tv Happening Now FOX News April 30, 2018 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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network. we didn't go to the white house corr responsible -- correspondent's dinner. >> no regrets. >> "happening now" starts now. >> jon: a caravan of migrants looking at an uncertain fate. good monday morning to you. i'm jon scott. >> and i'm julie banderas. members of the caravan forced to wait in mexico after a majority of the group is turned away by u.s. border officials. the officials say they don't have enough room at the san diego crossing to process the migrants. >> they're coming to the ports of entry and say i want to claim
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asylum. the port has the right and say okay, we can process only so many people per day. so they can turn them away and say we'll come back at a later date. if somebody comes to the port and says i'm here for admittance, i'm legal, i can come in, then you have to take them into custody and you have to process them. >> jon: what a situation. william la jeunesse is in california with more on this developing story. william? >> jon, the first step in the asylum process means you have to get in front of a hearing officer. to do that, you have to be admitted to the united states. for the 200 immigrants, that didn't happen yesterday. as events unfolded, it appears the caravan after two days of legal seminars would get their chance where they would ask for protecti
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protection claiming violence and persecution. it would all start outside san diego with hundreds of supporters. lawyers say the u.s. is legally required to hear each claim, even if it's not granted, the individual has to make an argument in front of an immigration judge. >> if they can send the national guard to handle the asylum seekers, that's a question of their priorities. >> as the group marches towards the border, the port of entry was at capacity. they couldn't accept them but for a handful of women, young children and several trans-gender individuals. the caravan invited publicity but did not appreciate the a criticism of the president. so what does the u.s. want?
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they don't want to appear to basically cave in to this group because they would encourage additional caravans to leave central america and perpetuate this problem. what could happen, lawyers for the group could file a claim in u.s. district court. the u.s. will let them trickle in, handle them like they did haitians a few dozen at a time maybe per day but letting them in. but that will leave the image of several hundred individuals camped out or sleeping next to the border fence in mexico. vice president pence expected to be here to look at the new border fence going in. >> jon: thanks, william. >> white house reaction now to the caravan of migrants at our southern border the president trump blasting u.s. immigration laws, calling them the dumbest anywhere on earth. john roberts is live with more.
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hi, john. >> julie, good morning. the president has been talking about this, complaining about it for a couple weeks now. the caravan is a classic example of how migrants take advantage of u.s. immigration law and how u.s. immigration law encourages things like this to happen. the president making that point again in washington, michigan over the weekend. listen here. >> are you watching that mess that is going on right know with the caravan coming up? are you watching this? our laws are so weak, so pathetic given to us by democrats. they're so pathetic. we have the worst laws anywhere in the world. we don't have borders. we're going to build the wall. we're getting it. we already started. i don't know if you have seen. >> the department of homeland security is replacing some
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fencing. none of the prototypes for wall designs that you see here. appropriations for border security prohibit using any of those designs in current border protection measures. in michigan the president said it's his goal to end illegal immigration but will leave a door open for legal transit. listen to the president here. >> we're going to let your guest workers come in because we're going to have strong borders. we have to have your workers come in. the unemployment picture is so good, so strong that we have to let people come in. they're going to be guest workers, going to come in, wok on your farms. we're going to have a lot of things happening. but then they have to go out. >> the president starting off this week with more optimism about his planned summit with north korean leader kim jong-un. the president tweeting this morning and taking a swipe at
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the "new york times." headline, kim prepared to concede nuclear weapons if the u.s. plans not to attack. and john bolton making it clear yesterday if kim wants assurances from the united states at a peace agreement with south korea, he has to give up his nuclear program. >> i think that's what denuclearization means. we have very much in mind the libya model from 2003-04. there's differences. the libyan program was much smaller. but that was basically the agreement that we made. so we'll want to test north korea in this first meeting for evidence that they have made that strategic decision. and we have history to give us some assistance on it. >> the location for that meeting is still in question. places like singapore, sweden and switzerland have been suggested. president trump loved that picture of kim jong-un walking
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across the border to meet the south korean president and the president would like to see that with him again only with him standing there to greet kim. numerous countries are being considered for the meeting but with peace house on the border of north and south korea be a more representative important and lasting sight than a third part country. just asking. the president's aides have told us that the peace house is off the table. but what the president wants very often gets and looks like he wants the freedom house. so we may be saddling up for seoul. >> julie: all right. have a good trip. >> jon: let's go back to the southern border. the caravan of migrants are there demanding asylum. gabby, i wonder, president trump has condemned this caravan,
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slammed it. i wonder if in some respects the caravan is helping him make his point about the porous border, the laws that he thinks should be changed and the fact that we need a border fence. >> the optics are helping the administration. it does show that this is an issue that he's talked about of not only something occurring under the obama administration but something that his administration is dealing with. we're seeing pictures of hundreds of migrants making their what you through guatemala and mexico and up to the border. we have 90,000 daily commuters coming through this and now immigration officials are having to deal with the arrival of the migrants seeking asylum. many of whom when they realize the process takes will cross illegally, this is something that the president can point to as he makes the demands for more
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border security and funding and something that he's talk about doing in nafta negotiations going forward and also later this year in september as the government returns spending negotiations. >> jon: we have the pictures of the migrants at the border fence and climbing up and sitting on top of the fence. that says a visual picture that this country is not all that secure. the borders are not all that secure. the wall the president says he wants, a lot of people that haven't thought about this issue now all that much are saying yeah, might not be a bad idea to have a bigger more enpenetratable wall. >> there's women and children trying to cross through what is known as smugglers gulch in
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san diego. i was there in october. just to see the rough terrain that young women and their children are crossing through because our court system is so overwhelmed because of what is happening down there. it's just heart breaking to see. you know, this administration is trying to handle the cases as expeditiously as possible. with the current resources available, it's not happening. >> the migrants say that they're fleeing persecution and, you know, unstable economies. that sort of thing. the president says these are economic refugees. it's up to border patrol to decide who gets in. >> it is up to border patrol. that's why you have the screenings taking place to weed out migrants that might be better suited to stay in mexico. some are families better suited to come to the united states. that's why the hearings take
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place. we've soon an increase in asylum fraud. that's a concern of the administration. making sure the priority of entry is granted to those that truly need it and that people that might better exist in some of the other latin american countries are toward toward them instead of the united states. >> jon: some openly admit they've been speaking to lawyers before the journey so they can know what to say to american immigration authorities. it's quite a situation. thanks, gabby. thank you. >> thanks. >> julie: james comey weighs in on the house russia investigation. why he says that committee's probe was a "wreck." plus, a massive teacher strike enters its second week. what educators are demanding. >> we wanted to let our teachers now, here a list of what we've had in phoenix so far and we support them. we won't stop supporting them.
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>> jon: right now arizona parents are scrambling to find child care as the teacher strike enters its second week. teachers are demanding raises and billions to be recover in state aid. the governor has not offered any details on a possible deal. >> did the house intelligence committee at all serve a good investigative purpose during this in your observations? >> not that i can see. >> got to politicized? >> yeah. wrecked the committee and damaged relationships with the fisa courts. is it's just a wreck. >> julie: james comey there slamming the house intelligence committee's russia investigation. after the report found no collusion between the trump campaign and russia. comey calling the report a political document.
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our political panel joins me. richard fowler and kevin mccullough from salem media. thank you for talking to us today. richard, are you surprised by comey's caddie comments? >> no, i'm not surprised by them whatsoever. >> julie: say that five times fast. >> i know. but on top of that, we have a larger problem. democrats and republicans can agree that the intelligence committee has been a wreck. trey gowdy, the chairman of the government oversight said it best. it's like an episode of "mean girls." >> julie: i love "mean girls." >> this is a bad investigation. the only investigation of figuring out what happened to the russians is the mueller investigation. we should give it enough time to run its course and figure out what the solutions are. >> julie: kevin, what is the point -- if you can explain it to me -- of asking comey about
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his opinion about how he feels on the russia investigation as if he's going to give an impartial answer? >> i think asking james comey to evaluate the investigation into russia, particularly by the house, is kind of akin to asking a doctor that's been remove from his practice for malpractice to explain the surgery that he did to get to disqualified for. this is a guy that lost about every ounce of public credibility. democrats don't like him. republicans don't like him. he's lost on so many fronts of integrity, it's almost insane that he can give a credible answer that would be worth a spot on a sunday morning talk show. >> julie: good comparison on the medical malpractice. i probably wouldn't ask him how the surgery went if he's being sued. whole thing is like a scene of an after school special, how i like the compare it to.
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or like i say, i love a good cat fight. in seriousness, when comey argues that the committee wrecked the fisa process. let's go into that. does he not realize that he once worked with the fbi and it is a fact that the fbi and the department of justice used a faulty dossier? >> fisa courts are problematic before james comey became director of the fbi. when they were created on george bush, they were problematic to begin with. they're problematic, took republicans a long time to get to that position. with that being said, this doesn't take away from the fact that there's some leeriness with trump associates. even in the devin nunes memo, the facts are clear that it wasn't the dossier that triggered the investigation.
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this was triggered by george papadopoulos having a conversation drunk in london. that is a fact. i don't think you can mix the two. we have a problem with our fisa courts in this country. >> if you look at the case for fisa, they led with the biggest majority of the application was spent discussing the dossier saying it wasn't necessary to get the report. the problem here is the facts definitively demonstrated if you didn't have the dossier and the salacious charges, you wouldn't get the fisa court's attention. without the fisa court to have something to wrap its head around, you wouldn't get the surveillance permissions. the papadopoulos information, the dossier and a couple other resources that were included in the application have their original roots stemming back to the hillary clinton campaign. this was a fundamental witch
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hunt based on a partisan son. >> that's not correct. >> julie: we're out of time. but if comey is a credible keeper of facts after he distributed the classification of memos without seeking clearance -- final word, richard. >> couple things there. number 1, the george papadopoulos and the fisa courts are distinct. what happened to carter page in the devin nunes memo is distinct from what triggered the mueller investigation, which in devin nunes own memo which was triggered by george papadopoulos talking to a drunk person in london. it's not a partisan witch hunt. it's a solid investigation. >> julie: all right. thank you both. kevin and richard. thank you. >> good to be here. >> julie: jon? >> jon: battle brewing in west virginia after republicans look to flip a key democratic seat. a look at the race here on fox news. and race fans get a big scare when one car ends up off the
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let's basement. and thanks to these xfi pods, the signal reaches down here, too. so sophie, i have an xfi password, and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. >> julie: race car fans are relieved after a close call. take a look at this video at a winston-salem, south carolina race. >> oh, my gosh! >> julie: i've never seen that happen before. a car jumping the guardrail. the car collided with another vehicle. then it veers off the track, runs into the wall and over into the space between the grandstand and the track. nobody was hurt.
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>> jon: a tight primary race in west virginia as republicans try to flip the senate seat held by joe manchin. voters head to the pole next week to choose a republican running against him. peter doocy has more. >> john, the candidate best known as being a coal baron that recentsly did a year in prison on a misdemeanor conviction tied to the upper big branch mine disaster, being well known is an advantage. his name is don blankenship. don's base of support is greater than the other candidates. thousands of west virginias have worked for don and understand what he's done for the conservative cause. the other two candidates are well-known where they love. patrick mo patri
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patrick morisey. and coal is a central part of patrick morisey's pick. he's picking up support from rand paul and many others. he said -- >> the other huge factor in this race is an allegiance to. trump. congressman evan jenkins says his support dates back the longest. he said -- >> west virginiians are weighing
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all of these arguments carefully. a quarter of them undecided. 41% say they could still change their minds, jon. >> jon: a lot of changing going on in the weeks ahead. peter doocy, thank you. once again, you can catch the big west virginia gop senate debate tomorrow on fox news channel moderated by bret baier and martha maccallum. it begins at 6:30 p.m. east entime. >> could be a major break through for the koreas. the new promises from north korea on their nuclear program. can the rogue nation be trusted? that is the question. and a missile attack in syria. who was behind it? we're live from the pentagon next. billions of bacteria, but life can throw them off balance. try align, the #1 doctor recommended probiotic. with a unique strain that re-aligns your system. re-align yourself, with align.
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>> julie: so north korea reportedly making new promises concerning their nuclear test site vowing to shut it down after its summit with the south and ahead of a presidential meeting with president trump. kim jong-un is looking for a security guarantee from the u.s. in return. the question is can he be trusted. >> i think if he has made a strategic determination that north korea would be better off without nuclear weapons, we have something to talk about.
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it's up to the north koreans to show us they do plan on giving up their nuclear weapons. >> julie: first of all, what kind of security guarantee is kim jong-un talking about? >> i think eventually in the short term, he's going to be longing for a suspension as the talks go along. that's not the case now. as the talks progress, he will be looking for a suspension of military exercises. the deal to be had in the long-term and what he will be looking for is for the united states to either greatly minimize or completely withdraw troops from south korea. that is something over the weekend general mattis seemed to indicate could be part of a longer term deal. >> julie: the problem is history. >> that's right. >> julie: similar promises were
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made in the bush administration. how is this any different? >> what happened back then, there was this incremental approach. the north koreans would give some concessions and we give sanction relief and food aid, fuel aid and other pieces, this administration, what gives me optimism, a few things. president trump has extracted concessions that military exercises will continue. sanctions will stay in place and that i think the biggest piece is that he has indicated he will walk away. i can see that being framed out in three different circumstances. one, if kim jong-un is just trying to use this for symbolism to be seen as on part with the president for his own domestic propaganda reasons, two, if he's -- he's taking a play out of the old north korean playbook, let's drag this along. i'm concerned about that, if we get bogged down when the
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inspectors can come in, how much notice and meanwhile the north korean missile ennears are -- engineers that icbm. >> julie: and how about japan? do they need to be on the same side? >> the south koreans and the japanese still have a lot of bad feelings, so to speak, left over from world war ii. they're not on the same page that president moon wants a deal badly. he's a progressive and really want to outreach to his north korean counter parts. the japanese are led by a conservative abe who does not believe in having talks for the sake of it. what he's worried about is that short and medium range missiles will be left out of this. the united states will be worried about the icbm missiles and the japanese concerns won't be taken into account.
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>> julie: credit given where credit do. there's been significant strides between this president and this administration. there's concern that this could be a propaganda win for kim jong-un to have a face-to-face meeting with potus. the guy never left his own country. then he goes to china and now he's willing to meet with the president. i mean, i don't know. it's hard to believe it. >> i think -- absolutely. the president has his eyes wide open. john bolton is certainly on record as a north korean skeptic and rightly so. and mike pompeo is going to take a very tough approach as well, again, as long as the sanctions stay in place and our foot stays on the neck of the north korean economy with chinese support and with the full u.n. support, i think we'll be in good shape. we have to have verifying full denuclearization before we make
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any concessions. >> julie: sounds promising. i can't lie. this is the most significant stride we've seen made. >> absolutely. the key here -- and the president knew this -- is we had to make them believe if they get this program it would make their destruction. and the president made them believe it. >> julie: thanks, corr -- colonel. >> thanks so much. >> jon: and a missile strike in syria killed 26 people. jennifer griffin is at the pentagon with more. jennifer? >> prime minister benjamin netanyahu is about to give a speech for intelligence on iran's nuclear program. sources tell me netanyahu will speak in english from the equivalent of israel's pentagon,
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a backdrop usually used in wartime. i'm told the head of israel's national security council has called other signatories to the jcpoa including france and england to share the intelligence. france says they were not given a heads-up about an iranian base known as brigade 47. the explosions may have killed up to 29 people including iranian fighters. surface-to-surface missiles shipped into syria by iran's revolution ordinary guard corps were supposed to be stored at the base. the explosions occurred shortly after secretary of state mike pompeo left israel after meeting netanyahu for 2 1/2 hours. >> we remain deeply concerned about iran and they're ambition
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to dominate the middle east remains. the united states is with israel in this fight. >> defense secretary jim mattisment at the pentagon thursday. earlier in the day on capitol hill, mattis told the senate armed services committee he was concerned about the proxy war in syria escalating into a war between israel and iran. >> there's significant escalation at this moment that would not only engulf syria but spread throughout the region? >> complex question. i believe the short answer is yes, senator. i can see how it might start. i'm not sure when or where. i think that it's very likely in syria because iran continues to do its proxy work there through lebanese hezbollah there and over into lebanon.
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so i can imagine this sparking something larger. >> something larger that could draw the u.s. into a war with iran if the escalation continues. jon? >> jon: very interesting back story to that strike. thanks very much. jennifer griffin at the pentagon. >> julie: a growing backlash after the white house correspondence dinner. a comedian crossed the line and wasn't even funny. i promise to have and to hold
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and a runny nose, plus nasal congestion, which pills don't. flonase helps block 6 key inflammatory substances. most pills only block one. and 6 is greater than 1. start your day with flonase for more complete allergy relief. flonase. this changes everything. >> julie: now information on a wild police chase in colorado. three different law enforcement agencies that spans two counties. it started when a semi was apparently stolen in the sterling area. officers from the police department began chasing the truck but the driver kept
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getting. he hit cars and a police car and a pedestrian. then he drove on to oncoming traffic hitting more vehicles. he was shot as he broke into a whole. five people were hurt in the chase including a police officer. >> jon: now to the growing uproar at the so-called comedian at the white house correspondent's dinner. many say michelle wolf's jokes crossed the line. >> for sarah huckabee sanders, i have to say i'm star truck. i love you as aunt lydia. every time she steps up to the podium, i'm not sure what we're going to get, a press briefing, a bunch of lies or divide it into a softball team.
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i like sarah. she's very resourceful. like she burns facts and she uses the ash to create a perfect smokey eye. >> jon: so will the incident spark changes to this annual dinner that is a fixture in washington? president trump says he thinks so. he said this was a total disaster and embarrassments to our country. fake news is alive and well and beautifully represented saturday night. so let's take it up with our media panel. joe concha is the media reporter for the hill. judy, does this mean the end of the correspondent's dinner? the president thinks so. >> oh, i don't think so. i think it's going to go on and on and we're going to have this debate every single year. every single year somebody says something that somebody doesn't like.
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i don't think michelle wolf was country. half of the country thought she was hilarious. i think she's a reflection of our divisions, not the cause of it. my regret is that that events and the furor over what she said and takes away from the dinner and what it's about, which is 50 journalists dieing in the line of duty last year and ten more this morning as we're sitting here in kabul. 250 in jail. this is supposed to be an evening honoring journalists and it turned into a furor. >> the white house correspondent's association has denounced her monologue. shouldn't they have known who it was they were hiring to do the work? >> too little, too late, jon. there's talks of her on comedy
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central. they knew what they were getting. i'm wondering what the white house correspondent's association that they were thinking. comedy central is overwhelmingly anti-trump. so of course you get what you got. so i'm not going to blake michelle wolf. i'm going to blame the people that chose here. a second tier comedian was exploiting that stage to advance her career. now she appealed to half the country and her career will go up. it was so bad, c span radio cut the broadcast and went to a repeat of "washington journal" because it was so bad. >> jon: this is what she treated. i said sarah huckabee sanders burns facts and uses the ash to perfect a smokey eye.
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he complimented her eye makeup and ingenuity of materials. can she get away with it? >> that's not half the way the country heard it. it was a slur on her looks and it's inappropriate. it's inappropriate when the president of the united states or the man that will become president does it. remember carlie fiorina. he's mocking of the handicap. she's a comic. he's the president. we expect more from him. >> all that said, i wasn't so much offended by that. when she calls her the uncle tom of white women with her sit three seats away, calling her a racist, that was the problem. >> inappropriate. >> jon: not defending her but it's comedy.
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people are supposed to take a joke. >> part of the problem was, trump isn't there. if you're there, you can give it back. when he's not there, when he's in the other washington, all of a sudden it looks like the press beating up on this president's people. that's not fair. that's how it looks. >> that's a big mistake by the white house correspondent's association. sarah sanders should have been given a chance to speak. but right now the association acts surprised. give me a bring. >> jon: and mika and maggie haberman from "the new york times" were critical of michelle wolf in her performance.
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>> yes. and abortion jokes are not funny. that was even more offensive. here's our problem. we're divided and therefore people think that making fun of the president or his people so kay. >> bret baier said maybe we should take a year off. he's usually reserved. he said 2019, retool it and come back in 2020. i'm not so sure that i agree with cancelling it for a year. at the same time, you can get better comics in there. i'd say to any comic -- go watch former president obama. he got with the tone and pitch. even george w. bush. get a veteran that understand what's this is about. you don't censor comedy.
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>> just go back to the original mission, which is honoring journalism. it's not fake news. >> last year was disappointed. >> karl rove said this morning it used to be that the jokes cinged but didn't burn. that was an apt description. >> not last night. >> thanks for our panel. >> thank you. julie? >> julie: a big win for immigrants in chicago. the city initiative being rolled out today. we'll tell you about it coming up. up, we were german. we danced in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland.
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a form of documentation. others say they could be used to protect illegal immigrants and used for voter fraud. >> registration starts today. a big crowd out here. fyi, it's not just people that may be undocumented but african americans here, folks that are homeless. these cards are designed for anyone who has difficulty getting an i.d. card. the hope is to make everybody feel at home here. take a look at what the cards look like. they're a photo i.d. card, which is important. because some people have difficulty getting the kind of documentation. so they have difficulty finding jobs and the rest. important to note that in chicago with this concern about undocumented folks, this can be used for voter registration.
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there's no checks on that. important also to note that federal law does not require that. you don't have to prove you're a us citizen. the cynics may see this is an attempt by rahm emanuel who is facing a tough re-election campaign to court the hispanic vote. i'd point out 7% of the population in chicago is believed to be undocumented. the major has said that chicago is and always will be a sanctuary city. i see a spokesman for the city clerk. jose sanchez. a lot of people say this will lead to voter fraud. what do you say? >> that is a myth that people are pushing out. that's not true. the cord does not give voting rights to anybody that isn't already able to vote. the office has been telling people, if you're not able to vote, don't use this card. the fact of the matter is -- >> if but if they wanted to lie about it. >> they could.
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but they could register with a like card or other cards. >> thanks very much. the registration continues and perhaps the debate. >> julie: thanks, jeff. jon? >> jon: any minute now, president trump is expected to welcome the president of nigeria to the white house. we'll have that live. will north korea really give up their nukes? senator lindsey graham says if that happens, the president should get the credit and even a nobel peace prize. he's one lucky guy on "outnumbered" at the top of the hour. little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, ...
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president at the white house. the president is likely to be asked about the latest out of north korea in a press conference, talks about the iran nuclear deal and the caravan on the southern border. we'll have that live as soon as it happens. and the trump administration standing united in its maximum pressure campaign against north korea. the nation's dictator kim jong-un reportedly pledges to shut down his main underground nuclear testing site in exchange for a truce. this is "outnumbered." i'm melissa francis. town hall editor, katie pavlich. host of kennedy on the fox business network, kennedy. and trish regan is here. joining us on the couch, republican senator from
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