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tv   Election Special  FOX News  November 4, 2018 8:00pm-9:00pm PST

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turn out and take care of business we lurched left and there is chaos. thank you. >> appreciate it. mark: the next time on "life, liberty and levin". local ♪ ♪ >> you're looking live box where outside the world headquarters of fox news were counting down the final hours before polls close across the country tuesday night and we start seeing the first result in 2018 midterms smack your inside studio f and americans election headquarters where we are tracking all of the races in what is developing into an epic battle for the control of congress. >> i'm threadbare. >> and i'm martha mccallum. president trump doubling down on his big camping push and he will had two more rallies today, one
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in georgia and one in tennessee. former president obama also out there in force and hitting the midwest to fire up democrats in indiana and illinois. both urging people to get out and vote. president trump: this is one of the most important elections that we will ever have the privilege of voting in in four. this is a big one. it will decide whether we build or the extraordinary prosperity we have achieved for our nation we let the radical democrats to control of congre congress. [crowd boos] and take a giant wrecking ball to our economymy. >> healthcare for millions is on the ballot. a fair shake for working families is on the ballot. [cheering and applause] and most importantly, the character of our nation is on the ballot. bret: president trump has been
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crisscrossing the nation hitting 11 rallies in eight states and the final week and comes amid record voter enthusiasm on both sides of the aisle. a whopping 34 million people already casting ballots early upping the anticipation for a high stake election day. martha: box team coverage site, peter ducey in florida followinm the contentious senate race and governor racewi and mike emanuel is in washington, christian fish in missouri's night were president trump will hold the final campaign rally tomorrow. bret: but we can with steve in chattanooga, tennessee where president trump is tonight. leaving, steve. reporter: the president has been going strong for about 45 minutes just getting stronger as the evening goes on but he seems to be enjoying himself at the podium. if you saw some of the rallies are in the 2016 campaign and the rally tonight there is no sense of any drop-off in enthusiasm or numbers. the stadium hold about 10000
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people, most are out there for eight or ten hours waiting to get in and some stayed overnight in the selection for senate he is here to campaign for marsha blackburn is a record-setting election for the state of tennessee. it set records for my spent about $80 million spent, 50 million outside money and also records for early voting. 1.3 million people voting early and it's on pace for our presidential election. the president is back here again we do love the crowd and they certainly love him here. the energy and enthusiasm is really palpable. back to you guys. bret: steve, why are they saying the president is back in tennessee? placing off any numbers for blackburn or try not to fire up and ensure the firewall in the senate? reporter: i think it is really a sign of how close this race could be and it should not be that close of a race but president trump carried tennessee by 26 percentage points in 2016 but this is the
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third to appear so must be close. blackburn is running against popular former governor they are trying to paint him as a washington democrat and the crowd is responding pretty enthusiastically whenever that charge is made. back to you guys. bret: steve live in chattanooga. martha: president am heading to the states including missouri doubling down on his campaign efforts added tuesday try to help republican the attorney general in upstate flip the seat and beat incumbent democratic senator claire mccaskill. christian fish are following it all for us from st. louis. good evening, kristin. reporter: this race is so critical because control of the senate could come down right here to missouri. to give you an idea of how boring this race is to president trump's come to the stateri six times this election cycle and coming a seventh time tonight for his final rally before election day. for the incumbent democrat senator claire mccaskill said
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the frequency of his trip here are both good and bad for her keeping. >> i do think it is important to realize that he is coming a lot and there are two reasons. one, good news, they are very worried. right? [cheering and applause] and two, bad news, they really, really really, want to get rid of me. reporter: her opponent is trying to get rid of her by tying her to the democratic resistance. in the charge that she's been trying to distance herself from by accusing the members of her own party as being the crazy democrat but josh holly, state wn mccaskill is too liberal for missouri, state he considers to be the firewall in these midterm elections. >> president said it best when he was in the state. he said the eyes of the world are on missouri and they sure are. what happens here is going to determine the course of the u.s.
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senate and the congress in the future of this country. reporter: this is also one of the closest races in the entire country. the latest boxful has these two candidates had a dead heat 43- 43-43. martha: that explains why both these campaigns are still on defense in the closing days of the race. reporter: yeah, that's right. holly has been accused of a local paper in recent days of allowing outside political consultants to embed themselves in side his attorney general office within weeks of being sworn in and the river goes on to say the same political consultants when on to help them run this very senate race. mccaskill called it inappropriate and potentially illegal but the hawley campaign is countering it by comparing that report to an 11 hour smear just like we saw with judge kavanaugh. as for mccaskill, her campaign is been accused of having a hand
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in these anonymous illegal mailers targeting hawley that have been sentll to voters all of missouri. she says her campaign had nothing to do with it but missouri republicans are now calling for a federal investigation. martha: a lot of b those charges in the final days differences. thank you very much. bret: tuesday night is about the balance of power inn both house and senate. currently, begins hold majority in the house with 240 seats. democrats have 195 feet and there are seven vacancies. democrats need to gain 23 seats to take the majority control of the house meaning they need to hold all of their seats and pick up 23 more seats now held by republican. anything short of that publicans retain control. on the senate side, different picture. arjun of error is much harder for democrats. millions of a majority at 51 and democrats have orgy nine. two independent caucus with the democrats so the democrats need to pick up two seats to take control. anything less than that stays
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with the puppy. no, we are all separate physical up the stairs. >> we've taken the data attack and supersize it. over on the billboard, you can take this map and board by me and talk about it for hours because there's a thousand stories to talk about for tuesday night. let's talk about the house. you can look at maybe 70 different house races we will follow for tonight but these are the 29 we think have a chance of flipping, red to blue or blue to red. keep that in mind. we wanted to figure out how do story about 41 retirements from republicans and 23 districts republicans have a dependency where hillary clinton 12 years ago. i'll give you an example. here in the midwest every thing in red, republican, everything in bloomington democrat and the
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yellow is a tossup. think about here in chicago and here's an example. illinois six, suburban district of chicago, the public and is defending his seat against. it is suburban and in moment of show you how much of it two years ago the president lost this district by seven points. hillary clinton was the victor but who are these voters? the census data will tell you an awful lot. wealthy, two times the national average. at least 80% have a college degree or better and they are overwhelmingly white at 77%. suburban america. that's been red for a long time and shifted blue a few years ago but in all likelihood will be purple this timee of year. that's on the site. on the senate side can look at where we begin the night on tuesday at 51, 49 on the what if map. take this and mess with it but missouri in north dakota,
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republicans think they have a w good shot on the democratic side they flip nevada and arizona, look where we are. back at 51,a 49. that's where we stopped. what is this all about? forty-seven hours rate will get pull closing and then we'll get data to see this map fill in. bret: remember being up there in 2016 watching that map? [inaudible conversations] martha: speaking of history, the midterms are not usually kind to the party that is in the white house with a few exceptions. w here with more "fox news sunday" anchor chris wallace and fox to senior clinical analyst for a tomb. great to have both of you with us this evening. give us examples. to start with you, chris. how this has worked in the past and what the president can or cannot call it a night. >> since world war ii the average in the first midterm
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after a new president is elected for his, party is the house they lose 28 seats. that is the average and i think it's too-three seats in the senate. generally speaking the country isn't entirely happy with the new president's party in the most controversial case i can make out is 1994 and i just happen have the numbers here with me republicans gained 52 seats in the house, ate in the senate in 1994. two years into bill clinton's term and the republican or democrat held onto the house since 1954 and after 40 years of the democrats controlling the house it flipped. it was a dramatic almost a earthquake on the political scene. bret: let's look at the graphics. you mentioned 94, if you go to 2006 if house democrats picking up 30 seats in senate democrats for seats and in 2010 republicans pick up 63 seats,
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senate republicans six seats. as we look at this you look at the early vote more than 34 million already and people are fired up and how that breaks on tuesday will be fascinating. >> if the democrats animated by their feelings about mr. trump were the party with the motivation but recent events seem to contradict that and republicans got very fired up over the treatment of brett davanaugh and it looks now as if it is not quite a wash because democrats are motivated to the max but republicans have closed in on them on the motivation department. pulling has look better for the republicans but the betting oddk about, still favor the democrats getting control of the house at about 67% to two: one in the senate. people betting on this -- the
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democrats with only about a 67% chance of getting house. the republicans look better in the senate and the democrats do in house but republicans are favored in the senate and democrats still in the house. that's how that looks now at the stage and what we can tell, bret and martha, what is the trump effect here? what is the effect of the lake camping. i remember vividly because the covered the white house at the time bill clinton campaign he went after it in 1994 to say that congress for his party and he campaigned as vigorously as the president has and was off or not. here we were on election night having watched the president campaign so hard and getting these crowds that he boasted about and we said they knew the crowd size is not an indicator but boy, were we wrong. we don't really know. we may be in a new time and this man may have a full we can't quite measure by the usual metrics. martha: that is the question. what is the trump effect.
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in 2016 we all sat in his room and watched something that was so remarkable take place in so here we are two years later with the pent up energy of people who have been resisting this president and people who have been supporting this president and that is what it will come down to here because these areop close races speed. >> i look at the fact that in the average first midterm the president's party i loses 28 ses in the house and presidents can be very popular and get big crowds but their names are not on the ballot and people will go and vote for senator x and congressman y and as we saw with the clinton and barack obama in bush that doesn't transfer from the president's popularity to what happens with party -- speak quickly, you both agree that the biggest issue slain voters so far has been the brett kavanaugh process in that situation? k >> go ahead. >> you go had. >> i disagree. for republicans -- actually,
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it's time for both sides. trump is the animated factor and there are other things. but cap not immigrationonmpd ane economy and health care but i think people will come out and vote for or against on a. >> i agree with chris trump is the big factor here. martha: and he may be -- he may be the reason we see these numbers do get amped up it will be because of trump. bret: gentlemen, as always, thank you. >> thank you. martha: will publicans be able to block the blue wave? or will democrats make significant gains and take control of thehe house connect e go live at the capitol hill with a look at the balance of power and how these numbers will move or not move. bret: we are making a big change. to give us a a better understanding of how voters and what they are thinking and how they make the decision, breaking down the new fox news voter analysis system. that is next. there are multiples on the table: one is cash,
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i am a techie dad.n. i believe the best technology should feel effortless. like magic. at comcast, it's my job to develop, apps and tools that simplify your experience. my name is mike, i'm in product development at comcast. we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome. welcome back to our sunday welcome back to our sunday martha: will come back to the sunday night special of american election headquarters, 2018
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midterms, all 134 seats are up for grabss and members of congress, democrats will need a net gain of 23 seats to reclaim the majority and that is clearly their goal. mike emanuel live on capitol hill with more tonight. what are real because they seem leading up to tuesday? reporter: they are 42 open house seats due to retirement or members running for office. you lose the and commit a mighty and fundraising advantage. places to watch tonight in virginia republicann barbara comstock and dave pratt are excited to have tough races in suburban districts. in new jersey tom and leonard in a blue statee are two seats to watch. if they hold on republicans may hold their own. if the seats in the two in virginia go to democrats that will be a signal that could be a very long night for the gop. today meetinghouse will and protected the gop will get it donene. >> we will hold out. i feel the enthusiasm every can see it and were getting large
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crowds and a lot of feelings to what we saw two years ago at this point for the democrats were measuring the drapes and ready to winri something funny happened. reporter: police and others are working to make sure there's no blue wave and final hour. martha: democrats want to counter act bad and they are are they as competent as they are about winning the house. reporter: recent polling suggests big registered voters pervert the mechanic t can it's over a parking can it at least in his house races but the strong economy and concerns aboute border security are likey closing the gap in the key democrat says he's feeling good at this point. >> the team and the side that gets the most turnout or handles the ground game appropriately and aggressively will be the one that wins and i feel good about our turnout across the country and i think we will take the house back t. reporter: 's house gets taken back democratic chairs and the congress could be jerrold nadler of new york leading judiciary
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adam schiff of california leading intelligence and mac the waters of california leading . if they are steering committee for them to investigate all kinds of matters about president trump in his in ministration. martha: no doubt. thank you, mike. bret: examples have been around since the 1950s. fox news has used them for nearly 20 years but now we are making a change to fox news voter analysis. you to explain what that is and how it works, fox news night at night anger shannon bream and the director of the fox news decision team on [inaudible]. explain in simple terms over doing and what the changes.. >> we decided after 2016 we neededt with the huge growth of absentee voters in early voters in racine that right now in the data with the fact that in 2018 over six of the top 11 senate races are going to be held in
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states where over two thirds of the vote is coming early we decided we needed a different approach in his or voters never acceptable but they just vote early you can't exit polls someone who doesn't exit the ball. not doing an exit poll in our objective is to come up with an understanding of why people voted related and we believe the system will do that and what we do is a brief description we are having a huge survey conducting by phone and online of over 125,000 americans international sample and that compares to what we do with presented survey of about 25000 and that will enable us to show a lot more detail granular data about the electorates most probably will have pacific cross results in all 47 states with the statewide elections which we think is important. one of the lessons of 2016 isy the polling got it right and hillary clinton was headed to a significant 2% or two-point victory in the national of the vote but we need to measure
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state-by-state because that is how america votes. david state howth they vote and why they think that way. martha: i think it is a big deal. you said 25000 in the exit polls and this is 125,000 people enriching them on the internet and on cell phones and on their land lines because everyone knows that not semi- people useh them in line anymore. >> it is true. it's starting ahead of the day of the auction so start saturday in muncie when the polls coordinate to getting all those people who voted early lung with those who decided to turn out that they. the level of detail state-by-state is so interesting and will tell peopleoldaho in wt virginia how much the pole and demanded to people in the votes. please like indiana, west virginia, how they voted on kavanaugh and whether or notna that sweet voters one way or the other. it also takes a look at people who do not vote is wrapping them why didn't you engage this time or stay home so measures the economyn' immigration, all thins
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state-by-state, ages, race, background to give us more data about what starving people to vote. bret: you have the stories that the night and for that decision desk you will have more granular detail as you get the raw vote totals in from all the stages in our objective is to compare what the vote iss and we received a vote by county and we overlay that with how the vote is coming in and do that to number one prove that the accuracy of our polls and that were needed and help us make the call who is one election an individual state. martha: number questions and that is that you will have. thank you very much great to see you guys. we have a lot to talk about it in terms of the house to fight for control of the senate is also on the line in a look at ree races that l can make or brk it for both parties. bret: as a special coverage of the countdown to midterms news
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channel. -looks great, honey. -right? sometimes you need an expert. i got it. and sometimes those experts need experts. on it. [ crash ] and sometimes the expert the expert needed needs insurance expertise. it's all good. steve, you're covered for general liability. and, paul, we got your back with workers' comp. wow, it's like a party in here. where are the hors d'oeuvres, right? [ clanking ] tartlets? we cover commercial vehicles, too. i think there's something wrong with your sink.
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bret: president trump making a final push ahead of tuesday night. eleven rallies in eight states and one several critical states could have a direct impact in the balance of power in the senate and one of them key races in florida with a republican governor scott is looking to keep and commit to regret bill nelson from lending a fourth term it down there in florida heter daisy is life in miami. what are the vulnerable candidates telling you they see is the deciding factor in the midterms? reporter: there is still a ton of talk about the brett kavanaugh combination fight and that his income it will begin senator dean heller told me he thanks the excitement on the right that that created lasted just long enough to help them because lasted just until early voting started but he still faces a tough challenge for jackie rosen and this in
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tennessee congressmann marsha blackburn told me the top issue she has brought in her campaigning is democrats still replacing bob corker is the confirmation of constitutional doctors and aside from -- arizonati has the closest contet and the caravan is turning into the premier issue for republican charisma and martha next valley and race against democratic congresswoman kirsten cinema and the caravan and border security not just campaigning issues and border states but i've heard warnings about drugs and people pouring into country from candidates more than 1000 miles from mexico places like missouri and montana. every wilkins will keep their senate majority they need to just not lose two seats. there are three states where polls show it could be at the most respect the better, arizona, tennessee. democrats are defending even more ground.
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polling indicates the most danger forcing democrat senders in north dakota, indiana, missouri, montana and florida and the democratic candidates in all those places are trying to hold their seats by promoting their support for obamacare. bret. bret: peter doocy, live in miami. martha: as you can see a lot of the races are tight and president trump is heading to indiana tomorrow for today former president obama was firing up the crowd hoping to boost for the incumbent. mike is liveut in plymouth, indiana but what did president obama have to say out there? reporter: former president was polarizing. he told the packed convention center in gary, indiana for the democrats the republicans are robbing them fly. off the couchetff and never has about been more important. >> in two days, indiana, you get to vote and what i believe will be the most important election >> our lifetimes.
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reporter: president trump agrees that the senate race here in indiana is very important and is why his last-minute barnstorming to her includes two stops in the hoosier state that he stopped friday night inri indianapolis d tomorrow he willl be in fort wayne. will attempt to rally the base and break the deadlock that has probably challenger pulling within one point of the democratic incumbent and senator joe donnelly. martha: thank you very much, mike. chuck. bret: is a look at the latest fox news poll. incumbent senator hold a a seven-point lead in this poll and likely indianapolis but this st change from early september when he will the two-point lead in that poll. let's bring in our panel. hello, guys. you are so far away.
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[laughter] >> would you like us to come closer? bret: dana, and you talk about these earth races and a lot of them are really tight and it is basically just down to turn out. >> and two years ago we were here and thatnd was the most exciting election night that we all express together. this is pretty exciting. there is a white potential friday about comes a that could happen on tuesday night and neither party has really done a thing of under promising so they could overdeliver u and everyone has overpromised. the biggest risk for the democrat's they have these and if they fall short of hitting those then there's a measurable and a lot of blaming and because you know that on the night at midnight is the starting pistol for the 2020 election. there will be all this jockeying and i don't know legislatively how much it will matter in the next two years whatever happens in the house of representatives
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if the republicans maintain their majority in the senate they will probably do that for a little while but senate democrats up for reelection up uphill battle in 2020 not a single democrat is up for reelection is from aee state the trump one.. with regard to. martha: in terms of democratic turnout we've heard a similar message. this is such an important moment and you need to get out there and vote. that seems to be the driving t force behind what they are saying and that is a concern that people won't show up in that they won't vote. >> remember, history of midterm elections which is that typicallyem young people and minorities and women don't vote in big numbers. what we have seen is that in 2014 for examplen you got 40% of the potential turnout but you got to go back. if you go back to 2010 remember when obamacare and republicans
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came in and they wanted 63 seats and then you saw a bump but again it was a bump against churchgoing religious in that regard conservatives in older white people. what you get here is oprah and obama bikini pitch to that younger, more minority and especially i would saye a specil concern we have not paid a lot of attention to latino vote to get that latino vote activated and get them to come out. this plays into my summary people think of such an important election beyond the campaign ads and money we talked about which is a lot of people feel it significant because country is so deeply divided. >> money, five-point to billion dollars at this moment. >> it is unbelievable that that much money and today we heard that mike bloomberg, is putting another 5 million in. bret: molly. >> this is why it's a big mistake that the kavanaugh
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situation. democratic turnout has been something we saw they did a good job of coming out and voting in both of the previous years and republicans were trying to demoralize and did not bill great what was happening with the senate and house and you have that kavanaugh battle it completely activated republicans and reminded them of thetlte iss they care a lot about such as confirmation of judges. seeing what happened with that made them and having it so close to the election itav made a real airplane understand the idea behind it was probably they could get kavanaugh out and furthered demoralize the role of the motor butut the opposite happened with the stay strong and gather through and it excited republicans speak is the head of the democratic senator campaign chris van hollen on "fox news sunday". >> this is the toughest political map anyone party has faced in six years and we do have a path and it's a very narrow path as you indicate the fact that we are as competitive
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as we are is a real testament to our senators and candidates who have always said there were start standing up for people of their state. bret: acknowledging the tough matter. >> is a reality and i think will be interesting is the extent to which the trump coalition shows up and is transferred on to other republican candidates. in some of the 2017th races it did not in places like virginia and new jersey and special election it did not either. some of the senate races the map is much better for republicans in the fight donald trump seems to have given up campaigning for house races and he basically indicating he's giving signals that republicans will lose the house and is not helpful in those races. focusing on the senate races where his immigration message that hard-line closing argumento in a narrow set of states is going to work.
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on the flipside that closing argument i think will hurt republicans in the house and the president has made that cognition and we will see what happens there but the one thing we have not talked a lot about is governor races. 2020 redistricting and there will be probably anywhere from five-ten democratic pickups in the races crucial when you talk about what the house map will look like after the next election. that is really important and democrats have a lot of places they are supposed to pick up seats s. martha: thank you, everybody. bret: that is true. historic levels of enthusiasm from voters ahead of the high-stakes midterm so what of a the top issues driving people to the polls? that is next.l? that's next with my bladder leakage, the products i've tried just didn't fit right. they were too loose. it's getting in the way of our camping trips. but with a range of sizes, depend fit-flex is made for me. with a range of sizes for all body types, depend fit-flex underwear is guaranteed to be your best fit.
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bret: [inaudible] met you may be surprised to hear his m congressional candidate from texas and not a hitman in in a porno movie. >> i'm sorry i know he lost his eye in order or whatever -. martha: comedian pete davidson getting slammed for marking texas gop congressional candidate dan crenshaw unless nights episode of saturday night live. himself responded to this get between this -- that spring and karl rove,or former senior advir and deputy chief of staff to president george w. bush and
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[inaudible] gentlemen, welcome. good to have you here. the next friend of mine. bret: dan crenshaw. >> yeah, blew up by an ied and put in a medically induced. lost is when i and came back in to serve to combat tours after that and i don't know what saturday night live was the key. probably thinking nothing with that punchline. that comedian, so to speak, if that's what he is always dan crenshaw and his wife and the american people and the men he was honored to serve as ans apology. bret: robert, you don't want democrats having to answer questions about something like this and there's always things that happenut had elections in s is one that moves people to comment about? make absolutely. it was sad and watched it on snl and i thought it was despicable.
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i do not find it funny and i've been a supporter of wounded warriors for over a decade when i saw something like this it makes me sad. that being said i would get from then like that, i'm a huge fan of his is a congressman from massachusetts is he served america fact had over 20 military servicemen and women that are running as democrats this year. i'm hoping the democrats have a shift from what theyve saw last .ight martha: i would imaginene it wil bring more attention to dan crenshaw over the coming days soon to be congressman crenshaw is running for the second district market are broken and when the primary and they spent $60 and he spent the handle relatively small amount of money to and because he's an energetic or they get to hear a story, listening, wonderful human being and spectacular wife and the be in congress so maybe s&l can market as it is meant. bret: but that both of you set the table from your point of view. about what you are looking for come today. been talking about early vote
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34 million plus and there's a lot people engaged in the selection and in turn offered back that compared to 57 million in thehe presidential elections and at the big number. we are likely to see a big turnout everywhere and a very long one because will have closely contested races to house, senate andd i would not e surprised if the control of house came down literally several dozen races where there are several thousand votes sabrina candidates. >> it will be a late night for all of us and i think we've never seen this type of historical early voter and never seen this much money go into house races met democratic perspective. it feels a little better for us in the house and i'm not this whole blue wave stuff. my gut tells me we should be able to win the house because based on whated i've here heard
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from healthcare and the direction were going to feel like were running aun good campaign. were not talking enough about is governorships. this will be a very good night for the regrets i think we will pick up possibly as high as ten seats in governorships which will make a big difference for us going into 2020. senate, i think, kyle could give you the numbers better but chris finland that you guys well on fox. it's a narrow path. >> one correction. this is not the most favorable landscape for presidential e parties in 60 years but the most favorable political landscape for the party in power since he began elected senators by popular vote in 1914. never have we had elections with so many seats were held by the opposition and held states that the present. speak to agree with robert about the governor's races and setting up for 2020 and redistricting? >> they are important but i a wl not agree that there ten. write an all-time high for republicans.
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are we likely to lose some seats? yes because were term limited out in a number of states so yes, the republicans are likely to see losses they are in gains by democrats. important to watch legislative chambers because for example in colorado democrats make a run at getting controllf of the colorado senate which there is a to vote republican majority and by votes in florida and new york is 31-31 with republican governing with the help of the dissident democrat. it will be fun to watch. >> i'm not predicting but you could have the blue wall back in industrial america with governorships with ohio, michigan, in wisconsin. martha: and the impact of thatt on the 2020 election will be significant as well. bret: gentlemen, thank you. >> make you proud man speed lose coverage of the midterm elections, new look as we venture outside will take you outside to the newly contracted box square with the time-lapse
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of the eye-popping facility being built last week right here in the heart of new york city. martha: will take you out there for preview coming up next. if you have psoriasis, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats moderate to severe plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla,75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines and if you're pregnant or planning to be.
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it will not surprise you to it will not surprise you to martha: fox news iss going above and beyond the midterm elections on tuesday and we've constructed
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box square which is an entire election experience outside of our world headquarters in manhattan. fox news headlines 247 outside on the squarees. reporter: hello, you are breaking down the midterm election on tuesday and foxes will be hosting a viewing party for fans right outside the studio on the fox river in this area has been completed formed over the last few days and it is so impressive i wanted to give you are a closer look. fox news channel is americans electra headquarters for this reason. this is box square where midterm elections will be taking place. van can come in off the streetis watch the election results and there is a ton of stuff packed into this area that will make your unix. at home incredible.
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first, let's start with the state of the art of a studio. this is not here last week and we talked to one of the guys who built the studio and he said it made out of onene 100% american-made steel. there are 100 led tiles surrounding box square which are essentially giant tv screen. there's so much at stake on tuesday and election results will look bigger and bolder than ever before. i left out the best part. this is where our election coverage will be taking place. one of ourur studios to get up, down and show bret and martha a little bit of luck. this will be a real crowdpleaser. vaccination election experience ten where fox news and sccination stars will be all night long signing books, hanging out with fans,o there will be food, music, giveaways and one of the perks of signing up for fox nation. two more days to go and it's crunch time buth i need to go help out. a little more. to the left.
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perfect. it was fun to kick my feet up any popcorn and i was feeling that the last time anyone will er doing that athe fox news untl after the election is over. it took 75 people just a few days to get everything ready out here on fox square so rain or shine i can guarantee it will be a whole lot of fun out here on election night. bret and martha, back to you. martha: thank you. amazing. bret: i wish you could see the graphics of the building. coming up, final thoughts i had ita tuesday night.
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good night from new york. we are live from new york with a fired up crowd. are you ready? [applause] they are not making it up. they really are fired up. this election is so important we have so many fantastic guests. we barely know what to do with them all. good evening all. welcome to the next revolution. i'm steve hilton. this is the home of positive populism. positive populism is all about you the american people and how to make your life better. we will debate what's at stake in this election. theco

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