tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News June 22, 2018 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT
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they knew who he was. they gave him probation after his second dui. five weeks later, he killed my child. if that wasn't enough to deal with, this is my only child. i have no family. that's it. the public needs to know and they deserve to know that this could happen to each one of you at any given second. you hug your child, you send them off no matter what age they are. then you get that ugly phone call that will forever change your life. thank god our president and vice president voice, my family of aviac, they rallied behind us. they gave us a little light.
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i was going to end my life. the president from coming down the escalator that day, talking about illegal immigration. i had no clue that i would ever be at the white house. and i thank president trump, vice president pence, everybody behind me, i thank you, i thank everybody out here. make sure you get our stories out. i brought my son. this is what i have left, his ashes. i wear his ashes in a locket, this is how i hug my son. so remember when you go home and hug your kids. that there's many of us, thousands of us that don't get to do that anymore. let's work together and get this done. all politicians. i don't care what side you're open. you don't want your children in a casket or urn. so get it together for god's sake, for this country, for our
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citizens. thank you. [applause] >> my name is ray. i retired from the navy. i flew off of aircraft carriers. i had a great navy career and started my family in the 90s. two little girls, tessa and kelsey. they had a bigger brother, dylan. i raised them. their mother and her mom is hispanic. so tessa was hispanic. they live near the border as well. tessa was 16. she was a dreamer. so was her friend, allie counhard. 17 and 16 year old. beautiful girls. they went to a wawa in virginia
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beach to get a pack of gum. alfredo ramos was driving at 70 miles an hour. he was three times the legal limit. he had been arrested before for dui in which the judge give him no time or fines. he had a fake i.d. from florida bought by the cartels. he had a fake driver's license in his car and he couldn't speak glitch. he needed an interpreter for the last dui hearing. he was arrested for drunk in public. bottom line, he came in through mesa, tried to make it. he was going -- he was three times the legal limit. so the place told me that at that, it's like wearing almost black-out glasses while you're driving. when he hit the girls from behind, it was an explosion. the neighborhood thought a bomb went off. the girls were almost instantaneously dead. they worked on tessa awhile.
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i saw her in the hospital. those are the dreamers that the united states is focused on. i can't make an opinion about the young people that are hear illegally because their parents brought them. but i can guarantee you the government had nothing to do with that. everybody wants to blame. but the parents of those children are to blame. there was a lot of, well, maybe they'll feel sorry for them because they're kids and maybe if they behave, they'll just magically beat the system. my mom came from ireland. took her ten years to get her citizenship. she had a sponsor. if she got in trouble, not only did she get in trouble, the sponsor was in trouble. i would have been speaking northern irish right now if she got out of line. that's the way it was with ins in those days. and mom loved being an american. i helped her study for her exam.
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i'm all about legal immigration. but the invaders, people that come over our borders and decide to take the law in their own hands, maybe supported by a group of people that for god's sakes i don't know why they would want to do it, it's evil, it hurts people and it costs us billions of dollars a year. and they don't seem to want to pay for it. they want us to pay for it. the other taxpayers. i want to thank president trump because when my -- those kids died, i was in -- i was a city employee. of course, i sued the city and the judge and the adjoining city with the judge there. they're immune. didn't make my really friendly with the city. didn't make me friendly with ice. basically they claimed they weren't called, the sheriff's department said we called him and it was a back and forth.
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so nobody took responsibility. being in that situation where no one takes responsibility in this government at all means that you're standing in a dark forest at night when it's raining and it's cold and you're lost. everybody you talk to, yeah, yeah, but you know, he was drunk and we have a lot of drunks here. let me tell you, the guy shouldn't have been there at that time. he shouldn't have been there. we have many opportunities to get him out. so what is happening? or representative is the president and the vice president. they took us in. we're going to fight this battle. we're going to win it. we're going to clean it up, and i'm very proud of that. i'm very proud to be a part of that. i will support you as law enforcement and my president and
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vice president as much as they need. i want to thank the remembrance project for standing there when i had no one else. god bless you. i hope this doesn't happen to you. thank you. [applause] >> this is tom selleck. extent better looking, right? better looking. >> thank you. >> thank you. i'm angel. my family immigrated from hungary. we escaped during the revolution. my father was born in yugoslovia. they didn't allow us to come to the american embassy. we went to -- we had a choice of south africa, austria or brazil.
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we went to brazil. we lived there 13 years trying to legally immigrate to the united states. when we immigrated to brazil, the government took our citizenship. when we came to the united states, we were stateless. i'm honored and proud to say this is my home, my country and i will fight for this country until my death. thank you law enforcement, border patrol, immigration, barbara. everybody that got me here today. thank you for fighting this fight. you don't want to walk in our shoes. president trump, thank you for always standing behind us. you are the biggest birthday present i got and i'm still waiting for that shovel to help build the wall at the border. i live in california. i would like to ask if you don't want your state to become a
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sanctuary state, so i would like to ask president trump, if you would tweet and endorse us to fight sanctuarystate.com to help us so we don't go down. if california continues on this path, the rest of the country will follow. i'm so proud and honored of you, mr. president. the integrity and character that you have shown us pulling the daggers out of your back every day. it hasn't been fair. but i want you to know that i'm very honored to call you my president. god bless you and your family always. god bless this country. thank you so much. [applause] >> thank you, mr. president. that is my son, drew. he was in law school in san francisco in 2010 when
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roberto gallo tried to make a last-second left-hand turn and hit him. instead of stopping, he tried to flee. so he accelerated, drove over his body. my son was on a motorcycle. his helmet came off. wedged under one of his tired. he drove over him a second time. trying to get away, he went forward. by that time a guy got out and stopped with his rear tire on my son's abdomen and five people had to lift the car off of him. i want to talk about somebody else. you heard agnes mention fight sanctuarystate.com. in april of year, i filed with the state of california an initiative to overturn the sanctuary state. there's way to many deaths, way too many traffic collisions.
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i should just add on an aside, we gave out driver's licenses in 2015. in two years, the first two years of that traffic fatalities on what was supposed to be safer roads have gone up 19%, hit and runs have gone up 26%. yet they're still telling people the roads are safer because of that. but there's so many -- and somebody that is no here, a woman named veronica ramirez. give you an example of what happens with sanctuary. she was a domestic violence victim. called the santa rosa police. they arrested the perpetrator. he was -- had been deported previously. ice filed a detainer. and then the day that they decided to release him, instead of calling ice and giving ice a chance to show up, they were
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1 1/2 hours away. they gave him 16 minutes to show up and released him. 16 days later, he murder mrs. ramirez. according to kevin deleon was the author of the sanctuary bill, that makes the state safer, if you educational federal law enforcement over here and you keep the state law enforcement here, that makes the state safer. that's absurd, it's outrageous and something has to be done and i hope that as agnes said, if we don't kill this in california,it will spread. it's a death sentence for american law-abiding citizens. i'd like to thank the president, the vice president and everybody else here, director hohmann, you've been an incredible fred. john, barbara and my new friend today, kristen nielson. thank you very much,
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particularly law enforcement. . >> i said would you like to speak. you said no. she said i've been crying for too long, for too much. i just want to thank everybody for being here. i know these families. i know many more families that have gone through the same thing. i cannot imagine it being any worse. but we pledge to act with strength and with resolve and in the memory of those that have been lost so needlessly. it's because of families like yours that my administration created the new office of vhs, the victims of immigrant crime engagement, which has been doing i hear a fantastic job. call it voice. so that your voices can be
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heard. today we have released the first voice report within the first months of voice. we've opened more than 2,800 victims registered to receive information on their perpetrator. we're following these people. we're following them. so it can't happen again by that individual. voice assists hundreds of families already connected them to crucial services such as grief counselling, followed up their cases and helped ensure that criminal aliens that harmed their families so egregiously were detained. we want safety in our country. we want border security. we don't want people in our country that don't go through a process. we want people in our country based on merit, not based on a
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draw where other countries put their absolute worst in a bin and start drawing people. where you think they're going to put their good ones? they don't put their good ones. they put their bad ones. when they commit crimes, we're so surprised. we'll not rest until our border is security, our citizens are safe and we finally end the immigration crisis once and for all. we want safety in our country. we want strong borders. we wand people to come in, but we want them to come in the proper way. so thank you all for being here. these are incredible families, incredible people. your loves ones have not died in vain. much of what we're doing is because of what you've had to endure. we just thank you all very much for being here. god bless you all. thank you. [applause]
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>> trace:s that the immigration event happening in the eisenhower office. this is an attempt to chair the narrative of what's been happening all week. we've heard the sounds out of shelters, families separated at the border. the president trying to shift this, families that had loved ones killed by illegals. the president saying where is the outrage over ms-13, where is the outrage over families that have had loved ones killed by illegal immigrants. hello. i'm trace gallagher in for shepard smith. president trump claims democrats are making up phony stories of sadness and grief at the southern border where his policy has separated hundreds of children from their parents. as you just saw, the president met with families of people that said that they were permanently separated from loved ones. they didn't get to say good-bye. they didn't get to reunite.
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by undocumented immigrants. watch this. >> we're gathered today to hear from the american victims of illegal immigration. you know, you hear the other side. you never hear this side. >> today a gauatemalan mother sued the government but got her son back today. democrats say president trump is trying to use the children as leverage to force through a republican immigration bill. >> he's taking infant children hostage. wrenching them from the arms of their parents. traumaizing them perhaps for life. >> after calling on congress to fix the problem by passing an immigration bill, the president
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is telling gop lawmakers to stop wasting their time and wait till after the november mid-terms. let's get to john roberts. >> the president has had a number of events and had people on stage during campaign events when it comes to angel families. people that lost a love one due to crime from illegals. can't help but think about the timing here. the president rather stridently criticizing the coverage or comparing the coverage of what we see on the border to what he says is underreported and that is the plight of these angel families. listen here. >> where is the media outrage over the catch and release policy that allows drugs in. where is the condemnation of the democrats sanctuary cities that
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release violent criminals in hour communities and then protect them? >> the president sowing some confusion on capitol hill after pressing congress this week to pass the immigration reform. the president tweeted out this morning, republicans should stop wasting their time on immigration until after we elect more senators in november. dems are just playing games. they have no intention of doing anything to solve this be pro. we'll pass great legislation after the red wave. that stands in contrast to what the president said yesterday here at the white house where he said that he would be willing to sit down with democrats and work with congress to get his immigration reform measures passed. listen here. >> this has been going on for decades. they have to sit down. i'll be willing to do it. i just told you i'll invite senator schumer and nancy pelosi. they can come over, bring whoever they want. the lawmakers have to sit down
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and they have to do something. our country cannot continue to run like this. we can't have open borders. >> the president showing a little confusion at the beginning of his remarks there where he singled out the san diego mayor for alerting illegal immigrants to ice raids. that was not the san diego mayor. the san diego mayor, kevin faulkner, is a republican. it was the oakland mayor, libby schaaf that did that. make sure everybody at home had that one right. >> trace: yeah, john, we talked about the first lady's visit to a children's shelter and the jacket, the choice of jacket she was wearing. what more do we know about that? >> she didn't wear the jacket at the shelter. she wore it as she boarded the aircraft. it was a $39 jacket that she wore that had pseudograffiti written on the back that said "i really don't care, do you?" people speculated to the
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message. her spokeswoman told fox news it's a jacket. there was no hidden message. after today's important visit to texas, i hope the media isn't going to chose to focus on her wardrobe. grisham added, much like her high heels last year. the president tweeted, i really don't care, do you, referring to the fake news media. melania has learned how honest they are and she doesn't care about them. clearly the jacket has been somewhat the focus of her visit yesterday as opposed to what she was there for. trace? >> indeed. john roberts live at the white house. president trump says republicans are wasting their time trying to pass an immigration bill before the mid-terms. but some republicans say they're not giving up. we're live on capitol hill with the latest next. battery in your smart lock?
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>> trace: somehow republicans say here not giving up on the house immigration bill. one bill already failed. gop leaders delayed a vote on another bill twice. peter doocy is live on capitol hill. peter? >> even though republicans have a majority, party leaders keep coming up short as they try to find enough votes to advance an immigration package. they say they won't give up. >> we're going move forward. it's an uphill fight to push the coalition to come together. it would be nice if you had one democrat that was willing to vote for a bill that secures america's border. so far none have been willing to do that.
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>> conservatives in the house that watched their immigration bill fail yesterday are thrilled. president trump is trying to tank the leadership preferred plan as the compromise bill because the compromise is it provides the full $25 billion for a border wall but provides a pathway to citizenship for daca recipients brought to the country as kids. >> i think the president is right on this. if they had brought the ryan amnesty bill last night or this morning, they all know it would have failed. >> the majority leader, kevin mccarthy control what's gets a vote on the floor insists today there will be an immigration vote next week. trace? >> trace: peter, what about democrats? what are they saying? >> there's no way they're going to jump on board with this immigration plan. the compromise plan as long as there's so much money for a border wall. >> look, the border wall, if
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these children are being damaged so that he can win a proposition on a border wall, which so many of his republicans think will not solve the problem, we're for border security. we don't think the border wall is a good solution. >> other democrats are saying they would be willing to work with republicans to fix the immigration system, but near complaining that nobody asks for their input. >> honestly, it's very frustrating. for we're working on a bipartisan solution. we came up with a solution together that we agreed to and now we went to leadership. to the republican leadership. say sit down with us. we heard nothing back from them. >> so republicans in the house are trying to do it without any democratic votes. that a luxury that they won't have if it makes to it the senate. trace? >> peter doocy live on capitol hill.
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thank you. let's bring in a reporter for axios here. sounds to me, steph, that the president is back-pedalling a little bit. all week long, he said it's the democrat's fault. he said i'll work with them. now today he's not working with them. you can see these trying to change the narrative on the story a little bit. >> right. i keep going back to something the president said at the beginning of the week before he signed the executive order that would end family separation policy. he said if you're too weak, we'll be overrun by immigrants. if you're too strong, you have no heart. at the end, he said i would rather be strong. so we're seeing him weigh these two sides. he wants to be tough on immigration lake he promised. he's listening to the audio of children being separated from parents and trying to find a fine line. of course, there's the two bills in congress as well.
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he's come from saying only congress can fix this to then saying, okay, i can sign an executive order actually. now saying, okay, congress, just wait till after the mid-terms. >> trace: i'm not sure he's trying to walk that fine line anymore. yesterday he was. today it seems like he's over it. he's base is very happy with the fact that he's following the law. i think now you can see him leaning back saying, you know what? i like the fact that i following the law as well. so there's some resonance on that coming through. >> absolutely. today we're definitely seeing the president double down on his tough on immigration stance. earlier this week, he did kind of make a small hedge in that by signing the executive order. but he's doubling down on his platform that no, we need to have strong border security and we need to have strong immigration laws. >> trace: yeah, but without these bills from congress, you look at the big picture here,
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stef, he's in a legal pickle. the order can only go so far. he can only hold the families together for a certain amount of time. he needs help from congress to push this across the finish line. >> exactly. we're waiting to see if the district judge decides to modify her ruling and allow children to be held in detention for longer than 20 days or we need congress to change the laws to allow dhs to keep them in detention for a longer period of time. >> trace: what happens is judge gee has about the same odds as congress passing something in this next week. stef, thanks for joining us. >> thank you. >> trace: meantime, senators from both parties are visiting facilities holding immigrant parents and children that have been separated. that's after one shelter refused to let lawmakers in. but today officials reversing
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and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ♪ otezla. show more of you. >> i'm lea gabrielle with a fox report. more of today's headlines, a house exploding and the blast flattened the building. they say the building should have been empty. in virginia, new video of a dramatic helicopter rescue after a tractor trailer slammed into a construction truck. three workers were knocked off of a bucket and left them dangling on a bridge. first responders dropped ropes. one person died
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change the course of your treatment. ask your doctor about victoza®. >> saw lawmakers touring facilities for immigrant kids in south text. we're also looking at a shelter closed for media. we have more from phil keating and jeff paul. first, we begin with steve harrigan where ted cruz and john cornyn are visiting immigration facilities. steve? >> that's right, trace. the two texas senators making tours at detention centers to get a feel on the ground what conditions are like. their visit follows up on the visit by the first lady yesterday. melania trump visited a shelter that holds 50 children. some of those children captured traveling by themselves crossing the border illegally, others
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12-17 were forcibly separated from their parents. the first lady stressing she was ready to help in any way to try to reunite the children and the parents together as quickly as possible. right now administration officials are saying at least 500 of the 2,300 children separated have already been reunited with their parents. discussions now underway for the possible creation here in texas of a center to try to reunify those parents and children who remain separated as quickly as possible. trace, back to you. >> trace: steve, thank you. on the other side of the state, the government is housing teenage boys separated from their families. let's got to jeff paul. >> that's right, this is the entrance to the tent city. you can see it here. this is as close as police officers will allow us to get.
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two senators from new mexico were briefed about the facility, but they weren't allowed to tour the tent or meet with the kids. senator blumenthal says he knows the kids are being cared for but he still knows it's prison. >> you are not alone. the world is watching. even though you can't talk, even though we can't visit with you, we're watching, the world is watching. we're going to fight for you. >> the debate is still going on. there's another rally set for sunday here at the border. trace? >> trace: thanks. for the first time the feds are allowing media to go inside a shelter in south florida, this is where a senator and
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congresswoman were denied access earlier this week, this is in homestead severe weather of miami. >> trace, i'm told senator bill nelson will get his chance to tour tomorrow and senator marco rubio was here earlier this afternoon, this morning's media tour for about 20 of us specifically a direct response to a week of heavy criticism for access. this morning health and human services took a group of us for a one-hour tour. there's about 1,200 kids here between the ages of 13 and 17. the vast majority entered illegally without their parents. according to the shelter, fewer than 70 kids did cross with their parents this year and have been separated from them. we received this video of what it's like inside. that's how it is. clean and colorful classrooms where the kids have academics every day.
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the cafeteria where they get three square meals. 12 kids each room with six beds. we didn't see any cages or chain link fence holding cells. they told us here on the tour that is because they do not exist here. trace? >> trace: phil keating live in south florida. thank you. the supreme court issuing a major ruling today in a cell phone privacy case. in a 5-4 vote, the justices determined that police need a search warrant if they want to track criminal suspects using their cell phone information. in the past, they could go to phone companies and get in without a warrant. analysts say this decision could impact more than just the phones. will is here. a criminal defense attorney and former military attorney. we talked earlier, will, i'm surprised this decision came down 5-4. the reality here is, doesn't it seem like common sense? they want your information, you should go to a judge and say
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look, here's the probable cause. >> this is a steady trajectory recognizing in this era of modern technology, the rules will change. a cell phone is a private item. in riley versus california, the supreme court decided you needed a warrants before you searched a phone. you counter is search it on a suspect. >> and i remember the scott peterson case. it was triangulation. it was critical piecing together where he was when his wife's body was found. you had to get warrants. you don't -- is there an example where you need this stuff right now? >> i agree with you. i don't think it needs to be acquired immediately. plenty of time to get a warrant. the fourth amendment prevails here. it's easy to prevents your evidence to a judge and get a judge to sign off on a warrant. the evidence might disappear. apparently these cell phone companies keep this information
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for years. >> i guess i was reading, 300,000 cell phone towers now in the united states. they know where you are every step of the day. if your cell phone is on, they know where you are every step of the way. once you buy your cell phone and turn it on, you're giving consent to be follows. is that fair? >> that's correct, a couple times a minute your cell phone checks in with a tower. they know where you are a couple times a minute. that sort of personal information where they can locate your body clearly private information and the supreme court is protecting it here. >> i'm curious. everywhere you go, they know where you are. i see surveillance cameras everywhere. it's like hey, you walk in a gas station, there's that camera. walk here, cameras. when the police want to find out if mr. gallagher was in the convenient store, they can't just take the time. they have to go to a judge. >> that's correct. >> so that's kind of part of this whole thing.
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>> you know, i think what they're saying is, this is an intrusion into your privacy. before they do that, they have to have something from a judge. it's not like bank records or something like that, this is separate. >> thanks, will. >> thanks for having me. >> trace: meantime we are going where? where talking about pay-back time. the european union responding to the president's tariffs on billions of products. we'll get into that next. we came here for the friends.
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and we got to know the friends of our friends. then our old friends from middle school, our mom, our ex and our boss joined forces to wish us happy birthday. then we discovered our uncle use to play in a band. and realized he was young once too. and we found others just like us. and just like that we felt a little less alone. but then something happened. we had to deal with spam, clickbait, fake news, and data misuse. that's going to change. from now on, facebook will do more to keep you safe and protect your privacy. so we can all get back to what made facebook good in the first place. friends. because when this place does what it was built for, we all get a little closer.
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union is pulling back hard. starting today, european products are being slapped with $2 billion in tariffs. here's what is interesting. they're singling out products from key voting states essential to president trump's re-election campaign. they're targeting orange juice from florida, a key swing state, targeting corn products, corn from iowa, the first state to vote in the primary and targeting steel. mike pence's home state, indiana, is a big steel manufacturer as well. despite this quickly escalating from a economic issue to a political issue for the president, secretary state mike pompeo was hard at work this morning to court investors trying to convince them to put their money here. >> there's a myth of american retreated from the world. i have to say it's just a myth. president trump's agenda is the
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most pro business, most pro international trade of any president in history. it's been a game-changer for the american economic landscape and it's one that your company will want to be a part of. >> this tough talk from the white house is echoing across the globe. >> good reminder to buy more bourbon. what is the president saying about this? >> he's planning his next retaliatory move. he's pledging to fight tariffs with more tariffs. based on the tariffs placed on the u.s. and the great companies and workers by the european union, if they're not broken down soon, we will have a 20% tariff on all of their cars coming into the united states. build them here, this would be on top of the steel tariffs. he says we bring millions of
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cars in here but they're barely taxed at all. >> trace: thanks, hillary. it's a sad day as you may know for our fox family. charles krauthammer has lost his battle with cancer. we'll remember what made him so special to so many people next. into booking a hotel. with expedia's add-on advantage, booking a flight unlocks discounts on select hotels until the day you leave for your trip. add-on advantage. only when you book with expedia. add-on advantage. you might be missing something.y healthy. your eyes. that's why there's ocuvite. ocuvite helps replenish nutrients your eyes can lose as you age. it has lutein, zeaxanthin and omega-3. ocuvite. be good to your eyes. i'm a tin can tied to your bumper, cause.... i don't think enough people heard about your big day. but nothing says "we got married" like a 12 ounce piece of scrap metal. yo! we got married! honk if you like joint assets. now you're so busy soaking up all this attention,
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legacy as a journalist as the ultimate straight shooter. >> yeah, he was more than just a journalist, i'd say. he was a public intellectual that dazzled with his independence, honesty, wit and sheer brilliance. his powerful voice may have been his writing for "the washington post" and "time" magazine where he had a great impact on business. all newspaper columnists and say man, i wish i could write like that. even if you disagree with him, you have to respect him. he started out as a walter monday liberal and became to define modern conservativisisac. he was a fierce critic of president trump. but if he did something good, he
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said so. he set a standard that many of us could aspire to. >> trace: i read a couple of his articles. i know you knew him. talk about that, the personal aspect. >> he could be stealy. when i came to fox, i wrote something about the iraq war. let's say we had an exchange of views. he was final any. always asked me about the gossip. he talked to every makeup artist, everybody. he didn't want to be judged by a lesser standard. he wanted to be judged by the same standard as everybody else. one time he said because he couldn't type, he had to dictate his newspaper columns. because of that experience, he not only learned to speak on his feet but in perfect paragraphs. even if you disagreed with
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charles, a lot of liberals joining in the praise, you have to acknowledge what he brought to the table. >> trace: more to your point, you brought this up awhile ago. during the campaign, he really -- there was no love lost between charles krauthammer and candidate trump. but when the president did things proper, he gave him proper for doing things proper. >> yeah. donald trump ripped krauthammer in an interview with him. and krauthammer likened himself to an umpire in baseball. one time he praised him. he said it was a cover up without a crime. the president liked that so much. he favorably quoted him. charles said it was nice to be recognized the president of the united states. it wouldn't change his approach to critiquing him one bit. >> trace: thanks, howard. good of you to join us.
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>> trace: one of the biggest starts in the world cup may be headed for an early exit. messi and argentina being blanked by croatia and they could get bounced without getting out of their group. you can watch all the matches and extras on fox tv, fox sports 1, foxsports.com and the sports app. check your local listings. a college star said it was his dream when the 76ers picked him in the draft. six picks later, philly traded him to the phoenix suns just as
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he was wrapping up a news conference about his future with the sixers. he's going to make a lot of money. the dow is up for the first time in nine days, a little round of applause at the corner of wall and broad. he's in for shepard smith. "your world" with neil cavuto is right now. >> good morning! >> good morning. >> secretary nielsen! >> or actually bad morning. >> can you believe this? protesters taking the immigration fight today for the front door of the homeland security secretary kirstjen neilsen. carrying signs, labelling her a child snatcher. this is days after protesters shouted her out of a washington d.c. restaurant. this is now getting personal. and it's also getting something else. very dangerous. welcome, everybody. i'm neil cavuto. the immigration battle boiling over. but is it also getting a
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