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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  July 23, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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of a foreign power by any stretch of the imagination. >> carter page is more like inspector divaget than he is james born or james bond. steve: straight to a fox news alert on this monday morning. a gunman opening fire own a busy street in toronto overnight killing one person and killing 13 others and terrorism has not within ruled out. >> from that car? [gun fire. >> i herd at least 20 shots in intervals. clips being spent, reloading, clips being spent. i see at least four people shot here by the fountain. ainsley: shooter dressed in all black opening fire with hand gun in a neighborhood known as greek town. a young woman is dead. a-year-old girl is in critical condition. todd: the gunman killed in a shootout with police. investigators say this was not a random attack but it's too early to tell if this
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was terror or not. ainsley: too many of these to report the mormon church over the weekend. steve: we will keep you posted on what happened overnight in canada. mean while, another fox news alert. the president has been tweeting because we have been hearing from the leader of iran and it's not good news. president rouhani told diplomats in iran earlier yesterday, said. this mr. trump, don't play with the lion's tail. this would only lead to regret. america should know that peace with iran is the mother of all peace. and war with iran is the mother of all wars. ainsley: so our president tweets out in all capital leaders to the iranian president rouhani never ever threaten the united states again or you will suffer consequences the likes of which through throughout history have ever suffered before. we are no longer a country that will stand for your ghengted words of violence and death. be cautious.
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steve: unclear whether or not the threat from the president if it's to iran onto the leader himself. now, earlier last night. out in southern california at the ronald reagan library mike pompeo was speaking and he talked about how the iranian leaders are essentially like the mafia. and they are spreading violence throughout the middle east. he said the united states stands with the people who are protesting in the streets of iran keep in mind since u.s. has pulled out of the iran deal currency has fell off. they don't like the leadership and they want something new and now this. ainsley: out president as we know this morning earlier this year said we are going to withdraw from the iran nuclear deal. iran not happy about that of course. iran, as you know, this is a country that yells death to america. we're -- we have been in a
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conflict with them for a long time. todd: state sponsors of terror like steve said. they are not having such a great situation at home right now. let's remember a few key facts here, if we wanted to we could wipe out iran with a push of a button that's militarily. economically, with regard to everything that's going on there, sanctions could literally destroy the regime that's in power right now. and when push comes to shove on the international economic stage, who is the international community going to side with? a trading partner like the u.s. that has 330 million people or whatever it is in iran that has about 80 million people. they are going to side with iran -- excuse me, they are going to side with the u.s. iran doesn't really have a leg to stand on here in trying to threaten us. >> steve: this is a different kind of negotiation than we saw with the last administration that upghted to broker that deal and sent all that money over there. this president has made it very clear is he taking a different approach. one of the other things that mike pompeo said last night in southern california, he said that the supreme leader
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of iran has got some sort of 95 billion-dollar hedge fund he says, that goes and operates as if it were a slush fund for the revolutionary guard. that is how they are funding the military over there with a big hedge fund probably from oil. ainsley: also, over the weekend, 12 pages i'm holding right here. this is the heavily redacted document. this is the fisa warrant, yes. all of it. steve: how many cartridges did you go through? ainsley: a lot of ink. look how redacted this is. devin nunes. ainsley: we want the fisa the fbi and doj spying on carter page and doing it legally. this is what the doj has released. heavily redacted. steve: very helpful. what does that say? ainsley: republicans are upset about it. they want to see the whole
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thing without all the redactions. todd: one of the republicans speaking out about this, trey gowdy he has been front and center on this since the beginning. here is what he had to say about the underlying issue in here. the fbi relying on the unvetted dossier to spy on carter page. >> carter page is more like inspector gadget and james borne. we'll never know if the fbi had enough without the dossier. the dnc funded dossier because they included it and everyone who reads this fisa application sees the amount of reliance they placed on this product funded by hillary clinton's campaign and the dnc. i do have an issue when you rely on political opposition research that is unsetted and you represent that to a court and use it to spy on an american. todd: what we have to remember, in knowledge mall criminal procedures, a defendant gets to defend him or herself.
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in a surveillance situation, obviously secrecy is paramount. because of that, the court and the people applying for the application need to be completely above reproach. that did not happen here. as a result, we are in the situation we're now. ainsley: they used unverified information to spy on carter page or the trump administration. it was funded as the president tweeted over the weekend reminding all of us it was funded by hillary clinton or by the dnc. steve: right. but they never told that to the fisa judge. ainsley: they didn't. steve: the federal authorities used both the steal dossier ansteele dossier e the fisa court to grant the application. with the 412 pages right there those also include the renewals. four times the fbi told the fisa court it did not believe that christopher steele was the direct source for the opo news story which projected the fisa warrants. he wasn't the source, yet,
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in london court records, they show that steele briefed yahoo news and other reporters at the direction of fusion gps which is the opposition research firm. there is chris steele right there, behind the dossier they describe steele as business associate that research into trump's russia ties but do not mention that fusion gps was funded by the dnc and hillary clinton. ainsley: that's why there's 13 republicans who wrote that letter to the president in june included trey gowdy and devin nunes they are saying there irregularities with the sources. the information is not consistent. they have a problem with the fbi operations guide that prohibits the fbi from using unverified material to obtain fisa warrants. they are saying that dirty dossier that the president tweeted about this weekend he called it the dirty dossier. that was used to spy on carter page it was unverified which means it's illegal.
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steve: big question is and republicans have asked for a while unredacted versions. republicans i think it was mark meadows of north carolina that said keep the names, the methods and the secrets secret. ainsley: classified information. steve: everything else, there is a lot of stuff here you would think is not a method of surveillance or anything like that. todd: we clearly still do not know a lot. i have a question for rod rosenstein was he just rubber stamping things which basic it we have all been inferiors to a superior push paper along and rubber stamp things or was this a concerted effort? we really need to get answers. ainsley: what you are talking about the is he fliewl. todd: renewal, yes. ainsley: that time runs out eventually you have to go back to the fisa court and renew it last person to sign it on the third renewal was rod rosenstein. todd: right. steve: i don't know about rod rosenstein. i do know that historically, this is the first time we have ever seen a fisa application in 40 years. nobody has ever seen one biff.
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everybody is like oh, that's what it looks like. we have heard through this entire process over the last year or so though that it sounds like the application process is a rubber stamp. usually if the fbi goes to the fisa judge, they say hey, we need to keep tabs on this carter page. ainsley: 99% of the time. steve: usually they go okay. do you think they are going to read that stuff? ainsley: 412 pages. todd: somebody who has been on the forefront of this is tom fitton. we have him coming up at 6:15. president of judicial watch, to weigh in. i'm sure he has a ton to say. and speaking of somebody who continuously has a lot to say, it's our old friend hillary clinton. take a listen to what she had to say over the weekend with regard to, you guessed it, immigration and our president. >> any of you work for an airline i hope you will let me know, direct message me, because we need to get vouchers and discounted tickets to bring these families back together across that thousand miles.
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todd: she continues to raise the bar on lunancy. steve: what she is doing is something that is red hot on the democratic side is the issue of immigration. so what she is saying is, you know, if you work for an air company or airline company or something like that and have you free vouchers for people to travel, let's try to reunite some these families that are trying to get back into the country. ainsley: she'll provide the ride to reunite families and offer illegals a path into america. steve: she also advised a crowd to donate charities that provide spanish speaking social workers and lawyers. she walls here at ozzy fest on saturday night. ainsley: send in your foxandfriends.com. steve: rainy monday. ainsley: pouring down as we came in this morning. it was great when i got in the car. jillian: i got stuck in an elevator this morning. todd: con frat labor relations labor relation of.
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jillian: it's been aning there morning. ainsley: how long? jillian: about 15 minutes. start with a fox news alert. washington state community mourning the death of a police officer. officer was trying to stop a run away suspect with spike strippings when he was hit by another officer's car south of seattle. the suspect eventually crashed and is now in custody. morano is an 8 year veteran of the force. awarded for saving elderly woman from a fire in 2016. he leaves behind a wife and two kids. one person dead and another hurt after a shooting in mormon church in nevada. john kelly o'connor walked into the church, fired shots in the middle of a service, and then walked back to his home. o'connor later turned himself. in police believe it was a targeted attack against one person but at this point the motive remains unknown. air scare this weekend at president trump's golf club. u.s.a. air force f-16 fighter jet ordered to intercept a small plane flying in restricted space
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over bedminster, new jersey. the president was at the club at the sam at the time. the small plane landed at the airport and information about the pilot was not released. tiger woods making great strides in his come back but falling shorts of 15th major win. tiger in his classic sunday red shirt you can see there finishing tied for sixth after holding soul possession of the lead. it belonged to his partner molarnni. jillian: the italian winning the first major. todd: unbelievable. never seen anything like it. he won 1.8 million bucks with his putter. steve: good for him. ainsley: thank you, jillian. steve: coming up.
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ainsley: 6:12 here on the east coast. kristin gillibrand doubling down on calls to abolish the ice. >> when we flip the house and senate we should abolish ice. ainsley: she didn't stop there. steve: this guy's attempt to hide from the cops is a total washout. story behind the picture is moments away. you are watching "fox & friends." ♪ round, round ♪ you giv spin me round and round ♪ i've got to tell you something important. it's not going to be easy. quicksilver earns you unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere. actually, that's super easy. my bad.
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-progressive knows small business makes big demands. -you're not gonna make it, you're not gonna make it! ask her if we can do her next wedding too! -so we'll design the insurance solution that fits your business. -on second thought, don't...ask that. steve: fisa documents released revealing anti-trump dossier was the source in obtaining the fisa warrant leading up to the 2016 election. tom fitton watchdog of the group judicial watch fought for the release of these redacted documents and is urging the president to declassify them. he is here to explain. tom, good morning to you. >> good morning. how are you. steve: i'm looking at the documents. there is a lot of sharpy in there. a lot of stuff blacked out. we have no idea what's if there there. you think the president this morning could call somebody and declassify it and we would know what they are
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hiding, right? >> that's for sure. devin nunes bob goodlatte is suggesting there is other material in there that is classified right now but doesn't need to be classified. we already see from the material that was released over the weekend that the material that was -- we were told -- they couldn't even tell us existed one way or another didn't need to be classified. and we know why it was classified. it wasn't because they were protecting national security secrets. it was to cover up misconduct by the justice department and the fbi and misleading the courts by using this dossier in a dishonest way to gain a warrant to target the trump team u. steve: right u and apparently four times the fbi told the fisa court they didn't think that christopher steele, the guy behind the dossier was the guy who leaked the news to yahoo news that got the ball rolling when in fact he did. >> i call it a self-licking ice cream cone that document. they talk about the dossier generally. then they talk about news reports about the dossier. then they talk about a state
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department information about carter page that had its origins according to reports in the dossier and the clinton campaign. this is a clinton campaign document that was presented to the court as if it weren't and then they used reports about the clinton campaign document to justify asking for a warrant to target the trump team. anybody signed on to ask questions what they signed on to when. unfortunately includes the number two at the justice department, rod rosenstein. steve: sure, what is puzzling to me though is the fact that they did not revealed that the dnc and hillary clinton were paying for the dossier. instead they said somebody is obviously looking for dirt on trump. is that enough? >> i encourage your viewers to go look at that portion of the dossier footnote describe source number one which looked to be the danger source. they went out of their way
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to talk about to avoid talking about the fact it was the clinton campaign behind it there was no good reason not to inform the court that other than to, again, mislead the court into providing a pretext to spy on the trump team. look, this is about carter page in theory. but, when you look at what's been released. it was all about getting at the trump campaign. steve: absolutely. we heard from carter page yesterday. he said it's laughable. >> he wasn't a spy. he wasn't an agent of the russians. he was a cooperator with the fbi. they didn't need to spy on him. it was a fraud and hoax designed to target trump. and the doj and fbi and the usama bin laden behind it needed to be held by account. steve: by spying on him they spied on everybody in the trump campaign. tom fitton thank you very much. it was judicial watch with their freedom of information request that got this all out in front of us. thank you, sir. >> you are welcome. thank you. steve: coming up straight
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ahead on this monday morning democratic socialism is rising on the left. does anybody know what living like that would be like. a panel of immigrants who fled socialism for america here to discuss what those two like. go rewards® credit card from navy federal credit union... our members are the mission. you always get the lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed?m let's get someone to say it with a really low voice. carl? lowest price guaranteed. what about the world's lowest limbo stick? how low can you go? nice one, carl. hey i've got an idea. just say, badda book. badda boom.
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it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. todd: some quick headlines now. caught on camera. watch as a pickup truck swerves across traffic and hits a median in an apparent fit of road rage. the driver losing control after trying to cut off suv on denver highway, unclear if anyone was hurt or arrested. historic plane crashes during takeoff and bursts into flames. check this out. >> sorry, sorry, sorry. holy [bleep] holy [bleep]
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oh. todd: world war ii plane going down airport outside of texas. all 13 people on board got out safely. one person had some serious burns. seven others have minor injuries. ainsley, over to you. ainsley: thank you, todd. democratic socialism is on the rise among the progressive left. >> capitalism has not always existed in the world and it will not always exist in the world. ainsley: but do these folks who live in america do they truly understanding what it's like living in a socialist country have any here with the perspective is panel of immigrants all of whom fled countries for the american wave life. republican strategist and attorney peter lamaj fromly veinia, from russia and dana of nic rag gravment thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having us. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. reading all the notes that you have sewed to our producers and some of it so horrific. nic kit tax start with you, nik,
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you lived under a socialist state and saw many family members die because of this. can you go into more detail. >> in russia we have a single pair healthcare system socialist system survived the collapse of the soviet union. many of family members particularly older cannot get basic healthcare treatment. unfortunately this is a problem also for my friends who live in russia still there who are not as lucky as i am to have moved to the united states. it's a very big issue. and hearing politicians here in the united states advocate for systems such as a single pair healthcare system is frightening. ainsley: i have seen videos not supposed to leaf nicaragua what's going on down there. i'm seeing journalists being killed on the streets in your country. tell us what you escaped from. >> i came in 1981. i lived through the war, unfortunately. the same. i saw people on the streets and saw airplanes going over
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my house people were trying to escape communism but they had been there since 1979. so it took 40 years for the people to wake up and realize that it is another type of dictatorship what they have. ainsley: you have people here running under a socialist ticket. the democratic socialists of america. the path to paid member was 5,000. last week 45,000. 42 people running for office in america federal, state or local levels. formal endorsement from the dsa. now, peter, you say there is no such thing as a democratic socialism. you say that's an oxymoron. explain that. >> what i mean is that you cannot have a democratic socialism. social is coercion. socialism is forced. you cannot establish a system that people don't want without using power. what happened 1940s when communists came to albania, the first thing that they
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did, they disarmed the population and the moment they disarmed the population, got rid of the freedom of speech and then they starte start forcing peoplo comply with the requirements of a communist regime or socialist regime. anyone who disagreed with them was subjected to arrest. to tortures to interment camps. my family paid a price with that because we disagreed with a socialist regime. my entire family was taken to a consecration camp where my entire family was tortured to death. i don't get how the younger of the united states embrace a system failed all over the world and every time we tried it in eastern europe including russia and the gentleman speaking here today will give you the exact same examples that i'm giving you unless ordinary folks like you and i get involved and push back, socialism is coming to the united states and is not going to look good for our children and grandchildren. ainsley: all right. thank you all for being with us. i'm so glad you are here in america. god bless you all. >> thank you for having us.
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>> thank you. >> thank you for having us. ainsley: you are welcome. firing back at the thieves who stole his american flag. >> i think they are a coward, honestly. anybody who sees one of those flags they know there is some kind of history behind it. ainsley: community is rallying around that guy to help a hero. plus, what did janice do this weekend. she crawled through the mud for a very good cause. we will tell you about that coming up. happy birthday to daniel rate cliff the harry potter star turns 30 years old today. >> you are a wizard, harry. >> i'm a, what? >> a wizard. crabfest is back at red lobster! discover our largest variety of crab and crab dishes all year! like new crabfest combo. your one chance to have new jumbo snow crab with tender dungeness crab. or try crab lover's dream. sweet, juicy king crab and jumbo snow crab
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i think we should get rid of ice, immigration is our strength. it is our -- diversity is what makes our country and economy so strong. steve: that is new york senator kristin gillibrand at ozy fest we were talking about earlier in new york over the weekend. she, just like we were talking in the a block, a number of people on the politic left wanted to seize on this moment regarding immigration. so many people are saying okay, let's get rid of ice. whwhile they did try to bring it up last week. of course nobody voted for it for the most part it is a potent message where, if we take the house and the senate, let's just get rid it. ainsley: cynthia nixon one of the first to say accomplish ice. everyone's jaw dropped open. now a lot of democrats are passing along that mess agreeing with her. she was there at ozy fest. we wonder you had what this
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is. part music festival and talk and music. it's here in new york takes place annually once a year. they have lots of leaders, famous speakers, famous authors and they are all invited to come and speak. malcolm gladwell was one of the speakers, chelsea handler. todd: break down her statement. implying so much stuff here. deal with the children that are separated. well, we are dealing with the children that are separated. everything should be done. reuniounified. she says immigration sour strength. nobody is disagreeing with the fact that immigration is such an important thing to the united states of america. it's illegal immigration that we are talking about. lastly, steve, before we go if i can add this. i'm a double alum with her. undergrad and law school. i feel like she is devaluing our degree with these stupid statements. steve: political left going into november. if you like ice, vote for republicans. if you want to get rid of it, vote for democrats.
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she also said if the democrats win the house and senate, they should move on all the gun issues. the first month of taking back congress. ainsley: she talked about that. not agreeing with her. steve: people can't buy bump stocks. get rid of the big magazines. it's a two for. what do you think about that? email us at friends@foxnews.com. also, you can tweet us and you can facebook us because we are very busy on social media. ainsley: that's right. let us know if you have ever been to an ozy fest or if you are planning on going. todd: ted talk meets food meets music. steve: jillian joins us with the news. jillian: thanks for stretching. todd: no problem. jillian: get you caught up on some of this news. the coast guard will try to pull out the doomed duck boat from the bottom of a missouri lake. 17 people were killed when it capsized and sank in a storm last week. we now know the mechanic who
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inspected the boat last year warned the company that it could become a death trap in bad weather. he told his family they would never ride the boats again. the family who lost 9 photo before the deadly ride. iraq war veteran makes deadly plea to get stolen american flag back it was taken off the back of gomez's truck while he worked in tacoma, washington. this sign is in front of his home said et bottom four stripes had his late friends' blood on them. >> i think they are a coward it brings tears to my eyes. good feeling that flag. is he part of that flag. ainsley: iraqi boy gave him the flag in 2007 he used it as a tourniquet on his friend when they were hit with a roadside bomb bomb. a new app. could soon reveal how much coffee you need to stay alert. the u.s. military has developed an algorithm to
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figure out how much caffeine sleep deprived soldiers need to operate at optimal alertness. people who don't get enough sleep should drink two cups when they wake up and another two cups four hours later. hoping to create an app. to let coffee lovers know exactly how much to drink. call this guy's attempt to hide from the cops a total washout. spotted inside a drier trying to avoid cops in washington state. spokane police joining on facebook writing quote the adult version of hide-and-seek never turns out well for anyone. he was arrested for violating a no contact order. that doesn't look comfortable, does it? guys? steve: they caught him and he was hung out to drier? >> oh. >> bravo. ainsley: how do they sit in there? that's one of those compact ones, it's stackable. steve: jillian, thank you very much. here in new york city, it is rainy. it is rainy all over the
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place. janice dean, the radar machine shows us where? >> east coast for much of the workweek because we have this trough in place. meaning that unsettled weather is going to be the story for much of the workweek anywhere from florida all the way up towards the mid-atlantic and the northeast. this is forecast rainfall. some areas could get several inches in a short period of time. mid-atlantic region is where we are concerned because they are water logged here. any more rain is going to cause a pretty bad situation pretty quickly. on alert here. the big story is the heat the south and southwest where we have heat advisories in place there are your heat advisories in texas again where they have been dealing with over 100 degrees for the last week or. so there are your forecast highs for tuesday as well. we will get a little break across dallas but up against past 100 degrees. i was in new jersey on saturday. somerset new jersey for a good cause. getting mucked up for muckfest ms. a cause very near and dear to my heart because i was
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dises diagnosed in multiple sclerosis in 2005. we were raising money and awareness for that take a look. we are a the muckfest helping the ms sewed. we are getting dirty, my friends. what can i expect? this is my first muckfest? >> expect to look like this. absolutely. >> how is it going. >> great event. 3,000 participants. raising lots of money for the m.s. society. $30 million throughout the series. janice: are we done yet? steve: it was a rainy day on saturday. janice: no. actually it was beautiful in the morning and rain came in the afternoon. it didn't matter. we all got mucky. ainsley: it looks like so much fun. janice: i will say it's pretty grueling.
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i have no strength in my you were body. it was for a great cause. over this past seven years muckfest is actually in several different cities. they have raised $30 million for m.s. ainsley: wow. janice: raised about 300,000 in somerset, new jersey this weekend and, you know, i loved it. i'm going to be back next year. ainsley: all the money go to research. janice: getting close to maybe not a cure but stopping the progression of the disease. that's where we hope to go in the next couple of years. steve: when you are covered with mud as you are the end of muckfest. before you get in the car do you change clothes or do they hose you down? >> both. there are hosing stations and they had nice little tents where we could change. but i had mud in my hair. i had mud everywhere. you know i will do anything for a good cause. todd: ainsley souter of volunteered a little bit. could i volunteer a little bit if you are doing it again next year. janice: i will do it again next year. i will put you in there. ainsley: i would love to.
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janice: you will get wet and muddy. it was fun but again i can't lift anything today. steve: you don't have. to say we will help with you the weather button. just tell me oh, oh, if i push this it means it's time for a tease. janice: or a garage door opener. steve: next on the rundown this monday mornings. russian collapse the whole thing was a hoax now we have proof. dan bongino is coming up next. stooded to president's approval ratings higher than ever. comes down to one key issue. stuart varney on that coming up ♪ know what? no, what? i just switched to geico... ...and got more.
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jillian: uber commerce live streamed. jason has been suspended from uber and fired from lyft posted nearly 700 rides online. new scanners at airports worldwide could put an end to the liquids ban. technology produce image inside bureau. heathrow is testing the scanners now. trials have been done inside new york city jfk airport. steve. steve: thank you, jillian. we have been telling you about releasing the fisa warrant carter page. moments ago the president tweeted this out. now we find out it was the unverified and fake dossier paid for by crooked hillary clinton and the dnc. it was knowingly and falsely submitted to fisa and which was responsible for starting
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the totally conflicted and discredited mueller witch-hunt. there is a lot going on in that tweet. ainsley: here to weigh in is dan bongino the former secret service agent and host of the dan bongino show podcast. he joins us now with his perspective. good morning to you, dan. what do you think about thi this? >> >> president trump is right and right to be annoyed, guys. listen, now we know, now that the fisa warrant application has been released. all 400 pantle pages and i have gotten through most of it, the case was a hoax. the hoax was paid for by hillary clinton. people in the media will the hoax and the hoax was brought to a court and lied to. guys, we're don't even have to use my words or the words of president trump to describe the hoax. let's describe the hoax using the fbi leadership's own words about the hoax. jim comey about the information in the warrant to spy on the trump team. right? what did he say? it was i salacious and unverified. his number two, andy mccabe, what did he say about it?
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if we didn't have the fake information we never would have had the fisa warrant that's andy mccabe. the head of the counter intelligence division asked if they verified the hoax. oh it was in infancy. this one is the icing on the cake. peter strzok, the lead hoax investigator. what did he say about the hoax? there is no there there there. you all got worked, america. this is the biggest scam in modern american history. >> one of the things jaw dropping while it was political opposition research that essentially was the dossier, they never revealed that it was funded by hillary clinton dnc. they just said yeah, it's the guy behind it is somebody who is looking for dirt on trump. >> you think that might be a critical fact. a guy walking out of a facility with money and fail to mention that he robbed the bank. the critical component of information the judge needed to evaluate the content was hillary clinton's team paid
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for this information. it was her information. it was her team. now, yet, dancing around that doesn't absolve them of the responsibility. one other critical thing about, this too. i see the liberals, i already know where they are going with it well portions of 'are redacted. they are correct. heavy portions are we americans with disabilities acted. i have been to utter cop. i have sworn to warrants. there is no extra credit for information in front of a judge. you only put in a warrant what you need to establish probable cause. meaning this: that hoax information in there that we can see was critical towards establishing the legal standard they needed to spy on the trump team. meaning, without it, they never would have had it. the fbi's number two andy mccabe attested to you that. ainsley: dan, you are the authority on that. what disturbed you the most about this? >> that basically donald trump was tweeted like a citizen in a third world communist republic. i mean, ainsley, listen, justice died a little bit friday night. gives you no joy in telling
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you. i'm not like here to own the libs and destroy the constitutional republic. if this was a democrat, i assure you i would go to the grave with this. i would be making the same case on national television. donald trump was treated like a citizen in cuba and liberals don't gave hoot. it's a shame. todd: adam schiff of california saying the president acts like russia has dirt on him. i will play this for you and then get your reaction. >> i certainly think he is acting like someone who is compromised and it may very well be that he is compromised or it may very well be that he believes is he compromised that the russians have information on him. todd: what do you make of all that compromise by schiff. >> is he a fraud and liar and disgrace embarrassment to himself, the congress, the country. adam schiff has been the lead hoaxer. he has been out there on television now for a year looking in the face of you, america, and lying to every one of you in an effort to
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distract the entire country on a hoax russia scandal. is he a fraud. and he should be called out as a fraud. he has been lying to everyone u. steve: exit question real fast. speaking of probable cause as did you a moment ago. was there from what you saw in the application probable cause to investigate carter page for connections to russia? >> probable cause? it wasn't even reasonable suspicion. that document is a joke. the man's team was spied on for zippo. they better produce redactions soon it's going to get worse. ainsley: didn't take long sharpy black black black black black. >> it's about five pages when you get the redactions out. steve: still ahead, ainsley goes one-on-one with white house press secretary sean spicer at home. does he miss working for the president? the answer to that top of the hour. ainsley: plus, despite the his tearia, the president's approval rating is higher
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ainsley: according to brand new poll president trump's approval rating hitting all time high 45% this month. powered by strong support of republicans. steve: economy is number one issue deciding their vote in the midterm elections this november. todd: stuart varney the host of varney and company on the fox business network is here to weigh in right now. so, news flash, it's the
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economy, stupid. which we have said for eternity. >> true. by the way,. todd: yes, sir. >> next time can be on your panel of immigrants who don't like socialism? because i'm a refugee from socialism. i would have loved to have been on that panel. that's another story entirely. ainsley: his approval rating suspect even after his meeting with putin. >> i think you can make the case that his approval ratings are up in large part because of the economy, which is booming, we are returning to prosperity. and also because the democrats are just in love with socialism. and that doesn't fly with most voters. real quick aside if i may. when i left england in the 1970s, railroads, car companies, airlines, steel companies coal production and production and a lot of road haulage, trucking owned by the government and run into the ground that was socialism. i left it because the economy was just tanking. i come to america. frequenfreemarket giant economy.
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all over the place and away we go. ainsley: never regretted it. >> not one moment. steve: ever since the president left helsinki a week ago today, there has been so much negative publicity about the how it all worked out and yet. >> and yet, exactly. this is a poll from the "wall street journal" ntsb. i mean, okay, i mean, it's a good solid poll. taken during and right after the putin summit when there was firestorm of criticism for the president. yet, his approval rating goes up. steve: why? >> it's because of the economy, isn't it? that's the most important issue to most voters, and he has got the solid support of the republican party, 88% behind him. he is unified the party, behind prosperity. the democrats are in love with socialism and up goes the president's approval rating despite putin. how about that? steve: how about that? >> this is a very big week, by the way. find out this week for sure
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that we're growing at 4%. historic, big deal. ainsley: coming up next sean sean spicer we sat down with him at his parent's house. talking with him about his new book. blnks ♪ ♪ ♪
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the president has been tweeting because we have been hearing from the leader of iran and it's not good news. >> the iranian president rouhani never ever threatened the united states again or you will suffer consequences the likes of which few throughout history have ever suffered before. >> the fbi unveiling hundreds of pages of redacted documents this weekend on a the wiretapping
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of carter page. >> you are talking about misleading the courts. i have never been an agent of a foreign power by any stretch of the imagination. this. >> this is about carter page in theory but when you look at what's been released it was all about getting at the trump campaign. >> carter page is more like inspector gadget than is he jason bourn or james bond is did from that car? [gunfire] >> i thought it was fireworks at first because it was rapid fire. people were running. we started running and ran down the side street. ainsley: let's get right to a fox news alert. one person dead. 13 others injured after a gunman opened fire busy street in toronto. terrorism has not been ruled out. todd: shootner all black opening gun in neighborhood known as greek town. one woman dead. 9-year-old girl in critical condition right now. steve: gunman killed in a shootout with the cops.
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investigators say this was not a random act. but it is too early to tell if it was terror. also, apparently, the toronto mayor told toronto canada has a gun problem. let's bring in sean spicer. former white house press secretary, you remember him. he was on tv every afternoon now he has written a great book called the briefing. >> thank you for having me. ainsley: we went to your hometown the house you grew up in we will talk about that in a minute. first you are on the curvey couch and have an opportunity to talk to you about the news of the day that you used to talk about regularly. you are familiar with the tore will iran. >> yeah. ainsley: president of iran warns our president if there is any hostility. he says mr. trump don't play with the lion's tale. >> it there this will lead
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to regret steve: he responded with all c.p.a.'s that means is he yelling never ever threaten the united states again or you will suffer consequences the likes of which few throughout history have ever suffered before. we are no longer a country that's that is a swipe at barack obama that will stand for your commente demented wordf violent and death. be cautious. why did the president put this out this weekend. >> if you are president rouhani you better be clear who you are dealing with president trump made it clear this country under this leadership is not going to stand for that kind of threatening language. i think he better heed those words. steve: in other words it might have worked with the last guy who had this job. >> all i would say is i would not mess with president trump. he means what he says and takes very decisive action.
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if you are president rouhani you better get your team together real quick and read through talking points. todd: you don't anticipate a pallets of cash going to iran. >> there will be no pallets of cash. might be things going to iran but not pallets of cash. ainsley: you know the president very well. we sat down with you in your hometown to talk about the new book called the briefing. i read it cover to cover. interview with you and your mom and your wife. >> thank you. >> so this is the family room. this is where we would gather as a family to watch television, to talk. you know, obviously there is a lot of pictures of family in here. the photo up there when i was a kid, this is me in ninth grade. only picture that still exists from that era. >> you wanted us to come here to rhode island. this is where you grew up. >> it is. >> why did you want the interview to take place here? >> because it is a special place for me and my family. i wanted a platform, an opportunity to kind of give a little more context to who i am beyond the podium. >> i see your humble begins and your close knit family.
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so many of us can relate to that your father had pancreatic cancer. he passed away. >> um-huh. yeah. >> your dad was your hero. >> yeah. >> tell me about your dad. >> he instilled a sense of right and wrong, family. faith, soiled have never gotten where i am today without his guidance and support. ainsley: i know your faith is extremely important to you. even your hardest days when your dad died, how god just redeems, when you have a tough time and you are in the valley, all of a sudden you are on the mountain. your dad passes away and you get this big job in washington almost like your dad or god saying it's okay. i've gotcha. on election night you ended up winning. with was that night like? >> i don't know that i will ever be able to fully explain what that felt like. >> you are walking on cloud nine that i don't care can i ever fully articulate nor i do know if it will happen again.
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ainsley: tell us about day one. >> good evening, thank you for coming. >> we had planned on monday for being day one. next thing you know i'm talking about inauguration sizes and having people tear apart my suit. it was definitely baptism by fire. >> mom, tell us what it was like to raise this amazing child? >> oh, come on now. it was good and challenging. sean has always been focused. of all the kids i could always read sean. i knew when he was having a difficult time that day i was prepared for whatever was coming his way. >> a game of gotcha. >> a difference between reporters and stories that incontinually arintentionally fd painting everyone with a broad brush. >> there are others engaged how to get a click or a clip than good old fashioned journalism. ainsley: that's the "new york times" article. >> when we got business.
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rebecca was in the news business and i was on capitol hill. i got lucky. ainsley: what's it like to be married to someone who is under scrutiny? this administration has just been pummeled by what he would call fake news. you saw sean being made fun of on "saturday night live" or being impersonated and what was that like? >> sometimes it's funny. but i think it's also just digging into your roots and knowing your reality and knowing who is he and knowing who we are as a family. ainsley: number one question that everyone asks can ski a question, sean, you already know what they're going to ask. what is it. >> mostly about melissa mccarty. >> settle down, settle down. >> each watching it oh my gosh it's me. >> take the politics out of it it's funny. >> she was fantastic actor. end of it in couple of skits went over the line. as an actor she does a fantastic job and there was definitely humorous points. ainsley: you start the book and end the book with anthony scaramucci. >> yeah. >> he is brought in and that
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leads to your refusing. >> correct. >> why is that? >> i didn't think he had the skill set for that the president wanted a change. and i told the president look, i respect that you want a change and if you are going to do it, let's give anthony the ability to do it and make it his. ainsley: are you glad he is out? >> i see a big difference in just the look on his face and i mean, the day after you could just see it. it all drained out and it was sean again. ainsley: do you miss it. >> i miss the people tremendously. ainsley: that's what everyone says. >> no, i don't miss the job. i was honored to have it. there is a level of intensity and i write about so many instances in the book whether it was me or my family i was glad to walk away from that level of scrutiny and intensity. ainsley: you really worked hard. >> thank you. steve: great interview, ainsley. ainsley: guy raised in the smallest state in our country has one of the
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biggest jobs that's the american dream. congratulations on your success. >> that's what i write about how you end up there. todd: talk more about the book. without trying to kill your book sales here, is there one key story that nobody would believe from your time in the white house? steve: just one? [laughter] todd: i'm looking for just one we have to go to jillian for headlines at some point. >> get into prime time. there is a bunch of them. as ainsley pointed out, every piece of this i grew up in a small town in a small state in a very tight-knit family. the idea that i ended up at the white house, every piece of this, i mean, you saw the pictures there meeting the holy father. standing behind the podium. having these interactions with the president of the united states and flying on air force one with them. every single day was sort of one of those pinch me moments where you are going no way i deserve to be here. that's why i continuously say what an honor and privilege it's been to serve. ainsley: how about the one time you told the president no? >> i have never told the
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president no. i have given him advice and counsel. ainsley: the church thing? >> well, that's different. the president was very kind one time in bedminster. we were up there during the transition let's all go to church tomorrow. it was a very kind offer to bring the team together i said i have to go to mass tomorrow because i'm catholic. and i already prearranged the schedule to make sure i could go in the morning before he started his meetings. and he had made this very kind offer. he said let's all go together tomorrow. how do you tell the president-elect no when he is making this very kind gesture. i had to fulfill my obligation. i was wondering like how do you explain this to soon to be leader of the free world. steve: how do you do that? you were there from day one in the white house. you talk to the press every day. they had all sorts of interesting questions for you. fast forward to today, hats thhasthe tenure changed last wek in helsinki and earlier a month ago regarding the kids in the cages.
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it's been ferocious. >> i would argue the fact that it's intensified. there is this -- god bless sara and that team for how they can continuously go do this every day. buff the president, i think, whether it's the campaign or the transition or now, has constantly been under attack. and it's -- the beautiful thing about it and i think you guys saw it before this nbc poll continues to tick up. the american people are hip to this idea that results matter. and they are seeing the president get things done for them on behalf of this economy, on behalf of immigration. isis, foreign policy. this president is doing exactly what he said he was going to do as a candidate and giving results to the american people and people are rewarding him in terms of their approval rating. ainsley: you were instrumental in getting sarah trained. >> i don't know you told the president you thought she would be good for the position. >> i don't think i needed to tell. obviously i fully support her. but i didn't know in need to tell anybody that she has demonstrated that you day in and day out what a talented
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individual she is. steve: she is going to be joining us in about 20 minutes. ainsley: sean's book if you want all the stories behind the scenes it's called "the briefing." >> thank you for coming up to rhode island. ainsley: thanks for the gift basket if you feel all kinds of booze. steve: wait, where sour booze? ainsley: we distributed it amongst the crew. >> you didn't come, no booze. ainsley: you lose. congratulations. >> thanks, guys. steve: meanwhile straight ahead the senate this afternoon will vote on confirming president trump's pick to lead the v.a. what do you need to know about robert willeke? we are taking you inside next. ainsley: oden mccarthy says those new fisa documents prove what he has been saying for the last year. is he going to join us live. todd: nancy pelosi, remember her? promises if she gets enough people to sign a petition, she will stop vladimir putin from visiting the u.s. but there is just one tiny little itsy bitsy problem with her plan. would will tell you what it
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todd: later today, the senate expected to vote on the confirmation of secretary of veterans affair nominee robert willeke. the vote comes just days after willeke received near unanimous backing on veteran affairs. what else should we know about nominee joining us to discuss dan coalwell of concerned americans. dan, thank you for getting up with us. what what should we know about robert willeke. >> he made excellent choice to be. he was born in khaki diapers. >> he grew up in a military family. father actually severely wounded during the invasion of cam body i can't. he has a served in the air force and navy and spent most of his life working in veterans and defense policy. i can't think of a better choice for the next v.a. secretary and i'm looking forward to him being confirmed. todd: dan, you haven't heard
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a lot from dems talking about robert wilkie like they did. always create problems for trump nominees? >> i do think robert wilkie is going to be easily confirmed. i do think unfortunately he will be the first v.a. secretary nominee to not receive unanimous vote. that's not a reflection of robert wilkie you have people like bernie sanders play political games. he already said he wouldn't support robert wilkie vote against him in committee. not because he doesn't like robert wilkie he is making a statement against trump. that's unfortunate. todd: if he is confirmed what does he need to do to turn the v.a. around? >> i think it's important to point out over the last year and a half president trump has been able to pass a lot of laws that languish under the previous administration. laws that fix the gi bill that increase choice for veterans.
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make it easier to fire bad va employees. all these laws need to be properly implemented. robert wilkie has to get in there and ensure all these great bills president trump signed into law are properly implemented and executed so the v.a. can better care for our veterans. todd: dan, we will eagerly await the vote. thank you for joining us and we appreciate your perspective. >> thank you for having me on. todd: no problem. house republicans calling on president trump to declassify the classified documents under carterrer page. confirm what he has been saying for the past year. andy mccarthy is live coming up next. ♪ i always feel like somebody's watching me ♪ and i have no privacy ♪ when my hot water heater failed, she was pregnant,
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jillian: good morning to you and welcome back. we have quick headlines now. the suspect in a deadly supermarket standoff expected to be charged with murder today. gene atkins allegedly shot his grandmother during an argument and kidnapped his girlfriend before leading police on a chase and crashing outside of a trader joe's in los angeles. the store manager was shot dead during standoff inside. family identifying her. frightening moment as beach umbrella. rushing her away from the sand in ocean city maryland. the city spokesperson said the gust of wind lifted the umbrella off the ground and sending it through the woman's chest. her condition is not known. they say she was conscious when first responders got to her. last week a woman in new jersey was also impaled by a beach umbrella. the wind causing it to pierce her ankle.
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frightening scene. that's a look at your headlines, ainsley? ainsley: that sounds painful. hope she is okay. we have been telling you about the doj releasing more than 400 pages of the fisa warrant application and our next guest says they confirm exactly what he has been saying for the past year. steve: here to explain, fox news contributor and former federal prosecutor, he knows his way around the courtroom, andrew mccarthy. andy, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: what's your headline? >> i think that a fisa warrant was issued on the basis of unverified uncorroborated information. steve: how often does that happen. >> you hope never. one of the big problems people are going to have with this is that there is a lot of things in national security whereby the government has to be able to look nut eye and say trust us fisa is exactly that what people are going to wonder if they did that in this case how rampant is the problem. how much do they push the
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envelope because they know no one is ever going to check their work. abby: fbi, doj, they use that dirty dossier as the president called it this weekend in a tweet as a reason to say that carter page might be collaborating with russia. that clearly didn't happen. and, if it did, carter page would have been arrested, right? >> ainsley, the other thing we should be blunt about this. they used it to say the trump campaign was colluding with russia. what they say in the application is that he was, basically, the linchpin for coordinating the efforts that russia was making to interfere with the election with the trump campaign. and it's probably important to point out to people that under our american fisa law, to get a warrant on an american citizen, you have to show not only that he is willfully engage engaged in clandestined activities they probably violate law. they were on carter page for a year. he has never been charged with anything which, again, underscores that they did
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this based on the dossier without corroboration. todd: the reason you need to do that is unlike a standard criminal procedure where there is a defense attorney that can represent the defendant, the nature of surveillance requires that these things be in secret. so the defendant doesn't get a robust defense like his -- the hallmark of the u.s. judicial system. >> todd, this is the big problem with this. because this is a secret proceeding, the justice department and the court owe an american citizen who is subject to a surveillance warrant a higher level of due process. because it's the only due process the person is ever going to get. steve: sure. >> they have to comply with the law on the justice department side and the court has to be exacting to make sure that the justifiable department complies. and that appears to have broken down. todd: with that in mind, andy, this week and you made some headlines or raised some eyebrows by saying we may need to look into the judges that were signing off on these fisa warrants as we know fisa judges are at the tippy top of their profession.
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federal judges with lifetime appointments who are asked to come on and take a look at these applications in very specific situations. that is a bold statement by you. you think this is warranted in this situation? >> well, you know, i don't know how bold it is. look, everybody gets stuff wrong, right? and i prefaced my remark about the judges by saying that i got this wrong. i told people that the fbi would never ever do this. that they would never bring unverified information to a court. especially when their procedures say they can't. i -- the judges relied overly it appears on the fbi. they trusted that they were following their procedures and they weren't exacting enough. i wasn't saying that the judges should be kicked off the bench but i think they ought to be asked hard questions. to me, i look at this application and it's appalling and i don't understand how a judge -- i think if i gave this warrant when i was a prosecutor to a judge down the street in manhattan i would have got my head cut off.
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ainsley: here are the 412 pages. can you see. steve: wasted paper. >> maybe the court just weighed it instead of reading it. ainsley: 13 republicans including devin nunes and congressman trey gowdy asking for the unredacted version. they want to see what all these pages actually say. will they get that? >> well, they will get more than we'll get. and that's probably right. because a lot of what's in these fisa applications, look, they should be classified because very top secret information. if there is information in there about what we know about russia, and the threat it is to the united states, that stuff should be kept classified. so the people in congress who have clearance to review this should review it, how much of it becomes public, i don't know. but, if they're going to argue that those redactions have some corroboration, that nobody, including apparently the top people in the fbi know about, let's see what they got. steve: i mean, congress has
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been having committee hearings for over the last year and yet it wasn't congressional request that got those. it was judicial watch. a freedom of information act request so they judicial watch. why can congress getting so much of the stuff they want to see. >> congress rangles with the justice department. neither one wants to pull the trigger. judicial watch really dogged in these sort of things, they get to go to a federal judge. a federal judge isn't so worried about that. and doesn't have any hesitancy about telling the government to produce documents. steve: i'm sure you have seen the many tweets the president has already tweeted out. >> yeah, i heard about it. >> what do you think about his assessment of what was discovered in this fisa application and the renewals? >> i would respectfully suggest that the president ought to let this sing for itself because it's really bad. on the other hand, the
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president has gotten pretty far without my advice. maybe i ought to -- maybe i ought to leave it at that. >> fascinating stuff. thank you for joining us. >> thank you. steve: still ahead. more of the breaking news out of canada deadly mass shooting in one of canada's most popular neighborhoods overnight. >> is it from that car? >> gunfire] steve: oh my goodness, new details coming in overnight straight ahead. ainsley: president trump sending a warning to iran's president, threaten the u.s., and you will suffer. we will ask white house press secretary sarah huckabee sanders about that when she joins us live next. advil is relief that's fast strength that lasts you'll ask... what pain? with advil liqui-gels
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opposition against the iranian nation do not play with the lion's tail or else you will regret it. it will bring you eternal regret. steve: okay. so that is the president of iran rouhani talking to diplomats yesterday where essentially he was laying down the law, don't threaten us, united states. and then the president of the united states, donald trump, he went on twitter and he doesn't do this very often. he was in all caps which means he was yelling back at iran. and he said this. ainsley: right. this was his tweet to the iranian president. never ever threaten the united states again or you will suffer consequences. the likes of which few throughout history have ever suffered before. we are no longer a country that will stand for your commented words odemented wordse and death. be cautious schamtion. >exclamation point.essentially e like the mafia.
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sowing disorder in the middle east. violence. mike pompeo told the audience at the ronald reagan center thought california that the united states is with the protesters. keep in mind there is great unrest inside of iran because of the sanctions and the fact that we pulled out and in the last, since january, their monetary system has tanked. whatever it was -- if it was 100 percent in january, it's 50% right now. todd: large part of that is because of a 180 from one administration to another. instead of coming out with pallets of cash from the obama administration, obviously president trump doing the exact 180 and saying look, we are going to slap severe economic sanctions on you. going to put pressure on to you change your ways. there is a new sheriff in town. and that tweet, obviously in all kaps, is one further piece of evidence that he is not messing around with this state sponsor of terror. ainsley: that's right. president obama was giving him money. was supporting the iran nuclear deal. this new president, president trump has said absolutely not.
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and said at the beginning of the year he wants to withdraw from that. steve: exactly right. one other thing that mike pompeo said that the supreme leader of iran had 5 billion-dollar slush fund, a hedge fund he uses to finance the revolutionary guard. let's bring in from the white house, press secretary sarah huckabee sanders. sarah, good morning to you. ainsley: good morning. >> good morning. steve: what's going on with the president and iran? >> look, the president has been clear from the beginning since the first day he took office and even before that nuclear proliferation was something that he was not going to tolerate, something he would aggressively stand up and talk about. and he certainly is not going to listen to aggressive leaders from other countries and their empty threats against america. is he going to stand up and make sure that we are protecting americans and certainly protect the world from nuclear proliferation. it's something he takes seriously and is he going to continue to be tough on this topic.
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ainsley: sarah, what kind of threat from iran would allow our president to respond and what kind of a response would that be? >> well, as you know, we are never going to broadcast what actions the president may or may not take or what specific actions is going to prompt him to take things a step further. but you can be rest assured he takes this process extremely seriously. is he monitoring and watching the actions of iran. and if needed, he will take what steps are necessary to protect people in this country. and certainly to protected the world from nuclear proliferation. todd: sarah, we have been on the couch the entire morning we have not necessarily seen this because we are not watching other media. you can be sure mainstream media is going to attack the president for all caps tweets saying is he inciting a problem with iran. what's the president's response to that. >> the only person inciting anything is iran. the president has been very, very clear, again, since day one what his objectives are. and he certainly is not going to tolerate the leader of iran making threats
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against americans, making threats against this country. making threats against israel. this is a president who is going to stand up and make sure he is doing what is necessary. he is showing peace through strength. but if needed, and steps are required, this president is not afraid to take them. steve: you know what, sarah, this is reminiscent of last august when the president was going back and forth with kim jong un, calling him little rocket man and, you know, kim jong un was saying some derogatory things as well. but then eventually the president talked about fire and fury. you know, you better look out, fire and fury coming your way. which ultimately led to direct talks with kim jong un. is that part of the game? is that part of the equation? you know, maybe this tough talk will lead to some sort of agreement? >> look, the president certainly uses tough language. he is not afraid to take tough steps if necessary. frankly it didn't come to that with north korea.
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hopefully it doesn't come to that with iran or anyone else. this is a president who wants to see peace. this is a president who wants to work with other world leaders. this is a president who wants to bring people together. at the same time, he is going to do what is necessary to protect americans. and to make sure that he has laid that out very clearly. i don't think there is any question what donald trump's idea is here is that he is going to do whatever is necessary to protect americans. ainsley: sarah, let's talk about the fisa warrant application. congress has been asking for this. republicans in congress have been asking for the unredacted form. well, judicial watch through freedom of information act. they got this. and it's 412 pages. if you start flipping through it, can you see all the redactions. congress sent a letter. 13 republicans in congress led by devin nunes. trey gowdy was part of this. they sent a letter on june 14th to the president saying can you please get the unredacted fisa application. we want to see what it all says. they have the ability to do
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it. we as americans can't but they have confidentiality status where they are able to look at it all. do you think the president is going to get involved? will he demand from the doj look, you need to hand this over to congress? >> look, the president wants transparency in this process. i think what you can see even just from the information that has been released is that the president has been right all along that this is a total waste of time and waste of taxpayer money. his campaign had nothing to do with russia but had everything to do with a great message. to defeat hillary clinton. that's exactly what this -- that campaign was focused on. that's exactly what this president has done since he got into office. i think we would all be a lot better off if we could get this out of the way and that congress and the special counsel could come to the same conclusion that the rest of america has, that this is a hoax and a waste of time. and let's move on and focus on some of the big problems and big challenges we actually have to faces a a
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country. ainsley: has he not asked for it because he doesn't want to get involved? >> look, that remains to be seen. but, the president would like this to operated independent of him. he certainly has asked for the department of cruivel to be transparent in this process. and if there are questions, which clearly there remain to be some, we hope they will step up and help answer those questions. >> i want to get to something that's up my sleeve i'm the one "fox & friends" sends out to do the stories on made in america products. the white house is going to show us made in america products at the white house today. this is great things you guys doomplets it's incredible event. hopefully the weather will get a little more cooperative throughout the day. i know there is big products that will be out on the south lawn later this afternoon. it's a great moment for our country. you get to see some of the greatest products that the world has to offer made right here in america. it's another reminder of the president's focus on american workers. the american economy and creating american jobs. this is going to be a great
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event and great showcase. something we did last year and really excited about seeing all the great products from all 50 states again this year. steve: just got an email from my friend tim tyler viking range. build them down in mississippi viking range there do you imagine the president is going to get a lot of feedback regarding the tariffs and trade talks? >> look, again, the president has been extremely focused on making sure we are doing everything to protect american workers and to grow american industry. this event is exactly another reminder of that focus of the president. i don't think that that will be the big topic of conversation. i think the fact that the economy is booming and growing like never before that we have a better job market and job environment that we have had in decades, i think that will certainly be something you hear something talked a lot about. maybe we can put that viking range to use. if you get some free time, maybe can you pop down here this afternoon and we can make some pai or other out
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of your book. ainsley: i was going to say, steve, that's a good contact to have. can you give us all of his numbers? viking is a great company. steve: sarah, good luck with the activity this afternoon. i hope the rain holds off. sara sara thanks so much. have a great day, guys. todd: more on deadly mass shooting in one of popular neighborhoods. >> it from that car? [gunfire] >> and there is new information breaking right now. we'll have it for you next. steve: plus, james comey urged americans to vote democrat to protect our country's values. but now he says democrats are losing their minds. we'll explain what he said coming up. ainsley: this woman says her father never get her get away with self-pity. made her stronger and more confident as an individual. her message for parents everywhere ♪ ♪ parodontax,
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jillian: good monday morning to you, back with headlines, a 13-year-old girl saved herself and baby sister from a carjacker by beating up. this video joe's jocelyn with sister in the backseat of that car while her mom is in a gas station near salt lake city. the man gets in and takes off. johnson quickly springs into action. >> i was hitting him as hard as i could, i was hitting him on the neck and face. i told him if he kept me just take my baby sister back. jillian: suspect pulling over and running away. police are still looking for him. the girls thankfully are not hurt. he urged americans to vote democrat to protect the country's values. but now fired fbi director james comey is taking aim at the latest democratic
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movement tweeting, quote: democrats, please, please, don't lose your minds and rush to the socialist left. this president and republican party are counting on you to do exactly that america's great middle wants sensible, balanced, ethical leadership. nancy pelosi says she has a way to stop russian president vladimir putin from visiting dc. she just needs signatures and email from pelosi sent democratic voters through the democratic congressional campaign committee says, quote: i will not allow putin to set foot in the united states. i need 1,000 signatures to block his visit and keep our elections safe. as it turns out no amount of signatures will block the president's visit. steve, send it back to you. steve: oopsy dazey. fox news alert. we have just learned two people are dead and 12 others hurt after that gunman opened fire on a busy street overnight in toronto. >> police say this was not a random act and not ruling out terrorism.
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todd: rob schmitt joins us live from new york newsroom with the breaking developments. rob? >> guys, good morning. 14 people shot. two of them killed after a gunman opened fire sunday night on a poplar street in toronto's greek town neighborhood and police say this was not random. >> is it from that car? [gunfire] just horrifying to see that video there. the surveillance video showing the gunman in all black firing with a handgun at anybody he could find as he walked down busy dan forth avenue. that's lined with restaurants and shops on toronto's near east side. police say a young woman was shot and killed and a little girl 8 or 9 years old was said to be in critical condition earlier this morning. we are not sure at this time if she is the second person who has now been pronounced dead. >> i heard at least 20 shots in intervals. you know, clips being spent, reloading, clip being spent. i saw at least four people shot here by the fountain.
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>> i thought it was fireworks at first because it was rapid fire. more people were running so we started running and reran down the side street. rob: it's terrible a busy area. a lot of families out and having dinner in that area of toronto. the gunman was killed after a shootout with police. police still have not released his name. investigators now working to determine a motive. they say terrorism is certainly a possibility. we'll probably learn a lot more later today, guys. send it back to you. todd: chilling video. steve: rob with the latest. two now the death toll. ainsley: hillary clinton has solution to get illegal immigrants into america. >> we need to get vouchers and discounted tickets to bring these families back together across that thousand miles. ainsley: your emails on that just ahead. steve: this woman says her father never let her get away with self-pity and it made her stronger, a more confident person. her message for dads everywhere coming up. ♪wa
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it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. steve: in a new "wall street journal" op-ed titled masculine dads raise confident daughters our next guest argues that it was her father's unapologetic masculinity that gave her grit. ainsley: "wall street journal" journal writer saying my father never let me get away with self-pity, never let me win an argument with tears. abigail joins us now to talk about her dad and the importance of having a strong father figure. good morning to you abby. >> great. great to see you. ainsley: good to see you, too. what made you want to write this op-ed? >> i wrote it essentially because for the last 7 to 8 months we have been engaging in a national conversation about men mistreating women.
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men behaving very badly towards women. that conversation has focused on two things, the first is holding men accountable for their bad behavior the second is so-called toxic masculinity. how to raise boys so they become essentially immasculated feminist. the problem is it spectacularly omits women's agency. how do we raise girls so they demand better treatment from the men in their lives? how do we raise girls so they expect more of themselves and refuse to be mistreated. steve: abigail you write in your op-ed if you want to protect girls find them good parents or become them. dads, whatever you are doing for your daughter, double it. when you were growing up, did you have the same appreciation for your father then as you do now? >> >> i think i did. my father and i were always very very close. we always have been. you know, it's interesting. i didn't mean to down play the role of mothers, of course. i mean, i am one. it's not that mothers don't
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have a very important role with all their children. i mean, it's incall could youably large. the point is men have fathers in my case and in many cases have uniquely potent message when they teach their daughters to demand a lot from themselves and to expect a lot ba way they will be treated. my father certainly taught me that. ainsley: that's wonderful. you are blessed to have that i love the story about border's book. tell the audience quickly about that story. >> i was sitting in borders book with my father one saturday night after i graduated from college. we were listening to sort of, you know, somebody singing and playing guitar from the floor above. and i teased my dad who was in the middle of reading i teased him if you had given me more support and encouragement with the guitar that could be me right now. and he said and looked at me and said that's right. i didn't support it the. that's why my kid is on the way graduate school and that guy is playing in borders. steve: funny stuff.
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read all about it in "wall street journal." abigail schire thanks for joining us. >> you are welcome. ainsley: more "fox & friends" on the other side of the break. if yor crohn's symptoms are holding you back, and your current treatment hasn't worked well enough, it may be time for a change. . . . . the gi tract
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the only thing that would make this better is if my mom were here. what?! an unexpected ending! >> i heard at least 20 shots in intervals. clippings spent, reloading. clipping spent. i saw at least four people shot. steve: gunman opening fire on a busy street in toronto overnight. >> iran is run by something resembles the mafia more than the government. steve: president is tweeting because we've been hearing from the leader of iran and it is not good news. >> i would not mess with president trump. he means what he says. he takes very decisive action. >> fbi unveiling hundreds of pages of redacted documents this weekend on wiretapping of carter page. >> carter page is more like inspector gauge a get than he is
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jason borne or james bond. >> it was all about getting at trump campaign. steve: ainsley goes one-on-one with former white house press secretary sean spicer at home. >> tell us what it is like to raise amazing child. >> come on now. >> it was good. it was challenging. >> in that car? [gunfire] >> i heard at least 20 shots anyoneter vales. clippings spent. clippings spent reloading. saw at least four people shot by the fountain. steve: that was last night. fox news alert. two people dead, 12 others injured after a gunman opened fire on a busy street in toronto. at this hour terrorism has not been ruled out. todd: the shooter dressed in all black, opening fire in a neighborhood known as green town. the video is chilling. young woman is dead and 8 or
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9-year-old girl is said to be in critical condition. we don't know if she is the second victim declare dead. ainsley: the gun man killed after shootout with police. the investigators say this was not a random attack but it is too early to tell if it was terror. we'll learn more when toronto's mayor gives an update an hour from now. steve: incident happened a weekend extra toronto police were deployed, dozens throughout the community to try to deal with gun violence. we'll keep you posted. meanwhile it is 8:02 in new york city. the pat of the united states has been back and forth with the leader of iran on twitter and elsewhere as things heat up. ainsley: that is because the president of iran, this was his quote, mr. trump, don't play with the lion's tail, this will only lead to refret. america should know peace with iran is the mother of all peace. and war with iran is the mother of all wars. todd: which led to the response
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from our president. quote, two -- to iranian president rue hahn in i all caps, never threaten the united states again or you will suffer consequences that few throughout history have ever suffered before. we are no longer a country that will stand for your demented word of violence and death. be cautious. steve: white house press secretary sarah huckabee sanders we asked what is up with this? here is what she had to say. >> the president has been very, very clear, again since day one what his objectives are and he certainly will not tolerate the leader of iran making threats against americans, making threats against this country, making threats against israel. this is a president who will stand up to make sure that he is doing what is necessary. he is showing peace through strength but if needed, and steps are required, this president is not afraid to take them. ainsley: mike pompeo, secretary of state, he is meeting with the
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australian foreign affairs minister today but yesterday he was at the ronald reagan presidential library and museum. he was delivering remarks on iran. which could be the reason president rouhani said all of this. mike pompeo comparing the iran's leaders to the mafia. he says the u.s. will support the people of iran protesting on the street opposing the regime. steve: keefe in mind what the united states is doing in iran just like north korea, we're applying maximum pressure. over in iran, ever since we pulled out of deal a month or two ago, we have been trying to squeeze, our other partners who are still trading with them. we could love for them to cut off iran as we have. unfortunately that is not the case right now you know what? for a lot of countries in europe, iran is their gas station. todd: we're giving them more or less a choice. do you want to deal with economically a country with
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330 million, quite frankly the leader of the free world, i.e., the united states or do you want to deal with a state sponsor of terror in iran. they have a fair amount of oil, that can not be discounted. 80 million people not nearly the size of the u.s. and economy not as robust. you need to choose the u.s. over iran in the economics battle. that will give us the hammer -- >> former administration was giving him money. supporting the iran nuclear deal. this president said he wants to withdraw from the deal. not giving them money, has a different message for iran. steve: let's talk about this president. he has been tweeting this morning and a lot of it regards the fisa applications which ainsley has it right here, all 412 applications. 80 pages you can read. ainsley: that are not redacted. steve: what we learned over the weekend dropped on late friday, we got hold of it through freedom of information act
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request by "judicial watch," federal authorities used the steele dossier and yahoo! news article to convince the fisa court to spy on carter page. four times they told the fisa court they did not believe chris steele was the direct source for the yahoo! news article, yet in a london courtroom it was revealed indeed he was. starting to put pieces together that they used. ainsley: they were four times told something different. it is illegal to use unverified information, the dirty dossier, it was illegal to use that, since it wasn't verified, that was used to spy on someone. that was the fbi's own rules. if andy mccarthy did something wrong, why hasn't he been arrested? >> under our american fisa war
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to get a warrant on an american citizen you have to show he is willfully engaged in clandestine activities. they probably violated federal law. they were up on carter page for a year and never been charged anything. they did this based on the dossier. todd: that is a great point, as we've been saying all morning long you have a heightened standard to get one of these. over the course of our history these things have been rubberstamped. when you break down what a fisa application is, there is no defense attorney arguing for the defendant. it has to be in secret. we understand that. we want to protect against terrorism but at the end of the day there is heightened scrutiny. clearly this document didn't reach that heightened level of scrutiny. steve: we had dan bongino on, two hours ago we asked, he is an investigate, worked on a lot of cases do you see probable cause effected there, he said absolutely not. one of the other things is, this has a lot of people scratching
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their heads, why was it not revealed to the fisa court this dirty dossier was put together by fusion gps but they were being paid by the hillary clinton campaign and the dnc? instead what it did was it alluded to the person behind this particular batch of intel was looking for dirt on donald trump, which was true but it was also political opposition. ainsley: the question is, did the fbi abuse its surveillance powers? the president was tweeting this weekend reminded everyone, called it the dirty dossier, don't forget that was paid for by the dems. steve: it is proof of a witch-hunt and a scam. he praised "judicial watch" for finally getting the department of justice to cough up the records. ainsley: i don't understand the doj, why the fbi won't just hand unredacted version to to congress, those individuals that have security clearance? they are allowed to see the
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secrets. we aren't but they are. todd: what is clear, ainsley, people in the know two things. they know the stuff redacted in there the american people need to know. because they vetted it, they know our national security will not be compromised a by a lot of stuff currently redacted. granted there are some things in these documents that nobody wants disclosed because it will undermine the safety and security of the men and women here in our country but that is not most of the redactions. people who know -- we're loving this. i feel bad for individual has to redact this stuff. the redacting is tough. you get car pal tunnel in your hand. that is for another stay. there is stuff we need to know that will not jeopardize us any way, shape or form. steve: the whole application, this is the fbi, we believe carter page is colluding with the russians. this is why. here we are two years later he has never been charged which
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suggest they couldn't find anything, or, maybe they misled. ainsley: you have republicans in congress, devin nunez, trey gowdy, 13 republicans sent a letter in june, we want unredacted application, with declassified key parts. they want footnotes on the third renewal. the third renewal, if you get a fisa application you have to to continuously renewed because time runs out. the third renewal was signed by rod rosenstein in june 2017. steve: i'm glad when this is all over when the people in the fbi and department of justice can explain what they did. todd: can i do a brian toss, never redacts her documents. jillian: i think brian said those words to me before. we have breaking news and sad news to report. get you caught up with the fox news alert. a firefighter is killed overnight battling a massive
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house fire in maryland. officials say the unidentified hero fell through the floor of a home in clarksville outside of baltimore. the 13-year veteran of the department was critically injured around died at a nearby hospital. officials believe a lightning strike sparked the fire. everyone inside of the home got out safely. today the coast guard will try to pull out the doomed duck boat from the bottom of a missouri lake. 17 people were killed when it capsized and sank in a storm last week. a mechanic who inspected the boat last year he warned the company it could become a deathtrap in pad weather. he told his family they would never ride the boats again. the family who lost nine loved ones in the accident, sharing this deadly photo. robert wilkie is expected to be named veterans affair secretary today. earlier dan caldwell of
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concerned vets of america said veterans support wilkie. >> he spent most of his wife working in veterans and defense policy. so i can't think of a better choice for the next va secretary and i'm looking forward to him being confirmed. jillian: president trump picked wilkie after his first joyce ronnie jackson with drew his nomination. he will replace former secretary david shulkin fired this year. chicago cubs fans steel a foul ball from a little boy and hand it to the kid next to him. the kid dropped after the first base coach dropped souvenir. he wound up getting a last laugh. he went home with two balls, with haw very baez. ainsley: little boy tried to catch it. dropped it. gave it to the woman. the map grabs it. todd: how stupid is this guy, a camera is always on you, even if you are a -- jillian: not first time it
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happens. see stuff like this all the time. boy ends up going home with two baseballs. one signed. >> did the woman give the ball to the little kid? jillian: i can't confirm or deny. home with a autographed ball. steve: straight ahead on the monday, president trumps gears up for the meeting with vladmir putin our next guest says the president needs to send a clear an unambiguous warning to president putin. daniel hoffman spent his career as a cia station chief in moscow. todd: this guy's attempt to hide from the cops was a total washout. the story behind this picture and ainsley and steve's really awesome puns coming up. ♪ ♪
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steve: in a new op set our next guest calls president trump to deliver a unambiguous warning to president putin following the summit. daniel hoffman said this might be his last, best chance to induce a change in russia's
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behavior and unite the congress and our nation in collective defense before the next russian cyber onslaught. daniel hoffman served as cia station chief in moscow and also a fox news contributor. he joins us from our nation's capitol. good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: you say the president should warn russia. warn russia what? >> first i would highlight the president's director of russia at the national security council, fiona hill rightly called vladmir putin the kgb operative in the kremlin. it is important to remember that, and that putin was director of russia's notorious security police, the ff. about, responsible for suppressing russian citizen's freedoms and suppressing foreigners that work in russia like myself for five years. the president needs to understand, and i think he does, we need concurrently to work with russia on areas are mutual interest on arms control but counterand deter russia from
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mounting aggressive efforts to target our way of life. in this case, with russia's election interference, i think the president would do well to warn vladmir putin directly that we know that rub that interfered in our election. that if they continue to do so, they will pay a price. steve: right. >> it is important for deterrence that the aggrieved party lets the other know that we will take action so it is not ambiguous at all when we do take action. steve: it sounds like the president invited mr. putin to the white house, middle of october. if at that point the russians are still meddling in our election, smart guys like you would know that is going on, that would be a perfect time by the way, vladimir, i told you a couple months ago to stop it and now stop it. >> i couldn't agree more. that is a propitious opportunity to to unite our country to
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defend itself against russia's nefarious espionage. our national security and cyber come monday are putting plans to countier russia in cyberspace with offensive cyber operations there. is no better time than the president to deliver that stark, unambiguous warning to putin. he could do it before that but why not do that an our own turf as well. steve: great point. daniel hoffman, thanks for joining us from the nation's capitol? >> thank thank you, steve stever and lyft riders had no idea what was happening in that car. maxine waters urged protestors burn the flag outside of her office. [shouting] steve: our next guest, a former navy seal has a message for the congressman, coming up.
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♪ todd: 24 minutes after the hour now, news by the numbers. first, 16, how many ritz cracker products being recalled nationwide over salmonella fierce. ritz bits, cheese, cheese cracker sandwiches. love the ritz. no illness es reported fortunately. driver charged with trafficking marijuana. finally $114.99. yep, that's the price of that golden girls action figure set. ♪ always awesome to hear the song. you can never got get enough of
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a song. the dolls revealed at comic-con in san diego. ouren girl not in age but effervescent. ainsley: thanks, todd. maxine waters sticking up for the demonstrators that burn and stomped on the american flag outside of her office. [shouting] this was supposed to a counterprotest against a far-right group but that group never showed up. the california representative saying in part, while i do not agree with torching the flag as a form of protest, i understand the constitution gains 'tis everyone the right to do this form of free expression. dan dibono, a former knave sy seal who fought for this country, has a message for her this morning. he joins us now. thank you for your service and thank you for being with us. what is your message to maxine waters? >> the american flag represents hundreds of years of history, there has been a tremendous amount of blood shed in the name of that flag.
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it represents our way of life and our system. while burning the flag is acceptable form of protest under the law it is something that my brothers and i, we find unacceptable and despicable. ainsley: the protesters they're chanting this is not the u.s. flag. this is their flag. america was never great. what is your message to the protesters? >> the protesters are attempting to soil the republican party and the president. what they're really doing in effect is only soiling themselves. the flag represents all of our ideals, our way of life, our freedom. represents their ability to protest that. they're only bringing dishonor upon themselves doing what they're doing. ainsley: do you agree with maxine waters do you understand the flag-burning protest? >> i do not. i don't think the protesters are achieving anything. instead of having a dialogue, they're acting like spoiled juvenile delinquents only brings dishonor to themselves and does not further the dialogue this is furtherance what we've seen from the liberal democratic party. this is becoming the new center.
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instead of having a dialogue and using persuasion, they don't have a message, they're resorting to tactics such as this to gain attention but only brings dishonor among themselves. ainsley: will this back four? >> i think it will backfire. what we're afraid of protests turning into violence. it is not only a fear, has been a reality. this started last year, we saw representative steve scalise shot by somebody who saw one of these leftists on tv saying it was okay to harass people. that continued this year when you hadman stream politicians calling for harrassment and inciting violence t wasn't just maxine waters. right here in the tri-state area representative tom suozzi using the second amendment in cases that could not be solved. ainsley: the guy who shot steve scalise. we don't know the motivation. i don't know whether people like maxine waters, we need to protest, get in the face of other people, we're not sure what his motives have, but how
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did we get here as a country? men and women fought for our flag. we're allowed to disagree. maxine is right you do have the right to protest but how did we get here? so disheartening anger, vitriol, among people because you don't like the president or you do like the president? or you vote a certain way? >> somehow over the last couple years it has become acceptable to display sheer contempt and hatred for the other side. in times past when there is disagreement, that disagreement was expressed in election or opinion pieces, people having discussions and we've gotten to the point, this rot starts at the head, senior leadership of the democratic party saying to resist, to fight. this was a fairly-elected president. he won the election. he represents america. he is our president, no matter whether you like him or not. the left simply can not seem to accept that. ainsley: yet, you're right because we used to just go to the polls. that was your voice.
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you could vote a certain way. now it has become protesting on the street, violence, going up to people in restaurants telling them how they feel about their positions or not supporting this administration. >> you have people suggesting harrassment. there is very thin line between harassing by saying i don't like your policies and getting into somebody's face, physically touching them or beating them, as we saw last year with representative scalise. ainsley: happening on both sides. maxine waters she has fallen victim to this too. >> it happened to me, twice on long island. i had people aggressive get in my face. ainsley: you're running for congress. >> people don't like your ideas. instead of having a dialogue, here is my alternative idea and get in your face attempt to intimidate. most people will not be intimidated by that. it's a desperate ploy, essentially is going to backfire. if you recall back in the '60s, flag burning for better or worse was seen as peaceful protest by hippies. my fear going forward, flag
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burning has become the radical left's alternative way to shout "allahu akbar!." while it is not illegal. it is something we endure but don't think it is right thing to do. ainsley: dan debono former navy seal, a candidate for third congressional district in new york. democrats like adam schiff refusing to give up the russia collusion narrative. >> he is acting like someone who is compromised, that the russians have information on him. ainsley: wait until you hear what dan bongino has to say about this. britney spears dog style. the toxic video going viral. ♪ h means we use less. three generations of clothes cleaned in one wash. those are moms. anybody seen my pants? nothing cleans better.
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steve: yep, shot of the morning. it is sally, my daughter, screen left's birthday. doocy children to, taylor swift concert. as it turns out, taylor swift photo bombped us at one point. ainsley: that is awesome. she could be part of the family. steve: i want to show you a a little video of the doocy girls, they were so excited to be there, just watch this. remember what it was like when you were this age. watch. ♪ todd: journalistic question, what was peter doocy response,
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decides that little smirk there? steve: i told peter there was a giant es game. todd: you fooled him. >> the show was absolutely fantastic. my daughter's knew all the words, part of the reputation tour. we were there the night that it didn't rain. when we showed you that picture of taylor before the show, i said, now, taylor, i don't know if you remember this, but about 10 or 12 years ago you were on "fox & friends." do you remember? she said, absolutely. that was my first tv gig. ainsley: really? steve: she remembered it. taylor that was 10 or 12 years ago. what have you been doing since? fill us in. todd: let us know what you've been up to. ainsley: she is so cute. how was the concert? steve: it was fantastic. ainsley: she goes to her fan's houses. knocks on the door. there is taylor. seems like a great girl. todd: with all the negativity in the world, she is one of these people that loves to really get with her fans, donate so much to
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charity. one of those personalities that you love. ainsley: her mom manages her career. her mom battled cancer. she were on the awards stage together. she is so cute. she really evolved and grown up and really done, what i feel so many young girls look up to her. she seems to be a good role model. i don't know much about her. steve: it was great show. i don't know, 60, 70,000 people. ainsley: isn't so much to sing and perform like that? jillian: i can't sing at all. ainsley: everyone loves you. you're on stage. you make a lot of money. jillian: you need to have talent in the singing department to do that. side note, she grew up 45 minutes from me. yep. ainsley: she seems to be a great girl. jillian: i never met her, but seems to be. go to the headlines now, get you caught up on the news for the day. he isn't planning to house
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minority lead are nancy pelosi, democratic congressman seth moulton hopes she will be replaced. >> we need a new generation of leadership. we need a leader to talk about future, not talk about the past. we need uniter. we can continue to have narrow, divisive politics with leaders or find leaders that will bring us together. jillian: the former marine is trying to recruit younger democrats for office in effort to take back control of the house. uber-and lyft passengers were live streamed for the world to without the knowledge. the person has been suspended from uber and fired from lyft. gargak postedhundred rides online. call this guy's attempt to hide from cops a total washout. he was spotted inside of a drier. he was trying to avoid cops inside washington state. police joking the adult version
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of hide-and-seek never turns out well for anyone. he was arrested for violating a no-contact order. this dog is going viral. howling almost the exact tune of a britney spears song. the video, sure to give you pause. [dog howling] jillian: riley the doug's howl, sounded almost identical to the riff on the song, "toxic." take a listen. ♪ the video has been seen four million times. regardless you think it is funny when you see the two videos combined like that. steve: it is funny. ainsley: first time i heard the dog do it, i thought that sounds like a britney spears song. jillian: i didn't hear it at first, when they were combined, that's good.
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ainsley: so cute. steve: very nice. todd: thanks, jillian. steve: 22 minutes before the top of the hour. janice dean the weather machine, it is rainy start to this monday. >> it is. it tapered off a little bit. where are you from? >> i'm from savannah, georgia. >> my gosh, from georgia, "fox & friends" on my mine your name? >> thomas riehlely. >> what are the conditions. >> 76 and raining. >> let's see if you are correct. different points in new york where they do the different temperature measurements. i will say you are right on. the problem we have a big ol' trough across the east coast, potential of heavy rain from the forecast all the way up from florida to maine. hope it won't dam enyour spirits or tourism around new york city. we're a little concerned about flash flooding. the other big story is big heat across texas and louisiana as well as arkansas. building heat across the
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southwest as well. so dangerous heat. be aware of that. for our friends in dallas, texas, 100 degrees for much of the work week. you want to say hi to someone at home. >> to my grandmothers steve thanks, grandmothers. thanks for watching "fox & friends." todd: we love grandmothers. >> nicely done. steve: former views president joe biden blasting president trump's border policy. >> this administration's policy literally rip babies from the arms of their mothers and fathers one of the darkest moments in our history. steve: our next guest says joe biden and obama administrations are the ones to blame. they will explain. todd: this police officer going above and beyond the call of duty. helping a woman carry her groceries up hill after a fire blocked her way home. we'll have both of them coming
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>> good morning, back to you with on quick headlines. democrats don't seem to give up the russia collusion narrative. california congressman adam schiff says president trump act the like someone compromised by president putin. >> he is exacting like someone compromised. may very well be he is compromised. he may well belief he is compromised that the russians have information on him. jillian: schiff's comments coming after the president's meeting with putin in helsinki. he urged americans to vote democrat to protect the country's values now fired fbi director james comey is taking aim at late of the democratic movement. tweeting, democrats, please don't lose your mind and rush to the socialist left. the president and republican
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party are counting on you to do that. america's graduate middle, want sensible, balanced ethical leadership. that is look at your headlines. todd? todd: democrats doubling down on calls to abolish i.c.e. and president border policies. >> i think we should get rid of i.c.e. >> this administration's policies, literally rip babe -- babies from the arms of their mothers and fathers is one of the darkest moments of our history. todd: our next guest says the darkest day when children were released to criminals during the obama years. officials like biden did nothing to stop it. former i.c.e. supervisor, and whistle-blower dr. jason piccolo is here. what do you mean about about the darkest days were during the obama administration. >> thank you, todd.
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darkest days, 2015 i was i.c.e. whistle-blower. i worked for white house security concerns sill human smuggling cell. i was sole i.c.e. representative responsible for anything to do with enforcement or remove operations. i discovered the obama administration was releasing tender age children, little kids, not talking ms 1 types to criminal sponsors, unvetted criminal sponsors. this was perhaps the most darkest times of my almost 20 year federal career. todd: why doesn't the mainstream media seem to understand that while i.c.e., yes, does protect the citizens of the u.s., they also protect the illegal immigrants trying to cross our borders from things like rape, murder, human trafficking? why isn't that clear to them? >> it's not. they don't understand the i.c.e. mission. right now the i.c.e. mission it's twofold. you have enforcement and removal operations and you have homeland security investigations. one completely deals with immigration and one deals with anything with international nexus is, i.e., terrorism,
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counter proliferations operations those type of operations, they simply do not have the optics what i.c.e. does. we have a whole separate agency that deals with stuff like that. the united states citizen immigration services uscis. they deal with asylum claims and helping families to who are here with asylum and refugee status. how come the politicians don't look at that agency as well. todd: what if the democrats on the lib aleft, got their way, i.c.e. would be abolished? >> we would loosen forcement capability. we track down the bad of the bad, worst of the worst, your killers, sexual offend earns, your rapists, they find them and they have them removed. do we want to keep them them within our borders or have open borders where anybody can come and go? todd: somebody who has given so much of his life to i.c.e., defending our borders, when you see what the liberal left is
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doing right now, how does that make you feel? what goes through your head when you see that. >> it sickens me. i worked with thousands and thousand of people in my career, through all the different agencies in homeland security, there u.s. customs, border patrol, i.c.e., i.c.e. headquarters great people, from every race, creed, religion you can imagine. tons of vet, tons of hispanics, a lot of good people. calling for their abolishment and lose their livelihood sickens me. todd: put your politics hat on, put you on the spot. do you this is smart strategy on the whole to adopt liberal left is doing, panduraing the topic of the day here in abolishes i.c.e. and open borders? do you think this is smart political strategy for them? >> it is not. i stay as bipartisan as possible to informed decision but this is not. we need solid immigration law. we need solid immigration
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enforcement. you can not have open borders. i've seen some evil people come from other lands to spread evil in our country. that is kind of cliche but the truth. todd: dr. piccolo, appreciate you taking the time. have a great day. thank you for your insight. >> thank you, todd. todd: this police officer going above the call of duty, helping a woman carry her groceries uphill after a fire blocked her way home. that is coming up neck. here is bill hemmer. >> breaking news overnight. who is responsible for the shooting in toronto? we expect a press conference where the mayor will bring that to you. stern warning from the president to the leader of iran overnight. what we're learning from the secret fisa warrant, critical understanding why the surveillance occurred during the trump campaign. who leads for the race from congress. great guests whose seats are on the line. a-team panel is ready, headliner coming up join sandra and me at
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steve: stalk about going above and beyond the call of duty, this photo know going viral showing a a new hampshire police officer helping a woman carry her groceries half a mile uphill after a fire blocked her usual route on the way home. ainsley: joining us now is the police department master patrol officer, tyler cody and woman he helped. nicole roche. tell us what happened that day. >> i was on my way home getting groceries, just the normal. i came to a blocked road. most people were turning around. i asked if i could go left to go home. no, actually that is where the fire was. after panic, realizing it was
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not my home, that i had just moved into the week prior, i pulled in the parking lot. they said you're welcome to walk home but, you might want to take your perishables with you. so i grabbed what i could out of my car and left the rest there. and, as i started to walk, i came across officer cody and he said, where are you headed? i told him. that is ridiculous. give me many sew of those. just continued on the way with me. steve: that's great. how officer do you do things like that? >> you know, i have been doing this job for 13 years now and, if i see somebody in need, i help them. and that's why i still love what i do, i'm able to do it. who i am. who would have thought i would be here so. todd: are you surprised by the response? seems like to you this is ordinary thing you did, something you would do tomorrow. obviously the response from the country has been, this is
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awesome? >> i am. i'm frankly i'm a little surprised. i never thought i would be here in front of all your viewers. todd: right. >> this is, it is crazy. my daughter is at home watching. my officer eliza is at home watching. it is surreal. ainsley: how did the picture go viral? who took the picture? >> we believe, if i'm not mistaken, i think it was a photographer out of boston who put it up on the article. we put it on the facebook page. ainsley: someone covering story. >> started picking up traction. steve: nicole -- >> i had no idea the photos were being taken. i'm not sure either of us did. we were walking on our way past the scene. steve: nicole, has to make you feel good, the men and women who wear uniform in your town are willing and ready to pitch in, no matter how big or small the
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task might be? >> absolutely. i think it is, it is testament to our small community, people that we have protecting and serving us. i would hope this serves as an example to other people, just doing good and doing things out of kindness of your heart, being kind to other people and what better person than a police officer for other people to look up to. todd: well-said. ainsley: tyler, why did you get into law enforcement? >> i got into law enforcement for the reason, believe it or not i'm sitting here today, i always wanted to help people. i didn't know how i wanted to do it when i was little, whether it was fire or police but here i am. and, i'm just honored to be recognized and i know that all the men and women of the police department would do exactly same thing. ainsley: yesterday i told my daughter. see a man like this in blue, or woman, they're there to help you. god bless you all. thank you so much both of you.
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>> bill: todd, we'll see you back here tomorrow. >> if you'll have me i'll be here. >> bill: breaking news on the deadly shooting in toronto. we're learning a second person has died after a gunman opened fire sending bullets onto a busy street. we're awaiting a news conference with the latest information. we should hear from the mayor this morning. a tough story to start the week. bill hemmer live inside of "america's newsroom." hope you had a good weekend. >> sandra: we're being told terrorism has not been ruled out at this hour. the deadly shooting that happened around 10:00 last night in a popular area within the city full of restaurants. we're hoping to learn new info

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