tv The Five FOX News June 27, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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♪ >> dana: i am dana perino with kimberly guilfoyle, juan williams, jesse watters and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five" ." this is a fox news alert. it's the decision that could supreme court for a generation and be a defining moment for the trump presidency. justice anthony kennedy announcing hours ago that he is retiring at the end of the next month. president trump reacting to the news. >> justice kennedy will be
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retiring, and he's a man that i've known for a long time and a man that i have respected for a long time. we will begin our search for a new justice of the united states supreme court that will begin immediately. we have a list of 25 people that i actually had during my election. we have a very excellent list of great, talented, highly educated, highly intelligent hopefully tremendous people. >> dana: senate majority leader mitch mcconnell laying out the timeline to confirm justice kennedy's successor. >> we look forward to yet another outstanding selection. we will vote to confirm justice kennedy successor. it's imperative this fall -- it's imperative that the president's nominee be -- >> dana: shannon bream covering the breaking news.
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breaking news at 2:00. tell us what you know. >> we thought that the retirement watch was officially over at least for today because they gaveled out of the bench this morning the final opinions of the day, and no one made a hint or peep. this afternoon, this letter services. we know that justice kennedy wanted to talk with president trump and deliver this letter and talk about walking away from the bench effective july 31. even though justice kennedy was appointed by president reagan, he was often left and center when it came to social issues, things like abortion and lgbt rights. hispanic swing vote even though he doesn't like that term. in a lot of these 5-4, he's been the 5. he's been conservative on a number of things but he's broken away. he has an independent streak when it comes to social issues. he authored the sweeping landmark decision which legalized same-sex marriage in all 50 states. i know he wanted that to be part of his legacy. he talked about the dignity of lgbt people, their families, the
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children they were raising. when it comes to things like health care, after the arguments heard here on the affordable character, there was speculation about what is kennedy going to do, how's it going to vote? turns out he never wavered. he was always the vote against the aca, finding it unconstitutional. in that case, it was the chief justice was the deciding vote that went over with the liberal wing of the court. there are number of groups saying they really celebrate justice kennedy for what he did on these issues, social issues left of center. they are worried about who the president will decide. we know there is a list of 25 they came up with in november of 2017. i'm told by people close to the white house on the president that he's planning to stick to the list or not add new names. senator mike lee, other prominent federal judges. we hear from democrats today saying absolutely they're going to hold the line into everything they can to try to block this vote until after the midterms.
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a lot of the pressure that justice kennedy got to go ahead and step down was coming from across the street in the senate where there were senators privately telling them we don't know that we can be sure were going to hold on to the senate for they were concerned about what happened to their party if that was the case. but now with this filibuster gone on supreme court justice votes, they need 51. they know they have it now. they will have to keep all the republicans together to get someone on that bench and in this seat before the midterms. it sounds like him as he said, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell plans to do that. >> dana: shannon bream, thank you. interesting things about justice kennedy, kimberly, he went to the white house today earlier commitment with president trump privately before any announcement was made. gentlemanly, like a good public servant might do. the second thing he wanted a republican president with a republican majority senate to be able to have this vote coming up. even though he was the swing vote on a lot of these things, i think that says something about him. he was originally appointed by
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ronald reagan. >> kimberly: he has really served with dignity. he is widely admired. i think it was a selfless thing to do. maybe he wanted to stay longer but he thought this would be best for him to do and do it at this time. if you look at it, and shannon explained it beautifully, the timing of it is very crucial and essential in terms of having the votes impaled to get someone on their that will do a great job and be able to serve for years to come and someone who is in keeping with the g.o.p. values and traditions, conservative values and traditions, a constitutionalist. president trump has really received wide praise for neil gorsuch. has really been a fantastic justice on the court. for the country and in terms of rulings on no he's decided. now the pressure is on find someone else, and there are so many good choices and candidates in that initial 20 and the five.
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looks like he's going to pick from one of those. he's got some excellent choices like senator mike lee. >> dana: jesse, replacing a swing vote, a reliable conservative that someone who takes the constitution as it is. it's not like replacing like for like. this is a really big deal for the conservative movement. >> jesse: i am kind of the swing vote at the table here. i the myself as the kennedy of "the five" ." this definitely moves the court to the right. it really puts pressure on ginsberg to stay as long as possible. the left is going to put up a big fight over this. you're already hearing chuck schumer say no, we are going to wait until after the midterms. this is going to be voted in the fall. the difference, they are talking about what happened with garland when obama was a lame duck and he had the vacancy. o'connell delayed it until after the presidential election. that was the difference. this is just the mature.
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i think the senate is going to stay in republican hands so this will definitely move the court to the right. this is kind of the golden age of conservatism when you think about it. the court on the presidency, congress, senate, state houses. state legislatures. all in the right's hands for now until they screwed up and hand it to the left. there are so many issues at stake. marijuana, technology, immigration. this is a big pick. he better not mess this up. we have seen other presidents method up big big time. like kimberly said, this list is strong. these are some of the best people out there. women, guys with the best credentials you'll ever see. mike lee even was speculated to be a great choice by his colleague, senator ted cruz. i think he would be a solid pick. >> dana: juan, i understand why the democrats are trying to say they should wait and delete this not after the midterms but doesn't that run the risk of ensuring that republicans will
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turn out in droves and maybe flip some of those seats in thee fence right now to red. democrats in red states like heidi heitkamp, joe manchin, claire mccaskill. wouldn't it ensure that republicans turn out to beat them? >> juan: i don't think so. could be republicans would turn out if they felt the senate was at stake. >> dana: i think that's true here. a supreme court nomination generate so much enthusiasm and a republican base. >> juan: i think republicans sold their souls on trump, the legitimacy, justification was that we can have a supreme court appointment. the guy who deserves the credit for that is mitch mcconnell, senate majority leader, who denied a hearing for just about a year to merrick garland, a democrat. so much for stability and rules of order. he just took it, now you understand what is at stake.
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thing about justice kennedy was justice kennedy, even though i certainly disagree with him on things like voting rights, guess what. he was seen as an open-minded person. who could go either way. what we have now is the potential for a trump nominee who is basically -- locks us into the partisan paralysis we see in congress on the supreme court. half the country will simply say the supreme court is in the hands of conservatives, and i don't have a fair shot if i go before the court because everything's going to be decided on a partisan basis, not on the basis of law. >> dana: that may get greg in here. harry reid when he was in charge of the seven, use the nuclear option to get more of president obama's nominees through. mitch mcconnell said you will live to regret this. maybe they are living to regret it now because now they are only going to need 51 votes. >> greg: i have to take issue with juan about what people did not sell their souls on trump.
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trump beat the competition. when that happened, people had to decide whether they were going to step forth the republican nominee because anything would be better than hillary. that is not sell your soul. it's making a pragmatic decision. when you talk about civility, you can't say to a bunch of people you sold your souls. anyway, i know it's a turn of phrase. you probably didn't mean it. i am enjoying the emotional reaction on the left. foreseeing some kind of grim apocalypses of the supreme court has been replaced by "duck dynasty" ." i saw a great suggestion. you know what president obama did, he picked fairly young women to be on the supreme court. and i do think -- i saw ben shapiro tweet that if he was chosen, he's a lawyer. maybe 55, 60 years. i think trump has to pick somebody young, somebody that can last for a long, long time. but i do think to everybody's
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point, kennedy pleased and displeased often the same peopl people. ronald reagan appointed this man who backed abortion and gay marriage which tells you you can never predict what's going to happen when you put that person on the court. when they get on the court, sometimes things change and they start picking about do i really want to mess things up? do i want to pull things back? they change. >> juan: let me respond to you. i don't think there's any question about the party selling his soul, because if you think about a man who defamed john mccain, manner talks about grabbing women come for the evangelicals, i don't think there was any question abortion was the issue. abortion, in terms of the supreme court and the supreme court ruling. they want someone there who will overturn roe v. wade. they are willing to overlook all trump's flaws and say well, hillary would put a lefty up there, right? >> dana: isn't that what greg was saying?
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>> juan: greg says i was not being civil by saying i sold their souls and he was trying to make the point that somehow, you know, it's okay for conservatives to celebrate this victory. i think, greg, there's a bigger point here witches you need americans to believe in this court. this court does not have an army. there is nobody to make you respect the court comes with the idea is that the american people would grant them authentic and sincere leeway to make decisions based on law. if people start to believe that this is just a trump puppet court -- >> greg: you could argue the same thing for obama's choices. very partisan. >> dana: what you are wanting in the what the president said he wants his judges who will adhere to the constitution and not try to make law outside the constitution. >> juan: we had a poll that said nearly 67% of americans say the constitution has to be interpreted in a contemporary context.
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>> jesse: it's a good thing that supreme court justices don't rule by polls. they are not politicians. they are supposed to interpret the constitution as it was written. to your point, the court swings to the left and right over generations, and i think part of the american people that stays the same, they respect the institution of the court. once the supreme court makes a decision, the country says the supreme court sided, and were going to agree with it, whether it's a left-wing court or right-wing court. that's been a tradition in the country. >> juan: if you go back, '54 in the brown decision, there's massive resistance. it was the eisenhower administration willing to do things like send the 100 101st airborne. >> dana: will have plenty of time to talk about the nomination. coming up, the stunning democratic primary upset that has the political world talking next.
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thanks for the ride-along, captain! i've never been in one of these before, even though geico has been- ohhh. ooh ohh here we go, here we go. you got cut off there, what were you saying? oooo. oh no no. maybe that geico has been proudly serving the military for over 75 years? is that what you wanted to say? mhmmm. i have to say, you seemed a lot chattier on tv. geico. proudly serving the military for over 75 years. you ok back there, buddy?
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>> juan: a stunning upset in the democratic party last night. 29-year-old democrat socialist alexandria ocasio-cortez shocking the political landscape and herself after beating joe crowley in new york. crowley didn't bother showing up to one of the debates, opting to send a proxy on his behalf. ocasio-cortez ran on a platform part of the left, calling for the abolishment of i.c.e. and he's -- raising eyebrows on the impeachment question. >> would you push for a trump impeachment? >> i would support impeachment. i think we have the grounds to do it. >> juan: democratic leader nancy pelosi downplaying the defeat of one of her top allies. >> they made a choice in one district. let's not get carried away on demographics and the rest of it. it's not to be viewed as
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something that stands for everything else. >> juan: this reminds me a little bit of what happened with eric cantor a while back. on the left, everybody thought joe crowley was the next nancy pelosi. >> dana: he had set himself up to be the next speaker of the house. reminds me of something congressman steve stivers told everyone of them, you have to run like you are ten points down, even if your internal polls are saying you are way ahead or you think some underfunded underdog could never possibly on ctu. this is the year that's very different. only 26,000 people voted in that election. you have to run like you're going to lose, or else you'll find wind up finding yourself having to concede to someone you didn't think was going to win. >> juan: here are some of the things that winter stands for.
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she wants a ban on guns. she is opposed to i.c.e., immigration control folks. and she wants campaign finance reform. >> jesse: keep telling me all these wacky things she believes. it's great for republicans. i remember when obama was president commit push the republican party pretty far to the right. the rise of the tea party and the internal warfare with the moderates and the tea party. it is still playing out today. right now donald trump is doing that for the democrats. pushing the democrats so far to the right -- pushing the democrats so far to the left. you see socialist, and occupy wall street democrat who wants to abolish i.c.e. and impeach the president and believes in medicare for all which cost $30 trillion over ten years. this is the result and i think it's good to have her voice in congress. i'm really glad that we are hearing her, but she's obviously a star. she's got a big bright smile, very young, attractive, tall,
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good-looking woman. a lot of energy. and she's going to be on every single cable news show for the next couple months. we better get used to saying her name. i can't pronounce her last name. >> dana: ocasio-cortez. >> jesse: ocasio-cortez. we are going to have to give her a little nickname. it's a tongue twister. >> juan: she is a bernie sanders supporters. sanders has not been doing well in terms of people he endorses winning on the democratic side. but the energy she represents has been seen now across the country in terms of aquatic turnout. is this an indication that rather than trying to go to the middle and try to be nice with donald trump and his supporters, democrats or go hard to the left? >> kimberly: no, i think it's a losing strategy but if they want to go ahead, knock themselves out. this is campaign laziness. you shouldn't lose if you are someone like him, by 3600 votes. he should've showed up for
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everything and not mail that in. yes, he follows in the footsteps of hillary clinton. he should have done more and he did last and he lost. maybe he is going to do a book tour and cry about it for a year. we will see. as for the momentum and progressives, socialist winning, okay. this is the democratic party. they don't have any messaging or not they have fringe candidates like this coming out. that's not going to win any major elections or anything like that. it's too alienating and too far left. it's not the principles that are sustainable and work unless you would like to run for office in venezuela. then it would be fantastic. nevertheless, she went out there, put yourself out there to win and run and she managed to pull this off. much to everyone's surprise, including her own. we will see what happens but i think it's presenting polarizing choices. we will see what she does with it. she is going to get the sound
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bites and get some interviews. now she has tried to start thinking like a serious candidate and what she's actually going to put forward. >> juan: gragg, given what kimberly just said, sounds like the energy here is anti-trump on the left and that's why she came along. >> greg: i think it's anti-democratic party when you remember that it was hillary that cheated ernie out of his chance of becoming the nominee. so pelosi sees this as an anomaly. i see it as a trend. there could be a bunch of bernies, especially to jesse's point about the media will chris of her as a superstar. she will be on msnbc more than russians. the media desperately wants to prompt somebody is at superstar because they are suffering for the dream. they need the new obama, they're going to overlook the extreme rhetoric is on her side. socialism never has worked. it's a capitalist society were the effects don't count.
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she will get the hero worship. they won't notice that there are some troubling people that support her. the radical talked about impeachment. they will overlook that as well. they are as disgusted by hillary and what happened in the election as many people who voted for trump were disgusted by mainstream republicanism. >> juan: the republican national committee is out with a new ad highlighting liberal instability, they say, aimed at president trump. we will play that ad for you right here on "the five" ." ♪
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supporters. >> a few years ago, ideas we talked about were thought to be fringe ideas, radical ideas, extremist ideas. those ideas are now mainstream. >> i don't know why there aren't uprisings all over the country. >> if you see anybody in that cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, in a gasoline station, you get up and create a crowd. >> jesse: that is only half the ad. it is so good. it's like hannity himself got this ad and it's about time the republican national committee came out guns blazing but i think it's going to be extremely effective. >> dana: i think it's very effective to use people's words against them. the republicans didn't say all these things. they are just putting together what the democrats have said and done. it's pretty amazing that maxine waters would give donald trump the high ground on civility. she will never be able to take it back unless she apologizes.
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doesn't look like she's going to do that. >> jesse: other visual elements. they have snoop dogg holding a gun. they have madonna saying she wants to bomb the white house. this is very aggressive. >> greg: you can say, if you're a liberal, you can say it's the greatest hits of the resistance. i think it works. i would say if i were making a commercial, i would have shown all the achievements on jobs, taxes, north korea. gdp, the economy, terror. show those things and then rewind it so that it starts to disappear and say this is what will happen if you don't vote. the one thing we've learned is that people don't want to lose things that they already have. a lot of things have happened in 18 months that you don't want to lose. >> jesse: it could be a contrast moment where they are setting something up for a different ad, like greg said, to make them think you know watch.
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we don't want to lose what we have. >> kimberly: i think this is brutally effective. it is 30 seconds. highly persuaded, engaging, shows the vitriol in the incendiary rhetoric calling for violence. wait a second. this is the party you are going to vote for? okay, you have the economy in great numbers. national security. or you have this kind of insanity. it is so unglued and unhinged. it seems like they are super framed and dangerous and not reasonable or sane. >> jesse: we have samantha bee in there with the feckless language. bill maher routing for recession and johnny depp. rough stuff. >> juan: to me, politics.
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poor republicans, we are so beaten down. they insult us and call us names. they don't respect the president. give me a break. who is the least civil president we've ever seen? i believe we know the answer and he's in the white house right now. they have a situation where. people like yeah, this is good because of somebody gets pushed out of the red hen restaurant, asked to leave, oh, that means we are put upon. poor conservatives. get out of here. >> greg: one republican did get shot recently. >> juan: we are a year away from people getting run over by a neo-nazi. i worry about neo-nazis. >> greg: we all do. >> juan: this is the problem that all of us want to have more civil debate and discussion, but to say that maxine waters is calling for violence? she never said anything like
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that. that's when you go over the top. people say understand what's going on here. this is red meat to the base. >> greg: democrats had the same thing. schumer said exactly what you said didn't happen. he said she was calling for stuff and she should stop. >> juan: she did not call for violence. >> greg: i am saying that schumer said it. >> kimberly: well, it wasn't civil with the red hen restaurant because she followed the family across the street so they couldn't even go someplace else to eat. there is nothing civil about that. >> juan: this is not civil. >> jesse: we know how effective the ad is based on juan's reaction. peter strzok feeling the heat on capitol hill. members of congress were weighing in on his closed-door testimony. that's next. there are multiples on the table: one is cash, three are fha, one is va. so what can you do? she's saying a whole lotta people want to buy this house. but you got this! rocket mortgage by quicken loans makes the complex simple. understand the details and get approved in as few
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>> kimberly: fbi agent peter strzok vowed to stop trump. finally answering for his biased text messages and explaining his role in the clinton email investigation russia probe. he was grilled for hours today behind closed doors by two house committees. congressman markman is reacting to the testimony. >> i would expect any witness to suggest that they have looked at this impartial. i don't know how you read the text. and how any reasonable person reads the texts and would suggest there is no bias if you have intimate personal conversation between two people that normally would show the intent more so than perhaps something that would be said in public. >> kimberly: reaction to this. people have been waiting quite some time to get some of the information and hear from him. we have seen the text messages but not heard from him directly. >> jesse: i wish i had heard from him on camera.
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it is sad he was behind closed doors but that's the way things are. i guess that was classified information shared. it would be like a dirty cop texting his lover about i hate black people and black people are the worst and then he turns the screws to a black guy, sets this up and sprinkles evidence all over and then you charge him and you say seems like you are a little biased. oh, i never let my bias impact my investigation. i mean, come on. it's common sense. he was so biased he couldn't participate surely in the mueller investigation when he got fired. that means he is so biased he shouldn't have been participating in the hillary and trump-russia fbi investigations. the context is critical. it's not like he was saying out of the blue i hate trump, these are my personal feelings. these text messages about hating trump and stopping trump and insurance policies were made in the context of him discussing investigative steps and decisions. he was making them as an fbi
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agent. i want to bring up one thing we glossed over last week. susan rice's chief cybersecurity officer testified on camera that she gave him a standout order about russian interference when russia was interfering in the 2016 election. susan rice said stand down. don't do anything about russian interference. come on. how serious is this? >> juan: can i respond? >> kimberly: he was looking directly at you. >> juan: i didn't want to interrupt. sometimes the garbage is so heavy you have to watch your head. i want to say remember that the obama administration, president obama, i wish he had done differently, decided that it would come across as partisan if they went before the american people. >> jesse: obama would never want to come across as partisan. >> juan: i didn't interrupt you. they decided first to approach majority leader mcconnell and say do you want to join us in saying there is russian interference and we are taking steps to combat so people don't
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view it as somehow favoring clinton over trump. >> jesse: but they never even even -- why not tell them? >> juan: the second thing to say here is that when strzok and page, there has been an inspector general report. it's not subject to "we don't know." the inspector general of the united states in the trump justice department said there was no indication of bias or untoward behavior by peter strzok in the investigation. in fact, i was about to say, if anybody deserves an apology, it is clinton. >> dana: i don't know what else to say. the hearing. we don't know a lot about it. this seemed like an -- mark meadows says none of his concerns a been alleviated. i think if he were to testify for the next ten months, they would say the same thing. nobody's minds are going to be changed.
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>> greg: there is one question has to be asked. if this doesn't constitute bias among someone investigating you, what would? what is the threshold? does that have to have implied violence? then it would be like no, no, n no. these texts are between emotional people fraught with passion. we've all been there. there's never going to be a threshold. >> juan: the threshold would be if you took action that was biased. >> jesse: he did. >> juan: he did not. if he had, you would be jumping up and down. there is no evidence he did anything but conduct a legitimate investigation. he wasn't the sole decision-maker. >> jesse: wait until the ig report comes out. >> juan: it did come out. >> jesse: not on russia investigation. >> kimberly: israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu taking a page
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>> greg: finally soccer is good for something. i kid. i love soccer. the israeli prime minister congratulating iran on their exploits in something called the world cup. apparently the world cup is a competition between countries that play soccer. it's very popular. >> can you imagine how hard it is to stop or a model from scoring a goal? i used to play soccer. let me tell you with the most impossible. but the iranian team just did the impossible. to the iranian people, i say you showed courage on the playing field. >> greg: as we worry about incivility within our own borders, we are watching all of
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branches sprouting all over. miller to trump's experiment, netanyahu is taking a will "we will see what happened" approach to iran. we all like soccer, and watching soccer with our families. you can only do that when there is peace and prosperity. netanyahu is creating a contrast between what is and what could be. does that sound familiar? john bolton and his mustache meets with putin, there seems to be a new pattern. while world leaders have exchange pleasantries before, this feels different. excessive pieces being sold and finally people are buying. let's hope these opportunities aren't squandered the way they were before. if an outstretched hand works with north korea or iran or russia, maybe it can work with our fellow americans too. to quote the guy who kicked this off, we will see what happens. dana, he's appealing to what's going on in the iran right now, the people are out on the
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streets. >> dana: they are having protests because we put our sanctions back on. started to have an immediate effect. unlike before, however, and i would say way back, these protests this week, they are shouting "death to the palestinians," not death to the united states. they are focused on their government being the enemy of the people of iran. i would imagine they are figuring out, if you can talk directly to the people of iraq, they might be able to force change in their leadership. the other thing i would say is that freedom of information, being able to get unfiltered, raw information through people's phones, on the internet, rather than through state television could be a big answer in places like iran, venezuela, north korea, and russia. >> greg: have you been following the stuff, jesse, things going on in north korea. >> jesse: images that they might've started in the work on
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a nuclear facility. it's troubling. trump needs to reengage on that and i'm sure he will. keep the momentum going. maybe he needs to play a round of golf with kim jong un. obviously sports is in elixir, the spirit around the country during the olympics. that's always positive and you saw what happened with north and south korea on that front. when trump plays golf with people, placate the leader of north korea? i was kidding. >> dana: you said it seriously. >> jesse: a.b. mar-a-lago, may be a round of 18. in all seriousness, people are moving away from isolationism to a certain extent and to a new era of engagement. it's interesting that donald trump and netanyahu are the ones leading the charge. >> greg: juan, don't you think there could be a summit in the offing if the north korea in the u.s. could do it, why not israel
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and iran? >> juan: i don't see that coming. i was awed by the way you put icing or pink eyeglasses on to talk about what's going on in north korea. maybe you could do that with harley-davidson moving out as the result of trump's tariffs. if this was obama, you would be celebrating. north korea is out there doing their own thing. >> kimberly: we wouldn't be celebrating. nobody wants that. he needs to be addressed. he needs to be pushed back. maybe there is more time, maybe it is time for more fire in theory, not golf. he's not going to put up with it, that's for sure. if kim jong un wants to play cutesy with president trump, he will lose that battle. >> greg: i enjoy soccer. i don't enjoy watching it. it is fun to play. not enough scoring. >> dana: a lot of running around. >> greg: i don't like running
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around. "one more thing" is up next. insurance that won't replace the full value of your new car? you're better off throwing your money right into the harbor. i'm gonna regret that. with new car replacement, if your brand new car gets totaled, liberty mutual will pay the entire value plus depreciation. liberty stands with you. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ ♪ if you have recurring constipation and belly pain, talk to your doctor and say yesss! to linzess. yesss! linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation or chronic constipation. linzess can help relieve your belly pain, and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements.
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i caught martha trying to injury our quarterback. watch this. >> you tried to injure him. when he was going around for a picture. >> [laughing]. >> you pulled tables out and tried to trip him. dirty! >> congratulations? >> thank you. >> i can get tickets to the home opener against the falcons? >> let's see. >> you are awful. >> i got one question does that was my question. >> when you have a shot you have to take it. >> i have not heard back, though. >> i bet you will. >> i am not sure. >> sometimes you want to watch a good race the new york marathon or the running of bulls or the running of the supreme court decisions. assistants and interns have to race when the decisions are handed out and run to the cameras. shannon bream and her team gave
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is their all over the last couple of days. >> wow. >> they made their plan. the supreme court police tried to slow them down. look at that. shannon bream's assistant an amazing stride. their great camera crew. that's shannon bream. she did it herself. they did a great job. we got the scoop today. >> wow. the interns learning from the track teams. >> you can't wear a cute shoe. get your running shoes on. >> a book her to promote the king of content. ever lasting control of the media empire. this author works for the "wall street journal." it includes a look in his life
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and angry ex-girlfriends and family drama. how the media industry are changing as we know today. it hit book stores yesterday. please take a look and pick up a copy. it's a fascinating discussion about media today. >> all right. >> [laughing]. the monologue. look up my schedule. i will be in texas, new york, new jersey, california. off to the nixon and reagan libraries in august. come visit me. i will be at the villages. >> yeah! >> [cheering]. >> let's do that. >> greg, do want feed this cat news. >> stop!
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>> oh! >> yes. >> it doesn't like salted vinegar chips this cat. >> listen. >> i love them. >> well, then you better be a fan of the cat. >> i. not a cat. >> all right. juan. >> for you historic frequency. a red, white and blue 4th of july treat. a one of a kind version of declaration of independence is on display in the museum. 200 copies were made after the signing but only 26th made on july 4th, 1776 exist today. this is the only one printed on over-size parchment. there are only 2 signatures on it. later copies had signatures of all of the 56 of the founding fathers. >> i thought you were going to race right down there.
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>> i. . >> [laughing]. >> all right. >> i am going home. >> [laughing]. >> the "special report" is up next. >> bret: a big day. this is a fox news alert. i am bret baier in washington. on a day the u.s. supreme court dealt a major blow to unions, justice anthony kennedy announced he will retire next month opening a second vacancy for president trump to fill. the white house did every today but confirm a date for meeting between president trump and russian president vladimir putin and announced a higher. a new white house communications official. on capitol hill, a republican compromise on imaggression fails on the house floor. the senior member of the democratic leadership is shocked by losing in a primary to
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