed to meet north korean leader kim jong un by may on friday, the white house seem today lay out preconditions for the meeting. >> i told president trump that in our meeting, north korean leader kim jong un, that he's committed to denuclearization. >> they have to follow through on the promises that they make
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and we want to see concrete and verifiable action on that front. >> when it comes to tariffs, tariffs on steel and aluminum are important vital in his words for national security. he signed those thursday, they take 15 days to go into effect. it'll be a 25% tariff on steel imports, 10% on aluminum. >> the strong steel and aluminum industry have vital to national security, absolutely vital. steel is steel, you don't have steel, you don't have a country. >> trump's top economic adviser gary cohn resigned this week reportedly resignation was in part due to tariffs, it's something that he reportedly did not like or agreed with, leaders with the european union say that if the u.s. actually does go through with these tariffs and they do go into effect they will impose countertariffs on u.s. goods, the european union's trade commissioner says that she's meeting with u.s. officials today and tweeted a
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while ago that she wants to see exclusion for european union leaders and she says they plan to continue meeting and discussing it with u.s. officials next week, eboni. >> thank you, ellison, leland. leland: we bring panel, josh, communications director at priority's usa. nice to see you both. josh, we will begin with you, i looked at your twitter account earlier at josh and this is a pin tweet, it's always at the top, today has not been good day for the administration, but you think back on this week, kim jong un says he's going to sit down and talk about denuclearization, nasdaq hits record high with huge job's numbers, dow is on its way back up 400 points, show this not a good day for a good week for the president? >> this week has been pretty crazy even in the context of every week that donald trump has --
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>> leland: is crazy bad? >> the tariffs that he initiated have caused not arguments but disagreements but allies in the world, with a lot of republicans and democrats here at home and the north korea meeting. might end up being a good thing and might end up being a disaster, we don't know. this all comes to context of robert mueller investigation and staff leaving the white house. leland: we have been hearing that for a long time. >> absolutely. leland: i haven't figured out how this was a good day per your tweet. >> it's funny because i read josh's same tweet, when did he actually pin this and i realize it's a pin tweet and been there for a while. it's been a good week for the president. we don't know how things are going to turn out but that's always the case. the reality is we have movement in north korea because even dictators like kim realize preservation is important.
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look, this is a chase game with these guys and we finally have a president that says check mate. we don't know what the outcome is going to be but there's movement. leland: i don't know that the north koreans feel that they have been checkmated. either way republicans deserve a chance on this, toughest critics are saying, hey, look, even sitting down and talking is worthy of at least seeing how it turns out, take a listen. >> president trump can truly solve the problem that would be going down as a great president and there's no way around that. >> all of the liberals who are hating on this, a, obama, remember him pro posed the exact same thing in 2008 and they loved it. >> come on, josh, you can agree that hillary clinton was president and kim jong un is sitting to meet with her, you would have been saying greatest
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diplomat. >> i will be the same thing right now, we know that kim jong un or the combhort -- north korean administration has been trying to get a meeting and if we get denuclearization that's massive accomplishment but we don't know that's going to happen. we can't say it's a success right now. leland: fair point. how much of a risk is for president trump, the kim family has promised denuclearization at least three times. lied every american president. if they promise it again and they don't deliver, how big of a black mark will that be on president trump's legacy? >> well, i don't think the president is taking them at their word, he's saying we will keep conversations going and keep pushing hard. >> the same thing that the bush administration, the same thing that the obama administration said frankly. >> it's not exactly what they did. they did not increase sanctions against north korea the way the
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trump administration has. they did not get china pull intoed this the way they have now and they are pushing very hard. right now kim is making tall concessions, we've made absolutely zero. he's not going to take the foot off the pedal on this, the question is what will they do, nobody, including the president believes what they've said until we actually go in there and they show us what they are going to do, so we are not going to take anybody's word for it, certainly not north korea's. leland: i think it was trust but verify from the reagan administration, we will bring that back, it sounds like, josh and genove. when you feel president trump has a good day, let us know. >> ly do that. leland: we will watch your twitter account. eboni: jeff sessions has vow today push back after mayor after she warned illegal immigrants about pending ice raid. speaking with tucker carlson, ag sessions called immigration laws
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radical. >> i think these people have just been able to get away with it and not being challenged, not being challenged intellectually as to the meaning of what they're doing and how radical it is and how unacceptable and how it place it is lives of american police officers and ice officers at greater risk as well as our communities at greater risk because we keep criminals in the country that are due to be deported. >> joining house former doj prosecutor, counselor, we hear the ag saying that the california laws are radical, that they are -- i want to talk with you about whether or not they are illegal, now you spent 17 years at the doj and in that time i am certain that you saw a lot of battles of states' rights laws and federal jurisdiction laws. i want you to help us lay out for us where it becomes wholly appropriate for the doj and federal jurisdiction to step in and take action around these really precious held state right
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that is we hold true in america. >> plenty of people at doj that believe in state rights, the issue here is that they're stepping in an area where there's federal supremacy, when immigration is an issue, an area that's exclusively the domain of the federal government. the state of california is phrasing in terms of ways of saving state resources, that they don't want to use state resources to ayes is the feds, but the reality is they are obstructing or attempting to obstruct federal enforcement actions through statutes. eboni, i'm glad that you brought up resources, that's a question that many people are asking, as you say immigration has historically been a federal jurisdiction issue, why not have the federal government put more of its resources so that they are not beholding on state actors on behalf of legislation? >> what you have to remember that part of what we are talking
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about resources is letting federal agents have access to jail records so they know when people are going to be subject to deportation. eboni: certainly for those that have practiced in the criminal space. there seems to be a miscommunication or something, like you said, sometimes it's more nefarious than that, defiance on the part of local or state law enforcement agencies, times the sheriff's offices where they are refusing to cooperate with federal agencies. so how about bypassing that? >> well, the difficulty is really figuring out what cooperation means in a very tangible concrete way. i think there's an image that state law enforcement is being asked to join task forces to take enforcement actions when really we are talking about very, i think, very deminimous reporting and letting know that this person's sentence is about to be done and ready for
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deportation and to make assumption for each direction you have to caveat deployment no matter what. eboni: sure, and again, if it's about protecting hard-working americans that should not ever be subject to the type of violence and threat that we know has happened because to have actions of some of these illegal immigrants, right, the kate steinle case is often cited as an example of that, i'm simply asking, counselor, what about, even if the resource that is you're describing simply bypassing it, let's presume that some of the local or state actors have political agenda and let's assume that some of them for better or worse no matter how low the lift is, so to speak, they are not inform some people are up for parole or will not cooperate. what about the feds at that point taking them out of equation so they have the information for themselves. >> there may be technology base ways to do that essentially, the problem with california statute or at least one of them is actually directing private actors to not cooperate in any
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way with federal authorities. then you get to a point where it's not supremacy clause but free speech issues which may or may not share political views as the leadership. eboni: i'm glad that you brought up supremacy laws. just a quick moment about how that fits in state rights and federal rights. >> it's going to be the big touch stone of litigation. supremacy clause basically says if there's direct conflict between federal and state law the feds win. in this instance the state has tried to draft it in a way where they say it's not really a direct conflict and that's what's going to be resolved fbi court soon. eboni: i have to tell you for you to be the litigator that you are and have the tame -- name trusty, i would say you lucked out on that one. [laughter] leland: as we are learning more
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about the veteran who killed three people dedicated from curing him from ptsd, police before storming in yesterday and killing three. he died as well. how we don't know, adam housely on the scene in california, adam, sad day as the sun comes up there. what do we know and what questions are there still out there? >> well, leland, we know he did serve time at least at this facility, behind me, pathway homes, small town in the middle of napa valley. it's been here more than a hundred years, we focused about a year ago, it was in the building -- sorry, four years ago in the building behind me. it's a private program, that man, that shooter had been a part of the program, we don't believe he finished it. he came back at 10:30 in the morning and opened fire. that's when standoff began, we
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were told early on there were no sounds coming from the inside for hours, basically after the initial shooting there was no connection whatsoever with the individual inside once they finally did get inside, eight hours later they found the body of him and three victims, jennifer, 42 year's old, clinical director by nearby, kristin director from napa and jennifer gonzález, 29 year's old, clinical psychologist, we worked with jennifer and kristin, spoke with them a couple of months ago as they tried to have us come back and do follow-up story to original story four years ago but the program had been incredibly successful taking some of the most high-risk ptsd patients in the country, nearly 500 of them and really integrating them back in society with the help of community here. donald trump, the president did reply to what happened via twitter putting out a statement, we are deeply saddened by the tragic situation and mourn the loss of three incredible women
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who cared for veterans. i can tell you, leland, this is my hometown, some of the officers volunteered for this program, it's very well known in the valley, they had done an incredible job and unfortunately yesterday the horrific tragedy and it's going to be a long before this area will be able to overcome it. so many men, the female program had come through the program and saved their lives. >> as you point out, women like this, people like this who dedicate themselves to veterans are hard to find, to say the at least and so successful as well. 100% cure rate. a lot of the veterans that were treated there had been given up by the va, they came to this facility and as you reported on, were successfully treated there. what's the future of it? are they going to try to move forward or is it too early to tell? >> i think it's too early to tell. i mean, this is a gun-free zone, they weren't supposed to be any weapons here. that now has to come into play if it does go forward with
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security. they weren't 100% a success. they only lost a couple of men in years they've been around which is incredibly, if you look at programs 70% considered to be great, this one had really been looked at by other number of communities, thank you for the service, all after we done report, so many people involved, it was basically a community-type event to bring men back into society and help them integrate into everything and help them with ptsd and i'm getting tweets from people in the area, keep it going and in memory find a way to keep it going. at this point, leland, we just don't know what the future is. right now about supporting the three families and the people who knew the women and we contacted them, they saw us here doing a different story a few months ago and they were so incredibly energetic about this program. leland. leland: as you point out it's now up to all of us to honor their memory. adam housely, yountville
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california, thanks. eboni: coming up we will take a closer look at north korea's long history of breaking promises over nuclear program. few americans who actually negotiated with them. former u.s. ambassador to the un phil richardson. plus the race to find deadly poison on russian spy who crossed vladimir putin before it sickens more people in england. as millions of people struggle to get back to normal after back to back nor'easter, could a third major storm be on the way? adam is checking for us at the fox extreme weather center. adam, how does it looking? >> a system firing up at this moment and could affect the southeast, that will run off the coast and run north. i amtraking it when we come back after the break
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>> sunny weather is helping out residents as they clean up after a massive nor'easter dumped snow and ice across the northeast. utility crews are clearing down trees and power lines and restoring electricity to hundreds of thousands of customers. but now residents are bracing for another possible storm that could roll through the east coast early next week.
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leland: adam klotz in the weather extreme center, adam, three and three weeks? >> it's absolutely insane, the last one we are still indecision, i'm going to show you how that plays off, maybe far enough the coast that the damage might be minor. here is the set-up, warm weather in bottom tier of the country, likely severe weather later today in lower mississippi valley, that eventually runs off the coast and impact it is west or the east coast tier as we get early into next week. here is your set-up on satellite, portions of north georgia back towards new orleans, areas where we could see severe weather later tornado, tornadic activity, all possible with the system once it powers in the heat of the day, all the energy that will move off the coast as it moves that direction dropping a whole lot of rain, plenty of spots getting up to 4 to 5-inches, but once it
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makes that move and you're looking at it there, it pushes off the coast, begins to run up the coast and that's when we could start to see the weather climbing up the coastal regions and once it does that, we are talking about a time frame of getting into monday and tuesday and run it for you here again. running back up the mid atlantic, towards new york, that's going to be something to talk about, tuesday morning, maybe far enough away that we get light snow but winter weather from the system there, leland. leland: obviously a lot to watch over the coming days, adam klotz doing that for us as we does all weekend. eboni. eboni: still ahead president trump making major strides in u.s.-north korea diplomacy. what the meeting means for future relations? and the u.s. and north korea have a history of diplomatic false starts, how this position ranks with past attempts. >> north korean has a regime
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leland: welcome back, skepticism in the air this weekend and feeling of dejavu and perhaps optimism, the hope that this time things will be different when it comes to north korea. dare to hope they say, jillian turner with both the risks of sitting down with kim jong un and perhaps some of the opportunities, hi, jillian. >> good to see you, president trump is asking tweeting the deal with north korea is very much in the making and completing a very good one in the world, time and place to be
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determined but agree to go talk is the very first step in what is guarantied to be a long and risky process. senior officials are already focused on reducing those risks by demanding concessions from pyongyang before president trump even sits down at the negotiating table. >> they've promise today denuclearize, they've promise today stop nuclear and missile testing and they recognized that we are going to continue in our military exercises. >> now, when the president does come facebook.com/booktv with kim jong un, their discussions will face and be with terrific, one risk by lawmaker is dislike of president trump and un have for each other and unpredictable natures. >> the the unpredictability and volatility of the two leaders is one of the risk that is is entailed here. >> south korea and japan have privately expressed the concern that president trump will concede too much and if the u.s.
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failed to get anything major in return the meeting could be viewed as propaganda victory for north korea. >> the other thing that might be happening is he's luring us into these negotiations but then he will make demands that he knows we can never agree to. >> this is what happened in 2000 when secretary of state met with kim jong un's father and the clinton administration was criticized for not accepting major concessions from the north. last major risk is, of course, failure and should the talks collapse some lawmakers fear that the u.s. will be left with really one good option. >> if you break off talks with no concessions and no move towards denuclearization, i fear the only option after that is a military option. >> the only thing that's really certain now is that the entire world will be watching. leland: they are. we had a congressman earlier in foreign relations committee, has the white house given you any idea of what the preconditions might be, what they are looking of concessions, he said no,
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hadn't been briefed, your sources give you any idea of what they are thinking about? >> so far that they want to see concrete actions, no word on what -- leland: concrete can mean a whole lot of things as we have found out. gillian, great reporting. eboni has more on this. eboni: absolutely, here to discuss former new mexico governor bill richardson who also served as u.s. ambassador to the un, governor, thanks for being with us. >> thank you, eboni. eboni: we heard lots of talk about the risks, we all know the same high risks, high reward, that seems to be president trump's perspective is is starting at the top, no real low-level talks at play, but you know governor know better than most what president trump is really dealing with, what he's talking into, i want your take on the risks soarnlted here. >> well, there are risks but at the same time i believe the president made the right decision. it's a huge gamble, however,
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things in the korean peninsula wouldn't be worst, there's tension, there's been missiles, there have been nuclear tests, there's been huge threats, so i think the president was right to accept the invitation. i think some concessions have been made on both sides, the concession we made is accepting the meeting, the north koreans have said they are going to have no missile, no nuclear tests, keep the exercises, the united states and south korea are doing up to the meeting, but the meeting is two months away. my worry, eboni, is that we don't have our act together. now, you know, hopefully the president will assemble his team, develop a negotiating strategy, a coherent strategy but he can't do it alone, this is not a reality tv show. but i commend him for -- eboni: i want to ask you about the team. so specifically i'm interested in your take on rex tillerson and where secretary of state fits into all of this because
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certainly just speaking from ethiopia on friday would be their time, secretary of state tillerson said we are a long way from these talks with north korea. then pretty much 24 hours later the president informs us as something different. does that look to you that the secretary of state and the president are not lock step and if so, is that a problem or is that kind of reading too far into it and, indeed, they could be more -- there could be more cohesion than it appears? >> well, that's a very good question, eboni, my take is that they are on the same page but the president didn't inform the secretary of state of these very rapid developments, secretary of state was doing some good work in africa that is necessary but the developments move so fast, you saw the president go into the press room breath-taking announcement to come, this move very suddenly, but there are
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mixed messages that the administration sends. so i am of the view that they have to develop a cohesive team and a cohesive strategy to let that team prepare the president, brief him, president should kind of stay silent for now which is going to be very difficult. eboni: no tweets about this meeting. >> no, no, no tweets, no tweets. eboni: let me ask you this, we heard the white house press secretary talking about concrete and verifiable action from north korea as a requirement for this meeting to even take place, from your experience dealing with them as you have, what do those actions look like, what could we conceivably be talking about that would be concrete and actionable? >> well, you know, the white house pushed back on what the press secretary said and mentioned the two concessions that the north koreans said they would make, in other words, no disruption of the military
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exercises between u.s. and korea and they would not do nuclear tests. if we say to the north koreans, you have to dismantle nuclear weapons before the meeting, that's not going to happen. i think the objective should be to develop a strategy but keep this meeting on. it might yield benefits, you know, there's a risk, you know, i also heard that they don't like each other, well, you know, we don't know that, they don't know each other, nobody knows kim jong un. maybe he can be a charm to do some good things but to say that he's going to denuclearize before the meeting, get inspections before the meeting, just do the meeting but the president needs to be really well prepared with the strategy and kim jong un is not going to be easy, you know, he's tough. he's somebody that has an agenda. eboni: certainly, but certainly as you say, governor, diplomacy has to start somewhere and you better than most having dealt
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with him directly. thank you, governor. leland. >> thank you. leland: all right, a little bit more on the history here and the kim full-time, we bring in dr. carrie cowr -- courier at tcu. >> thanks for having me. leland: we will bret to brackets later. first kim jong un, so many risks with president trump meeting him face to face, is there a value in the korean way of doing business especially with the north koreans of kim jong un looking president trump in the face and president trump explaining to him in no uncertain terms the risk of not denuclearizing specially the threat of the u.s. military? >> i mean, i think it's good that they would have a face to face meeting but i think we also have to be cautious about how it could be used from the north korean perspective and propaganda sense and having been asking for for a long time. leland: interesting you bring
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that up. this is a huge pr coup for the north koreans. they've got a bureau and some folks there, and they say that the state tv and state newspapers aren't playing this at all, they are not putting this in the papers, they are not playing at pr coup. >> well, i think it's too early to see. one of the things that your earlier guest mentioned, we fully expected ways to be used for propaganda and only in the aftermath you see full effects of it. leland: but still, this is a huge coup if president trump agree to go sit down with kim jong un, wouldn't they want to play that up immediately? >> but i think it would depend on how they expected to go, maybe not even knowing that trump could take the meeting and we are not quite sure that the meeting will actually occur, the timetable is pretty quick and usually they take tremendous amount of time to prepare for. leland: usually they do as we
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have learned in the past 18 months in washington, conventional wisdom can be thrown out the window. this isn't the first time we have been down this road before with north koreans dating back all the way to 1994 when they actually did agree to denuclearize and this is what president clinton had to say. >> north korea will freeze and dismantle nuclear programs. south korea and our other allies will be better protected. leland: okay, and good deeds did not follow good words, they cheated, lied time and time again, you lose count after -- after a while from the north korean's cheating. how do you then enforce this deal if there even is one? >> it would be difficult to enforce. whether or not the deal gets made at all is really under question and in the past as we have seen both of the failures, the agreed fame work in 1994 and the failure of the six-party talks, even an agreement in place doesn't necessarily mean that it'll be upheld.
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leland: yeah, seems like the kim family is happy to agree with anything if they get something and happy to renege or cheat. i guess we will end on this, go horn frogs, first chance since 1998. i know you and the students will be excited. >> go frogs. leland: i was waiting for that but i won't join you, nice to see you, ma'am. thank you. >> nice to see you as well. eboni: president trump tweeting about his visit to pennsylvania, quote, heading to moontown, pennsylvania, big and happy crowd, why not, some of the best economic numbers ever, rick will help me a lot, also tough on crime and border, loves to second amendment and vets, we will bring you full coverage of event tonight and the rest of the afternoon and coming up sending cell phone signals from above, how airborne tower is giving first responders a
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a trip back to the dthe doctor's office, mean just for a shot. but why go back there, when you can stay home with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. neulasta helps reduce infection risk by boosting your white blood cell count, which strengthens your immune system. in a key study, neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. applied the day of chemo, neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the next day. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to neulasta or neupogen (filgrastim). ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries, and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache.
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so why go back there? if you'd rather be home, ask your doctor about neulasta onpro. eboni: british military now being call today investigate the mysterious poisoning of a former russian spy and his daughter with the deadly nerve agent. british authorities haven't determined where the poison came from, here with more insight now gardner with the heritage foundation. neil, so much we don't know. can you tell us a bit, do we even know what the nerve agent is and how it got there? >> well, this is a subject to very broad investigation by the british police so we don't know the exact description of the substance in this case, but there is intens speculation, of course, that this act of basically state terrorism carried out by the russian
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government, they are the chief suspects in this, they have a long track record of eliminating political former spies and so by all accounts highly likely to be murder carried by the russian state. eboni: so far russia completely denying any involvement but why in the world would we believe them from a global standpoint? >> absolutely no reason to believe the russians whatsoever and we are dealing with absolutely murderist regime in moscow by vladimir putin, this is a regime that's carrying out acts of murder on british soil, there's also, of course, a police officer, a british police officer who has been injured as a result of his exposure to nerve agent and without a doubt, this is a direct attack on britain as well, it's not just an act against a specific former russian spy, this is an act of violence against great britain as well. eboni: let's ask this, if, indeed, it's found out through
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this investigation which as you say is very much on going, if it's found out that this was russia, certainly these are their actions, what then can be done by way of punishing them or holding them account for these horrific actions? >> yes, in fact, the british government is discussing possible means of retaliation against the russians. there's a wide range of options that britain has, of course, you could see the expulsion of further russian diplomats from london, you could see the strengthening of sanctions against russia, you could see action taken against, for example, the large number of oligarchs that are living in united kingdom and many close the vladimir putin and the russians have a lot of money invested in great britain. action to be taken directly close to those vladimir putin, also i think you are going see potentially a big build of british military power in the baltic states in order to head off the growing russian threat
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in eastern europe. the whole range of measures here, we simply cannot let the russians get away with this act of aggression here, the russians must be held to account. eboni: i would say from a global standpoint, neil, it does appear as vladimir putin and this entire regime has been getting away with it, we know at this point that they've meddled in our elections and others, this type of horrific thing here with this horrible substance that they are determining what it is, he seems to be going completely rogue, what is the control from a global standpoint of reining him in these actions in? >> i think what we have seen in the uk in the last few days is further confirmation that vladimir putin simply cannot be trusted, he's adversary, a very deadly adversary and the united states, great britain and nato allies must stand up to russians. we cannot allow to russians to carry this kind of action but also we must deter any kind of
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potential russian threat to nato territory in baltic states against poland. >> looks like the action is escalating. >> vladimir putin clearly sees brexit britain as threat to russia and so the russians are becoming more and more aggressive against great britain, of course, britain is leaving the european union in a year from now and once the britains leave eu, it would be a very powerful adversary for the russians in europe. certainly vladimir putin fears that. eboni: certainly, we will have to leave it there but much more on that in -- investigation, leland. leland: president trump will rally voters tonight ahead of a special congressional election, live coverage throughout the day and when the president takes the stage, plus, flying cell phone towers, new technology can keep you and your family and first
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responders connected after disasters. ♪ here's the story of green mountain coffee roasters sumatra reserve told in the time it takes to brew your cup. let's go to sumatra. where's sumatra? good question. this is win. and that's win's goat, adi. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. making the coffee erupt with flavor. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. that erupts with even more flavor. which helps provide for win's family. and adi the goat's family too. because his kids eat a lot. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. packed with goodness. you tthey made a mistake.ompany the check they sent isn't enough to replace your totaled new car. the guy says they didn't make the mistake. you made the mistake. i beg your pardon? he says, you should have chosen full-car replacement. excuse me? let me be frank, he says: you picked the wrong insurance plan. 'no. i picked the wrong insurance company.' with liberty mutual new car replacement™,
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responders rely heavily on cellular data networks and as we learned in back to back to back hurricanes last year, that is often a losing proposition. bryan llenas joining us now with new technology that can bring cell service back online but this time from the sky, high bryan. >> hi, leland, last year during hurricanes harvey, irma and maria cellular providers found out that repairing towers turned difficult because of flooded roads and influence, well, now verizon wireless has partnerde to develop a drone to develop service in immediate aftermath of storm. 17-foot long drone can fly 15,000 feet, carries 4glt equipment and once in the air acts like flying cell tower providing service up to 40-mile range. >> the worst thing is when you pick up your cell phone and you
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have no coverage. for us to be able to use this technology to save lives is everything. that's kind of what we are in this for but when you is the general public who are looking for any sign of life, if we could provide that they could make a quick phone call. >> we were there as they tested the drone in new jersey, it's design today provide enough signal for calls, 39 first responders were able to connect to one drone simultaneously. they expect in the next year or two to be flying routinely after natural disasters, 2017 was the costly west weather disaster in u.s. history according to national oceanic atmospheric administration and '18 expected to be intense for emergency responders as well. >> this is another tool on our tool box and seems to be wave of the future whether it be for communication testing or for damage assessment or situation
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reports after a major storm. it's going to be a big tool that emergency management is going to be able to use nationwide. >> now, the biggest hurdle for this technology is regulatory, they are awaiting for more permission and guidelines from the faa allowing them to fly right after a storm. leland. leland: yeah, especially considering often times after storm, you know, bryan, you helicopters in the air trying to rescue people. a lot going on. great story, fascinating, thanks a lot. we will see you soon, buddy. >> of course. eboni: still ahead, theylight savings time is here again, we will tell you exactly when those clocks will move spring forward.
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leland: all right, eboni, here is your official reminder that you spring forward tonight, 2:00 a.m. becomes 3:00 a.m. so you lose an hour of sleep but i was thinking about how to look at this in a positive way, i'm trying this new thing of my life rather than complaining, and it means, i think, if i have this figure right, in the morning when you get global market action overnight to run it'll be warmer when the sun is up, the sun would have been up for longer. took me a while to get there, i would be remiss, the fire department says now it's time to check smoke detectors,
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batteries. fair reminder. eboni: more sunshine in the day. legal legal we are here for all of your positive news after the past two hours, more news positive and otherwise from new york, we will see you tomorrow. kelly: breaking news, new details today on the highly anticipated talks between president trump and north korea's leader kim jong un. the white house announcing that rogue regime must take, quote, concrete and veriable steps to show its commitment to the nuclearize before president trump attends the face to face meeting with kim. hello, everyone, welcome to a new hour inside america's news headquarters and i'm kelly wright. >> and i'm julie banderas, the historic meeting to take place in the next few months should north korea take steps outlined by the white house, tweeting, and i'm quoting, the deal with north korea is very much in the making and will be
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