tv Americas News HQ FOX News December 2, 2018 1:00pm-2:00pm PST
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on mars this week. times as traveling seven the speed of a bullet. it had a one degree angle of entry to land safely. it had to slow down to five mph in seven minutes. there's only one word for it, awesome. >> thank you all. thanks to my panel and all of you for watching. i am paul gigot, hope to see you here next week. >> funeral preparations underway to honor the legacy of george herbert walker bush. hello everyone and welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's news hq". i am arthel neville. >> president h.w. bush will lie
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in state at the capital for his funeral service later this week in washington. of course on this sunday, tributes are continuing to pour in. here's his former vice president, dan quayle, appearing on sunday morning futures. >> he was a great individual and in my opinion, a great president. he loved his family. he loved his work. he loved the country. it was such an honor for me to work with him every single day that he was president and i was vice president. for the american people. >> - - is lives in college station, home to the bush presidential library or he would be laid to rest alongside his wife barbara and their three -year-old daughter who died of leukemia in 1953. >>reporter: the museum had a line outside this morning. a lot of families. parents wanting to explain to their kids the news. and who george bush was. and how he changed history. there's a number of exhibits in there. some in chronological order.
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beginning when the bushes moved out to texas making $300 a month. george bush went on to own an oil company but there's a story and said that he actually refused to sell the company to an individual for $400,000 less because, they would not guarantee the workers that they would have their jobs once it was sold. that was one way to illustrate humility, the temperament and the work ethic that typified 41. >> they talked a lot about president bush and what he was like. talked about what kind of man he was at what kind of man i want him to be. >>reporter: there is the george bush school of public policy on the campus of texas a&m. there was a vigil lastnight if you will , a lot of students. residents were on campus
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gathered behind the museum itself. near the burial site. they left candles, personal notes, flowers. at the foot of the statue of the president that is here on campus. and they also sang, god bless america, amazing grace, anchors away. i want to show you slides of the actual burial site which is closed right now by the secret service. it's a wooded area. you can't really see it from the road but that's where indeed barbara bush is currently buried as well as their daughter robin. where on thursday, the president will be brought here from houston in a funeral train .
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that is actually painted, a replica if you will or resembling air force one. kind of the blue and white that i saw pictures earlier today. that will bring the funeral party hereto college station and it will be a private service in back. for the bushes on the family and friends. >> a tremendous amount of respect and outpouring of affection for the former president from all of us. thank you. >> special counsel robert mueller is now considering bringing more criminal charges against paul manafort after accusing the former from campaign chairman of lying to investigators. this, as a president trump says he will not take a possible pardon for manafort off the table. molly heneberg is live in washington with more. >>reporter: a number of former translator in legal trouble. special counsel robert mueller's pro, michael cohen, paul manafort and others been republicans say mueller has yet to prove illegal collusion between russia and the tram campaign. cohen entered a guilty plea admitting to lying to congress about a real estate deal that trump was considering in russia prior to becoming president. that may spell trouble for cohen one gop senators is but
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not necessarily for president trump. >> the president is an international businessman. i'm not surprised he was doing international business. cohen is in trouble for lying to congress but not anything related to the campaign or russian influence. we have an investigation going on. we need to come to completion on that. it should be done quickly. >>reporter: meanwhile, mueller's team is expected to reveal this week but they are a are lies by former campaign advisor, paul manafort. after pleading guilty to financial fraud. they say he broke his plea deal and may face more charges. paul manafort's lawyers dispute that. - - says investigators are looking beyond paul manafort. >> it means that paul manafort
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was doubledealing basically been going through the pretense of cooperating but he was an underhanded way, supplying information to the trump legal defense team and president trump continues to dangle a pardon which adds the growing body of evidence that the president is involved in obstructing justice. that is the ultimate significance here. >>reporter: president trump has said mueller's team has treated paul manafort quote, so poorly and that he hasn't taken anything, such as a pardon, off the table. >> thank you molly. >> i have an update now from the southern border. that's where - - are forcing t1 officials, shutting down the sports complex they've been using as a shelter for those migrants. 6000 central american migrants are being told they are moving to a former concert venue that happens to be further away from the border because they have to get them out of that stadium. vice president mike pence is the same again mexico will work together on a more manageable asylum process.
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>> we will continue conversations with this new administration about reaching an agreement to permit the united states to process asylum applicants while individuals remain in mexico. but those conversations and those negotiations are ongoing. we remain hopeful that we'll be able to reach that agreement. going forward. >> there may be progress on that. jeff paul is lives in tijuana with the latest.>>reporter: we are standing here on the tijuana border. this is in fact the exact spot where one week ago, hundreds of migrants from the caravan at a protest and marched up to this border wall. you can see for federal agents standing by, anticipating any other moves, should they happen. but it's been a very quiet day so far. most of the action happening at
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one of the shelters. that's her officials have closed down one shelter due to health concerns, moving many of those migrants, thousands in fact. to a new shelter that is much larger. this is all happening on the same weekend where mexico is inaugurating a new president who mentioned the central american migrants in his speech thank you possible canthing he canada and the united states. >> i want to work with the three companies to promote the development of central american countries and also, hours but in this way confront and not with coercive measures, the phenomenon of migration. >>reporter: yesterday, there were talks of another marched to the border. that ended up not happening but a big part of the reason why it did, many of the migrants who have been at that shelters say, they didn't want to march but they don't feel like it will help their cause. many waiting around to see what
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this new president from mexico means to them that he's a leftist that campaigned on helping the poor. whether he takes any action, we will wait and see. >>it's encouraging that there's no one else there be just you reporting from the wall without anyone trying to get over it or through it . thank you. >> alaska is experiencing more than 1000 aftershocks from friday's major earthquake near anchorage. the magnitude 7 quake opened roads and left thousands without power.utility companies are scrambling to restore service. fortunately, no deaths or serious injuries were reported. roof collapse and structural damage appears less widespread than expected. >> there have been rare december tornadoes ripping through central illinois in the midwest.that destroyed homes and injured at least 30 people so far. adam class is tracking the storm from the fox news weather center. pretty rare and unusual to have this at this time of year. it's very rare and all
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because of the warm temperature is. which means some folks are having a beautiful sunday in front of that system. a couple weather makers. one of them has been absolute downpours across the gold coast, stretching toward portions of the southeast. that rain will continue to move off the coast eventually but it still raining and a lot of spots. if you live in the northeast, you've noticed a mix of wintry weather with rain stretching from the mid-atlantic up toward portions of maine. that's where you're still seeing someof the snow been in the system that causes those tornadoes, that's stretching back toward portions of the planes and into the midwest. it's that leading edge where the air is the warm enough where you so see those downpours and tornadoes. the backside, they are talking about winter weather. there's cold air behind it and winterwatches and advisories in place and some of the planes states. this will move a little bit. i do think it loses some of its gusto . it dries out and you continue to see some rain and snow.
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i don't think you're likely going to see a lot more tornadic activities. but it's being driven by that warm air. you are seeing it here. this is the cold front. when you get that cold and warm air bumping into each other, that's when you see those customs. it's not usually 66 degrees in louisville. these are very warm temperatures. 55 in new york city. one currently across parts of the country which means it's a beautiful day. it continues to stretch into the country and it becomes winter once again in the next couple days. >> it is winter, it makes sense. 40 degree differences in some of those temperatures. >> president trump announcing a trade truce with china. it's only for 90 days so what happens after that?>> plus, washington reacting to michael cohen.
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led to lying about the proposed trump tower deal and rush up in what is that all about and what is he trying to cover up if anything or is it much ado about nothing? our legalpanel will weigh in . he's a pretty good spokesperson. ehhh. so when i say, "drivers who switched from geico to esurance saved an average of $412," you probably won't believe me. hey, actor lady whose scene was cut. hi. but you can believe this esurance employee, nancy abraham. seriously, send her an email and ask her yourself. no emails... no emails. when insurance is affordable, it's surprisingly painless. vof hundreds of families, he'se hmost proud of the one the heads he's kept over his own. brand vo: get paid twice as fast with quickbooks smart invoicing.
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glucerna®. 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. >> the g 20 summit comes to a
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close with president trump and china's president agreeing to a 90 day tariff truths. ellison barber at the white house. >>reporter: according to the white house press secretary, president trump agreed to leave tariffs on $200 billion worth of chinese goods at 10 percent. instead of raising it to 25 percent on january 1 which is what they were previously planning to do. the white house says beijing agreed to quote, purchase a not yet agreed upon amount of product from the u.s. to reduce the trade imbalance. president trump and president xi jinping are set to begin negotiations on structural changes on things like intellectual property rights and agriculture that the press secretary said they be can
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those negotiations immediately. if the two countries are unable to reach a deal within 90 days, the 10 percent terrace will be raised to 25 percent. >> it'll have an incredibly positive impact on farming. meaning agriculture. industrial products. computers. every type of product. china right now has major trade barriers. major tariffs. and also major nontariff barriers which are brutal. china will be getting rid of many of them. >>reporter: on capitol hill, some lawmakers say they still need to see more details. >> they've had a history, decades of cheating on trade rules.the whole point tariffs is that they are a temporary tool to reach a negotiation and to make change with chinese/stay with us relations and what we are doing with trade policy. i'm hopeful, it's not clear to me yet that the president has done this right. >>reporter: president trump
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also talked about north korea with reporters on air force one. he said a summit with himself and can kim jong-un could happen in january.they are looking at three potential different places for that summit to take place again in january or possibly february. >>eric: for more on the tariffs, let's bring in peter brooks. always good to see you. it's a delay but kicking the can down the road to march. what does that achieve? >> you got them back to the table. they will start talks immediately. they weren't doing that at a substantive level before this. the chinese will buy a substantial amount of american goods. we don't know what that is or
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how much. but i'm hoping it will bring relief to our farmers on things like soybeans. china i think buys a third of the soybean crop. there could be good news in that respect. the chinese said we've gotten china's attention. this is something that hadn't agreed to before.and now there's an opportunity and the president has also put a time limit on it. he didn't say we are okay for nine months or a year or forever. only 90 days. if we are seeing progress from the president could extend that. if not, he increases the tariffs against chinese goods coming into the united states. >>eric: do you think xi jinping as we see them sitting on one side of the table and the president on the other. do you thinkchinese officials were surprised , that they were not used to a blunt business type dealing that this president seems means what he says and they're getting a different deal than they have from administrations in the past? >> i think you said it correctly. i think that's the case. these issues were trying to deal with. intellectual property. trade barriers, subsidies, the lack of a judicial system where
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we can get redress on commercial issues. the list of things were dealing with. these have been around for a long time. president trump finally said enough is enough. and we need relief on this. if we don't get relief then we will get tough. i think the chinese are quite surprised. these are the two worlds largest economies. everyone is watching this. if the chinese want to give us a level playing field, then we will make it tougher for them. we all want free trade but we want fair trade. in other words, we need access to the chinese market. they can have access to our market while we can have access to theirs on an equitable basis. i think the president certainly got their attention and we could see progress. it's going to be tough. a heavy lift, no question about that. i think this is a good sign. >>eric: you know what vince lombardi said. a yard at a time. you can't always throw the hail mary.
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matt cartwright, a democratic congressman from pennsylvania. the keystone state hit so hard. here's what he said about the meeting. take a listen. >> i think this is classic donald trump negotiating. stepping back from deals. not being that interested in this or that. he's been an effective negotiator in the sense that, he's not wedded to a deal and he can step away from a position at any moment. i think this is classic, what he's done to extend that to 90 days. let's follow that out and see how it works. >>eric: i guess the congressman support of you is is a classic negotiating tactic but what happens at the very end? rex we don't know but i think there are positive scenarios as i pointed out previously. >> some of this criticism will be political, right? there's no question about that.
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let's see what we can get out of this. we've gone the chinese to the table and gotten their attention. they know what happens in 90 days.if we had progress, maybe we will extend that. this is a very heavy lift and thankfully, an american president has taken the chinese on in these inequities in our trade relationship. >>eric: you think the inequities will be addressed sufficiently? in some ways, they've also got the ball by these on unfair trade practices that they've engaged in for decades. >> they will not go away from them willingly. that's why this pressure is important. we have seen the chinese economy grow at its slowest pace in 10 years .9-10 years. so they are concerned with the chinese have a social contract with their people that you stay, you let us handle the political reins at the chinese communist party. as we increase the standard of living. and if the growth isn't what it
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should be, then the chinese people will be feeling it. i think the chinese economy is feeling it so they will have to be compromised if they want this worlds biggest trading relationship to continue and to be of some benefit to them. >>eric: peter brooks, always good to see you. >>arthel: a call for michael cohen to testify before the senate intelligence committee after pleading guilty to line to congress about his business dealings in russia. what that couldmean for the mueller probe and the president . >>eric: any new look at the president h.w. bush and his foundation. they release really important and emotional rare glimpses at his younger years. it's time to sell or trade in your car.
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underway for the nation to bid farewell to george h.w. bush. he passed away on friday at his home in houston. he was 94 years old. president trump announced air force one will fly his body tomorrow to washington d.c. where it will lie and stay in the capitol rotunda. rick leventhal is live outside the bushes home in houston, texas. hi rick. >>reporter: today has been reserved for family and friends of george h.w. bush who is now here at this funeral home until tomorrow morning when we are told members of the secret service detail will carry his casket from here to an airfield. that's where he will board air force one for that flight to washington where he will lie in state in the capitol rotunda before his funeral is held wednesday in the national cathedral. george and barbara were proud, longtime residents of houston. today the houston texans paid tribute showing a montage of
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photos on the stadium's scoreboard. a moment of silent reflection for the man called him an american hero, patriot, beloved houstonian and friend of the team. his son talked about his parents texas connection. >> they love to the people here. anybody that would ask my dad, even when he was in a wheelchair for a picture. he would stop and graciously - - he would treat everybody in houston the same bed with the same amount of respect. he loved houston 33 we also heard this morning from former vice president dan quayle who spent four years in the white house with president bush. >> he loved his family. he loved his work. and the country. it was such an honor for me to work with him every single day that he was president and i was vice president, for the american people. >>reporter: a short time ago,
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when the presidents grandsons, pierce bush came out of the family home and spoke to one of our photographers and said his grandfather was the kindest, most decenthuman being and that he was feeling a sadness but also real release that he's now in a better place. >>eric: all of our thoughts and prayers with the bush family . >> not only have the stone other information but they were very forward leaning in terms of offering this information to the trump campaign and it appears in a number of the senior trump officials, campaign officials continue to lie about those contacts. >>arthel: mark warner, just one of several top democrats calling for former trump attorney mikemichael cohen to
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testify after he pleaded guilty to lying to congress about the presidents business dealings in russia. here's the counterpart, congressman adam schiff. >> at the same time donald trump was the presumptive nominee of the gop and arguing in favor of doing away with sanctions. he was working on a deal that would require doing away with sanctions for him to make money in russia. that is a real problem. it means that the compromise is far broader than we thought. >>arthel: let's bring in - - the associate editor for the hill. let's jump in to get through quite a bit in the segment but what is the likelihood of the democrats calling michael cohen back to testify on capitol hill and the likelihood that mr. cohen will be forthcoming this time? >> well, the probability of the democrats doing it is almost 100 percent. this admission by michael cohen that he lied to congress previously is really like a loose thread of the democrats will grip onto and pull but they can unravel by doing so.
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so he will be called back at mr. adam schiff, he has said he believes other witnesses have lied. and there's the prospect perhaps of members of the trump family being called to testify. the labor at the start of a new chapter in all of this. >>arthel: meanwhile, rudy giuliani is jumping all over michael cohen's credibility. so who will the public believe? giuliani's discrediting campaign or mueller's confirmation that the information michael cohen gave to him is truthful? >> we are in such a polarized moment right now. that division will almost certainly be along party lines. people who are supportive of the president will be predisposed to believe rudy giuliani and critics, mr. cohen. the question is how much evidence will be produced as this process goes forward?
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will we see more documentation? some of the legal filings suggest that mr. mueller might have emails that prove the case. >>arthel: moving forward, are the democrats energized to the point of pursuing impeachment or are they going to be more measured and hopeful the mueller investigation will produce more indictments and potentially damning information on the president or its family members? >> democrats are definitely energized but i think they are cautious about impeachment. they see impeachment as starting a fire they might not be able to control and my end up burning them. they remember in the late 1990s when republicans impeached president clinton and didn't reap any political benefit from doing so but in fact, it rebounded against them. i think democrats are hoping primarily there will be more facts exposed by mueller, troubled waters for the present will get deeper without them taking the divisive step of beginning impeachment proceedings.
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>>arthel: we just play that found from congressman adam schiff of california. pointing out what he sees as a real problem with the then republican presumptive nominee donald trump and his business aspirations with russia. will we ever see the president's tax returns and to think congress will subpoena more detailed business records from the president? >> the congress is clearly going to try to get more records from the president. that is something president trump has been resistant to since he was obviously a candidate. but this goes to why so many people close to the president were concerned about the midterm elections and continue to be concerned now that democrats will be come january, in control of the house of representatives. control means you have subpoena power . >>arthel: but what are they hiding, why are they concerned? >> we don't know that because it hasn't been revealed, right?
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president trump broke with precedent and not releasing his tax returns. most recent presidential nominees have done that.he claims his innocence and says he was under audit. there were other reasons, why he doesn't want to give up this material. but it's going to be a pitched political - - again. >>arthel: what happens if president trump pardons paul manafort, is dangling the notion potentially politically perilous for the president democrats politically dangerous for sure. >> they say making that offer in itself strengthens any case toward obstruction of justice. it's true that a president has brought ranging pardoning powers. what is not at all clear is whether those powers can be potentially used to frustrate an investigation, touching upon that. that's different from using pardon power. someone unrelated to you has been unjustly dealt with.
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>>arthel: i want to go back to something you mentioned a bit of the wealth related to the russia provide the call to testify before congressional committees? do you have any idea who might be called? >> there has been talk of donald trump jr., the president eldest son being called. there has been talk of jared kushner. i wouldn't want to get too far ahead in the reporting of this. seewhat happens when democrats take control .clearly they believe this can work almost as a twin track with mueller knowing his own investigation and then calling people and getting evidence that way. when mr. schiff said he believed previous witnesses have lied or been misleading, he didn't stipulate who he was referring to. so we'll have to see how that develops. >>arthel: if congress request for subpoenas document, must
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they be handed over? >> that's a complicated legal question. generally, yes. it's difficult to resist a congressional subpoena. but what you can do is mount a case arguing why it shouldn't be and kick the can down the road. >>arthel: thanks niles. >>eric: we will have a lot more on the investigation and michael cohen's lawyer who says he should not go behind bars. will their plea work. our legal panel weighs in on what that means and what it could mean for the president. the late president george h.w. bush revealing his thoughts and feelings through an audio diary. he kept one in the white house. coming up, we will hear some of those excerpts as a nation honors and members an american patriot and leader. ed our world. i had no idea the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs,
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but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. but he has plans today.ain. hey dad. so he took aleve. if he'd taken tylenol, he'd be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve. all day strong. >> he's a weak person and not a
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lesser prison sentence by making up a story. here's the thing, even if he was right, it doesn't matter. because i was allowed to do whatever i wanted during the campaign. >>eric: that's president trump lashing out at his former attorney, michael cohen. after mr. cohen cut that plea deal with robert mueller. he admitted he made false statements to congress about that potential trump organizationproject in russia. that big trump tower in moscow. what does this mean? for more on the plea and what that could mean for the probe and the president. here's our legal panel. fred burns , mercedes cohen. doug, let me start with you. first of all, michael faces like five years in prison for his lawyers want time served. he doesn't serve any time. you think a judge will go for that? >> you also have the sentencing guidelines. i looked quickly at a filing and the pointers it came out to somewhere in the vicinity of - - and the defense is arguing it's more like 45-55. that's the starting point.
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they are not binding. to answer your question, i don't think judge - - will necessarily give him no time. >>eric: what happens when the defense is no jail time, he's cooperating? >> it will be interesting because if there's something that comes from the prosecutor's office where they have a plea to the judge to have leniency, there might be an issue of going back and forth. i agree certainly there will be some - - because it's lying. when you say you like to congress, it's a kind of moral turpitude that will follow you the rest of your life. it's not something you can put in the background you will always be known as someone who's lives. as a convicted liar. >>eric: what does this mean for the investigation because this is lying to congress did not directly a russia type of collusion type of crime. it has to do with building this
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trump tower that never went through andpotentially try to hide that fact. >> pretty interesting , it's all about when the communication regarding trump tower mascot ended. what cohen said before congress is ended in january 2016. now he said under oath, it didn't end then it ended in june -july 2016. what we really think is happening is that mueller gave those questions to president trump. he was looking for those responses. there were questions about this deal. and he's probably going to compare no doubt, what president trump's answers were when these, indications ended. >>eric: why is that important? >> it's more political than legal. i think what they're arguing honestly, is that the president misled the potential voters as to the extent as to his deals in russia. what legal experts have pointed
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out, it's not illegal for a candidate to have a proposed business deal. which by the way, didn't go through. that's not a political soundbite. it's more political than legal, for sure. >> doug and i are both private practitioners and represent large corporations. you ask a ceo when these two medications took place, who was talking to who. all of these issues, most of them will tell you, unless their finger is right on the polls and they are involved they today in a project where there's a memorandum of understanding, it's unlikely that they will know. >>eric: he said i didn't do anything wrong. >> exactly. >>eric: here's what rudy giuliani said. michael cohen said there was a
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nonbinding letter of intent that was sent.as far as he knows, it never came to fruition. that was kind of the end of it. beyond congress, where's the criminality?>> it's a deal that didn't happen which sounds comical. in fairness, - - the reality is it's so toxic and everyone so red in the face. look at this, they were in dealings. the point is, where is it going to go? you hit it right on the head. with the new democratic house of representatives, everyone saying they're going to start drilling down all over the place.i said i don't think that's necessarily going to happen and it's a little counterintuitive becausethe point is, it's not necessarily going to help them . >>eric: here's - - he's the congressman, donald trump knows him very well. been in congress for many years. incoming chairman of the judiciary committee. >> i think we will know a lot more when we see mr. mueller's
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report. he knows a lot more than we do at this point. the fact that he's been able to show all of these people, whether it's paul manafort or gates or michael flynn or michael cohen come all the people around the president were lying. i assume he's got real documentation and proof and we'll see that in due course. >>eric: he sang this a lot we don't know about, he thinks. >> most practitioners will tell you, when your client is in the throes of a federal investigation. it starts off in a more narrow focus and then suddenly, it's a huge wide net. because it starts to accumulate over time point how many witnesses, where there text messages, documents. we know this, when your client is in the throes of this investigation. you wantto shut it down as quickly as possible, because you know these federal prosecutors will take it to the 15th , to the hundred degree.
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>>eric: some people saying there is a perceived conflict of interest. but legally, because of this hotel deal. >> i really do think it's about what the president said about this particular deal and what did michael cohen say. and if it's consistent, we will move on. >> they will turn around and try to investigate. >> also, i think it's a warning shot to everyone else coming down the pike. this is what we are doing. did it with men afford and cohen. we will squeezeyou hard . >>eric: a little like ken starr, running off into other areas. the president did not want the financial area - - we will see how that goes. esquires duo, thank you. >>arthel: the bush foundation releasing a rare and personal look at the life of president george herbert walker bush. excerpt from his diaries and
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letters. that's next. >> i think historians will say we did pretty well. and, that's all right for me. i'm not in any rush. i will let them make that determination. ♪ for each job exxonmobil creates, many more are created in the community. because energy touches so many industries, it supports 10 million u.s. jobs.
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we have this just in from the bush family spokesman, jim mcgraph, he tweeted this with this photograph. he said, quote, air force one arrived in houston for what will be called special air mission 41. tomorrow and wednesday. a beautiful day in texas, ceiling and visibility unlimited, mr. president, that a reference to one of the president's favorite aviation terms. he often talked about like that way. getting a new look at his life and his younger years, the 41st president as you know passed away on friday and his foundation is releasing rare behind the scenes glimpses at his life. jackijackjackie heinrich with mn >> reporter: addressed to his children, the audio clips capture melancholy as he
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accepted the fact that he lovedd would some day come to an end. it is paired with countless photos of children and grandchildren, he leaves guidance for those he leaves behind and assurance that he would always be there for him in spirit. >> dear kids, this letter is about aging. last year there was only a tiny sense of time left, of sand running through the glass. i want to put this aging on hold for a while now. i don't expect to be on the a-team anymore. >> reporter: jeb bush also revealed today there will be more of these videos to come. he tweeted, we'll be release ago video series with excerpts from his diary and letters. this reflection on aging is from september 1988, hashtag #remembering 41. there was a letter to barbara written in 1943, the letter he
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left to bill clinton after losing the election and many letters to his president. he never completed an auto biography. this video serves as his parting gift. >> as the summer finishes out and the seas get higher, the winds a little colder, i'll be making some notes so i can add to this report on getting older. >> reporter: the bush foundation has not said when the rest of the videos will be released or how many more are to come. we will be awaiting those. >> the bush foundation is the website to go see these. >> reporter: yes. we'll be sharing them too. >> very special. thank you. >> stay with us on fox news for continuing coverage of president gorge h.w. bush's life and legacy and the remembrances and services planned throughout the week. we'll be right back. i am all about living joyfully. the united explorer card hooks me up.
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some brave young hospital patients taking a special trip to the north pole this weekend. delta airlines did up salt lake city hangar as a winter wonderland and teamed up with the local hospital for childrens to bring kids and families on a mock airplane ride to santa's home base and of course they got to meet santa himself and they spent the day enjoying the holiday season. that is a lovely end to this
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newscast. we're so han thankful you joine. >> wonderful by delta airlines and we think of president bush and his family today and what he meant to our country and thank you for spending time with us. tonight i scared the dog, i was on the couch with the dog, i sort of -- this is what i do in my time off, sort of checked the court docket, saw the filing. i yelped, scared the dog in a way that stuck. he jumped off the couch. he wouldn't talk with me until breakfast time this morning. greg: that's no way to talk about charism chris matthews. [ laughter ] [ cheering and applause ] greg: it's like i'm crying but i'm not. talk about a vicious cycle. i call it the trump 360. trump says or tweets something outrageous, the media freaks out, filling their depends with compost. it'snd
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