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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  January 14, 2019 11:00pm-12:00am PST

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whether jayme closs was sexually assaulted but the complete doesn't list any sex crimes. >> sean: people are just evil in the world. unfortunately, that's all the time we have this evening. let not your heart be troubled because the news always continued. she's in new york, not in the sewer or in the swamp, so she can't wine tonight. >> what are you talking about? i came into town and all hell breaks loose. i'm thinking, maybe i won't finish my term through 2,021, or it's possible, because things have changed, that's what you're good mayor of new york city said. >> sean:>> conrad de blasio? every lunatic in the democratic party, i want them all to run. it will be highly entertaining.
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>> martha: that's a great show tonight. did the fbi target president trump as retaliation over the firing of jim comey? we picked a former assistant director of the fbi who it is outraged at his former agency's behavior. tonight, we are judging the judges. how a lawless judiciary is imperiling you with resistance. and decrees on immigration and other commentary. you will not believe this. plus, a new battlefront opening on the war on men. how the left is complaining rank abuse and violence with classic masculinity. i can't miss debate ahead. but first, democrats get away wafrom governing. that's the focus of tonight's angle. the president remained in washington over the weekend, very snowy. he was ready and willing to open a deal with them, but nancy and
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del mike pelosi and her crew left town. but they talked a good game. >> by punish people who are applying for food stamps because a presidentnt is having a temper tantrum? >> i hope they just do the right thing. owhy we are having that debate, let's reopen the government. >> let's get down to business and reopen the government tomorrow. >> martha: as i always say, forget about what they say and look at what they do. more than 30 democratic leadersr and their families needed to catch a chartered flight bound for the sunny shores of puerto rico. so while 800-1000 workers remain on furlough, these very concerned at democrats reliving the the high life out of beach resort in san juan. the trip came courtesy of 109 lobbyists, from facebook, amazon, various unions and microsoft.
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it was part of the congressional hispanic caucus is bold back retreat. the democrats were reportedly there to survey the damage of hurricane maria and a talk with various union groups. i remember that tidbit. stre's senator roberts menendez, taking a very personal interest in the local recovery effort. it looks like instead of helping the hurricane victims, he's helping himself to hurricane on the rocks. let's face it, this is a liberal pack junket paid for by lobbyists so that they can frolic in the tropics with celebrities.gr yes, the big congressional getaway fell on on the same weekend, wouldn't you know, as broadway megastar lin manuel miranda brought his award-winning minute musical "hamilton" to the island with the original cast. the media has been tripping over gthemselves praising maranda for his tireless efforts to bring
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maranda to puerto rico to support thee arts on the island. the plan was to perform the musical for three weeks. now there is a really interesting back story that got lost in all the gauzy coverage. hits the alma mater of linda manuals father. the maranda family charity race a million dollars to restore the family, theater. but this led to a shutdown of a different sort. and one of these union sent a letter to maranda's a father. >> the letter ended up saying there are real problems at the university of puerto rico and we want to realize that bad things and protests could have been a roger production. >> martha: now he is all for protests, and his family have
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long supported left-wing protests. even sings protest songs. >> ♪ yeah, you blow us all away, someday, someday ♪ >> martha: of "the new york times" quote that some students of the university of puerto rico who were less than thrilled that hamilton would be coming to campus. one said "the only artists and people that benefit from theom hamilton are the elite white north american settlers, the rich bourgeoisie and those who actively participate and aspire to become oppressors. as a latin person, he should be more careful of glorifying who hamilton hamilton was. in addition to the union groups students were also threatening to protest the production on campus. so how did mr. "they are not
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taking away my shot" react in the face of leftist threats? sadly he caved to the pressure and with the production to an art center off campus. maranda gave into mob rule and he also missed a huge opportunity with the world presy looking on no less to challenge and educate the liberal forces undermining free speech on campus. even hours which pretty much support their agenda. if they could go after their favorite son, what could other performers expect? and what would hamilton have done? >> it was an ovation like none other. especially after so much pain. >> well, maranda never looked
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back. the entire story was lost in a swirl of celebrity and grammar. just the way the left likes it. and, they had to buy their own hamilton tickets according to reports.tt they get to attend an after party with the cats for free, courtesy of the latino victory.y i bet they thought they were in the room when it happened, even though they worked. and that's the end goal. here is juan williams, fox news clinical analyst, and monica crowley. great to see both of you. talk to the democrats, can they continue to push down for the government shutdown to end because i'm, trump is there and,
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imagine if you go to mar-a-lago, there would have been uproar. they will go hang out, -- let me get this straight, have thele phones are broken? >> so you would have been okay for trump going to mar-a-lago for the weekend? >> and let me just say, you have senator mitch mcconnell there, they have all said, let's reopen -- sending a visual of menendez without his shirt on? i could see why the right would enjoy it given his past problem problems, and, of the judgment
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to do that. probably a violation of every rule. they are so worried about the comment, these guys are living the high life in puerto rico. >> i'm glad they are helping, but come on. and he's been in the office for weeks wanting to talk to the democrats and broker aa deal. the democrats will put him basking in the sun and surf but that doesn't demonstrate the arrogance of d a party -- no fer of any consequences because they have the protection of the press. if this had been the republicans down there basking, and that's
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corruption of the media that protects the democratic party and their agenda but it also points to something bigger. because that's what the fbi stories are all about, that's what the russian hoax iss all about and it continues to this day. so while we are looking forward to getting ready for the 2020 election cycle, they are still fighting the 2016 cycle and they are doing everything they can including starting with the government and in the sweat s trump set about the puerto rican extravaganza. watch. >> president trump: i can relax. i've been in the white house, and i think it's important for others to be there. ie, had a wonderful vacation ovr the weekend.
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>> is about 2020 now. >> mr. poor me, all along, and this is a guy remember, at least twice as much on the golf cours golf course. >> absolutely. obama said, he's created more jobs. >> how does he think these manufacturing jobs -- they are never coming back. never coming back. he's going to wave his magic wand. >>ni you made it, but you have n so fast to get away from trump -- >> martha: i'm not getting away from trump at all, if you get away from trump, they will
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go down the tubes. >> so who in the future, jeb bush? >> the republican party -- >> martha: losers. >> the republican party has -- >> as he said, he could shoot a man on fifth avenue and laura ingraham would back it. >> i had a column last week in the l washington times about the trump economic miracle and i commend you to it because it does list all of the latest economic data thanks to the ripped president and republic party. but to the bigger issue, one of the reasons that donald trumpss was elected was because he wasn't one of them. he came in as a successful businessman who was intent on solving the nation's problem. remember both parties have
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looked the other way because it's perfect to keep it going. he's sitting in the white house saying, i have the ideas to solve this, but she needs to meet me, maybe not even halfway, maybe a quarter of the way, democrats. >> this is trump talking about why he's not going to relent on this issue of the wall. let's watch. >> president trump: i will never, ever back down. we will deal with the people, and if they think they can stop me from building the wall, they think that's a good thing for 2020 because they are going to win. >> do you think there's any politics? he would do daca, and they've already open the door to doing
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some kind of deal. >> what i wanted to say to you is, this was the deal that was on the steeple a year ago and is broken no we want to focus in half. and now you have lindsey graham saying, we need three weeks. these are republicans i'm talking about. >> martha: none of them could be elected president of the united states. >> so that's what we are talking about? >> i'm saying here is the president and needs to make the decisions. >> doing the right thing for the american people and keeping the government open, and people not getting paired, thus i thought march or april, i can't remember now but it was phenomenal.
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so when he goes to puerto rico and performs, and i know i'm getting off-topic. but i think it's great. you have to admit that it's pretty funny when even lynn manual is shut down by the protesters and has to move into production. why are you making someone like him let alone anyone else but you are not forgetting. >> inner monologue you said, it's anha indication, and not oy puerto rico under siege, they haven't gotten -- they are still complaining about issues that they had with statehood and people in theit union stealing - >> what was beyond me was they were worried about violence. >> toward. the entire bill of rights >> i
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like the fact that trump and -- they are tweeting out photos off the white house. he gets shut down in 1 foot of snow. and he is like, well, it is very beautiful. great segment. when one we criticize him for being way too liberal on certain things. all right, liberal media in full down meltdown mode over the weekend and this piece is entitled fbi open secretly. >> that breaking news is special tonight. >> don lemon almost changed his facial expression. the report was on watson's other
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shows are talking about. in reaction to director jim comey without any actual evidence. join me now is chris walker, he worked for 24 years as a speciai agent. your reaction to this extraordinary death by fbi leadership investigation with little to no predicate. they are investigating him for exercising his article to authority to fire a member of executive branch, solely within his plenary power to do so. >> i guess the biggest surprises that anyone would consider "the new york times" to be a credible source on this. i get the feeling that maybe the sources are the same people at the fbi that have been discredited themselves. mccabe, comey, paige and peter
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strzok. that's a real theory here, it's not the she can but during the, nothingno they could have done during her tenure would be credible. we know they were biased and we know they had a kid gloves investigation of the clinton email investigationyo and they have all been disgraced. they lost their last little pocket of supporters inside and outside the fbi community.e so why should we believe that anything they did during that time. >> martha: when you look at the way the fbi has operated in the past several years, going back to whether you are talking about the uranium one deal or if you are talking about hillary's emails? is it your decision to announce that hillary is not going to be indicted? i was very odd, july 2016 press
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conference. what does the rank and file fbi staff or agent do to try to go in and do a job? i honestly wonder what this does to the public's view of justice overall? >> that's one of the big tragedies of this, there are 35,000 men and women of the fa that strap it on and go out there and do the best job that they can. and they don't deserve what that inner circle has brought down on them because he has been sort of using the fbi as a shield, and literally hundreds of them. they all agreed that comey was a rogue operator and his inner circle where people had been promoted beyond their capabilities accelerated promotions and they will rate
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represented. >> but they had they didn't like the fact that he fired comey, they didn't like the fact that he had a close relationship with russia.l all of this calls him into question toh launch a counter until investigation, it's ludicrous. the whole thing is a completely anti-constitutional and i disagree, i think separation of power is a big deal and another fate, blackeye again. i want to put something up on our screen for the viewers across the country and across the globe. this is how cnn start one of its hours today. look at this. trump in russia. they have all these hillary's, targeted by russian hackers, all the way up to trump, and i can't even read the last one. the meeting at trump tower, paul
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manafort, and all that. so we made our own. this is enough to launch a counter intel investigation, we did this one. obama and russia. remember when obama laughed off from the same russia was a threat? remember how they had that veiled reset with relations with russia? and the secretary of state's husband got a $500,000 fee to speak in moscow? no sanctions until the end of december 2016? you could do your own but if this is what you are going to judge, it's okay go around for a logic and counter intel investigation. we didn't even mention uranium one in there. i guess we could have had the fbi launch an investigation into obama for russia as well. >> the attorney general guidelines are very specific about what predication it takes to open an investigation. nothing you justt mentioned
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amounts to that level of predication. so i go back to the leadership failure within that inner circle. it obviously was personal, we know that between the text between peter strzok and lisa page but i don't want anyone to think that that is how -- that reflects the fbi. >> martha: we are talking about the upper echelon of the fbi. stay there
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>> time to see what the groups >> while it's not clear what the groups were fighting about, what is clear is everyone arrested is a member of ms-13 and a reminder of the gang's violent way violent way of ways. >> martha: more proof tonight that our nation's immigration laws need to be enforced in the polls close. police say three members of the ms-13 gang, who at two of arete detained stabbed and picked someone. all three defendants were here illegally. they came here in 2016 is unaccompanied alien children. that preferred status earned them a quick release to a family already in america. one of those suspects was actually arrested ten months after arriving here on suspicion
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of gang activity. a few months later, this judge, 95-year-old robert sweet who has been sitting on the bench since the carter administrationte ordered that lopez be released, claiming he had been held to long for a minor. la paz now 19. another suspect was also reportedly ordered to be released by a federal judge in late 2017. all three are now charged with i assault, with intent to cause physical harm. isis placed detainer requests on them claiming they should be deported once they serve any sentences. now, this all brings us to our next story, and a segment that we are dubbing "dodging the judges, where we'd highlight a troubling strain of judicial resistance that looks a whole lot like political activists.
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now this judge recently criticized prosecutors over an increase in immigration cases in federal court last week. now she saidi it, i think this s not the best use of judicial or justice department resources. she specifically singled out the justice. zach terwilliger is on, and i was on the train coming up to new york and i was reading "the washington post." democracy dies in the darkness.i so i'm reading "the washington post" and i'm reading these comments by judge, saying, i hope these cases don't continue in my courtroom. isn't that the role of the executive branch, how it is deciding to pursue various
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separate prosecutions? is that the role of a judge to interject himself or herself in this situation, or why are you singled out? >> thanks for having me. it's great to be here. this is a judge i have known for ten years and have a long relationship with and i respect. in this case we just have a fundamental disagreement surrounding the priority of these cases. one of the things as a prosecutor for the last decade and now as u.s. attorney that i often do is meet with the victims and survivors of crimeee and i feel very strongly that these cases represent public safety risk, and there's an article you referenced in the republican posts, these individuals they were talking about will illegally come to the country, and i think as the article also mentioned, many of these people have committed multiple offenses, or even
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battery against minors. >> martha: was a case that was cited in "the washington post," that individual, ochoa, had been in custody. >> that cases currently pending trials so rather than speak specifically about it, these individuals, these are the only reason you have been arrested for local violations and to me, that is not a good use of resources. unlike others they have come to our attention because they have committede other crimes and committed desk desk public safety violation. >> martha: and a lot of people are just coming back into the country after leaving the country for -- they illegally cross back into the country. and again i know you have to beu careful about what you say about any members of the bench, and that's fine.
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but for a judge to start questioning the priorities of article two branch of government, the executive branch which makes these types ofio prosecutorial decisions. it's just completely while axing up again. we are back on the separation of power. carry out the logs and form a prosecutorial prerogative and try to become president oren a member of the president's cabinet. i don't understand why the judge is taking this out on you and focusing on all these reentry, cases. like if you reenter the country, you should be able to stay here indefinitely unless you commit a crime that is a i think in this particular case.
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>> she doesn't want her courtroom clogged with illegal alien cases because everybody who is here should be able to stay here. >> for me it's been a priority, and what's interesting is we've always prosecuted a large number of these cases in the eastern district a version virginian, until 2014. i think part of it is the timing, i think there is a good place in these prosecutions but frankly, this is what we were doing for many years when the administration changed the immigration enforcement priorities. >> martha: and zach, i think we have a photo of you and there will soon be another attorney general, he is -- that you were.
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where were you? >> i feel extremely dominant to have known them for five years, so that was in november. 1982 it was the day that i will never forget, but i am just so thrilled to hopefully have the opportunity to work for attorney general bar in this capacity. >> that is wild. i've known him for a long time, but forn you being a little guy in this case and his dad being thanks for coming on and thanks for doing the work to keep the country safe, we really appreciate it. when we criticize neww guidelins from the american psychological association's on masculinity last week, he became the bad guys. next, part two of our debate over calls to further emasculate men in america, and what that
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could mean for society at large. tomorrow afternoon so -- she is going to podcast one.com and go subscribe on itunes. it's very easy. podcast one.com, tomorrow afternoon. about 50% of people with evesevere asthma k? have too many cells called eosinophils in their lungs. eosinophils are a key cause of severe asthma. fasenra is designed to target and remove these cells. fasenra is an add-on injection for people 12 and up with asthma driven by eosinophils.
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got it. ran out of ink and i have a big meeting today. and 2 boxes of twizzlers... yeah, uh...for the team. the team? gooo team...
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order online pickup in an hour. and, now get 20% off with coupon. at office depot officemax. >> laura: last week, we brought you a debate over new he wasn't a debate over the new guidelines issued by the american psychological association taking aim at classic masculinity. when we took aim at the finding, we were attacked for missing the point. in a long screen entitled "how masculinity hurts the men who believe it most. he was part of this when the guidelines were initially conceived. he says "everybody has their own ways " for that to me. you the writer of the piece and
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the more men claim to rigid views of masculinity, the more likely they are to be depressed or disdainful or lonely. here now is the host of the podcast "it's great to have you here with us. allie, let's start with you in your interactions. do you find a traditionally massive men are more prone to depression and loneliness? and obviously this is just a purely anecdotal bite i will raise. >> that hasn't been my subjective experience but i also don't think that's objectively true which b is why the apa hado say, okay soon so and so there
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has been a lot of criticism that i think justifies criticism because the findings that they found about a a few are now being generalized and used as a rule for all masculinity is, but it's all toxic. i just don't see how that's productive for society, particularly for young men. >> martha: affected this whole toxic masculinity's conversation becoming part of a punch line. by the way, i like your jackets and a. so what is this all about? >> this is all about the american psychological association. trying to make the public aware and other professionals aware that there is a lot of room for men to begin to have a
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conversation about masculinity. it is a fallacy to say that traditional masculinity is under attack. the way i like to put it is, traditional masculinity is under construction and improvement. >> what does it mean, when you say traditional masculinity, what does that mean? >> it means that the things that we are taught as men that think send a signal that we are not supposed to express our feelings, you're s supposed to o it alone, we're supposed supposed to be independent. >> martha: any woman in a car with her man, who can't find his way, we know them and can't do it by themselves. they can't do it alone. but i get what you are saying, we don't want men to mistreat women. we don't want men to mistreat other men. but isn't that just manners? how is that good manners? somehow it's a commentary on
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traditional masculinity.re that's what i am not getting. >> it includes manners but it's far more than that. it is actually the learnings that we incorporate from our early years about what it takes to be a good man. it's the cultural underpinnings that makes suggestions to boys that grow into men that say, these are the attributes that make a man a good man. >> martha: courage, stoicism -- i like -- allie, i know you have talked about this before andn i have done this on the radio show. look, men cried. they cry at their daughter'she wedding, they cry when they lose a parent. they cry if you are a member of the military and you lose your brother in arms or sister and arms. it's okay for men to cry.
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>> i would like you to spend a day in my office working with men who are really good men but feel very constricted sometimes about expressing themselves to their wives or to their girlfriends or to -- >> hear something that we need to address. how much of that is truly cultural and it needs to be changed and under construction, and how much of it is biological? instead of it being suppressed or changed or reconstructed, it just needs to be honed and trained in a different way. so all of the characteristics that we are talking about that are inherently negative, not be more emotional or being independent or being tougher, it can lead to negative things but that's also what makes men, men, and what makes them strong. what i'm concerned about is that we will start raising soft voice and that doesn't create good strongmen. >> i don't think you have any worry about that, men are not
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going to turn into women, trust me about that. but we are trying to do is not change man but, expand man. >> martha: i ran across this today. let me put it up on the screen. here's a quote from a fashion piece on a very, very well-known fashion fashion designer. o and describing new offerings on the runway, this is back in july, and a similar thing is being offered today. this is reminiscent of 18th and 19th century unisex women's closing down the runway. the latter felt particularly fitting for the collections commentary on shedding masculinity. their genderless characteristics express a blissful version of their true selves. and we have a picture, do we have a picture of the roughly
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number? there it is. that looks like jiffy pop, i don't know what that is. d but basically -- because man as you know suffer high rates of suicide and depression, and anxiety. i think there are a lot of reasons that blue-collar jobs are lost. if you don't have a college education, i don't think a lot of men know how to behave today. i think they are confused about jiffy pop man and other things. i honestly think a lot of men don't know where to turn. >> let's talk about two factors that men talk about is being manly. one is protecting and the other is providing. both are essential in both is important. but, they are very narrowly defined some time so is also giving your children or your wife an opportunity to express herself, and protecting is
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protecting the safety -- >> most women don't think strength -- you don't want the man to push you in front of himself. >> it's not a dichotomy, it's not either this or that. it's a multifaceted facet. >> martha: it's much more visceral. we are kind of discounting biology. i mean, you could probably arm wrestle me right now but that's just a biological fact. there's nothing wrong with it, there's nothing to be discounted or say that that is bad because you are stronger than women. >> and the guidelines do not suggest there is something. >> i think like you said, we are discounting a lot of biology and the natural inherent dichotomy between men and women. the negative qualities that we are talking about in men is on the fallen nature of men, women have so-called toxicity, too. it's about raising good men and women to be responsible adults
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and may be my colleague and i agree on that and that there are no distant atomic defenses to be had. >> martha: thank you both. with the democrats looking to subpoena everyone and everything in trump world, a debate over how much power the president has two shut them down before they start, next. ♪
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>> on this specific question on how our president conducts meetings of former haired doll make them a foreign heads of states -- >> i think there is the option to subpoena the notes and the interpreter. we are talking here about a possible threat to our national security. the american people have a right to know. >> getting to the truth, frankly, is more important than precedent or executive privilege. >> laura: does the president have lived in mid privilege grounds to keep private conversations with foreign leaders just that? private? joining me is john here joining me is john you and david katz. former u.s. assistant attorney. how much damage does it do if it
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don't make an american president cannot keep conversations like this privilege? >> allowing people like congress -- or the courts to overcome executive privilege would really strike a dagger in the heart of the american presidency. this is a power which presidents from george washington on have claimed and used. the supreme court said in 1973-1974, that the very height of executive privilege would be when president need to protect diplomatic, national security, military law enforcement information. this isn't just some minor use of executive privilege so the president can tell jokes or kick things around with his advisors. this is what the courts and presidents of said dell might have said is the height of data power and executive privilege, protecting the president's ability to communicate and discuss what foreign nations and resident advisors are most important policy secrets. there is no justification where
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congress or another branch can throw up which would allow, according to the supreme court, allow for the overcoming of this privilege in this kind of case. >> laura: david, i was watching an old youtuber, jay carney, the press secretary for president obama, being pummeled by the press for his having exercised executive privilege in the benghazi case. remember, ever called her not wanting to turn over certain documents. this is how he explained it. let's watch. >> the documents over which privilege is being asserted our internal executive branch documents that have to do with response to a congressional inquiry, response to media inquiry, those type of deliberations have been protected under privilege as a matter of the separation of powers enshrined in the constitution by administrations of both parties dating back 30
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years. >> laura: when they were fine with executive privilege as long as they were claiming it. right, dave? >> well, i'm an admirer of adam schiff. he's the head of the house intelligence committee. i think he's being nudged to either subpoena the notes or testimony from this translator. i don't think that's a wise place to start. i think that john has a point. of course, there is executive privilege. and it is strongest according to the united states versus nixon case unanimous. it is strong. it's not absolute. but it's strongest in the area of just what happened with this translator. so i think the committee would be smarter to start with a whole bunch of other areas. like the cohen inquiry. and the one in why not start with tiller sin and ask him what happened during that meeting and go from
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there? i do not think it's wise in the end to keep trying to subpoena if that's what they are trying to do. >> laura: when it's going to end up in the court. >> it's picking a fight with the state department -- it doesn't seem to me like a wise thing. >> laura: i got it, i got it. i got it. i got it. but, john, they are going to try to call members of the trump inner circle to capitol hill, correct, for the house really briefly, will the president's team be able to assert privilege to prevent them from testifying on capitol hill? we are talking about someone in the old white house counsel's office, current white house counsel, may be reince priebus, don mcgann, those types? will executive privilege cover that? >> i think it would cover it. i think if congress misuses its legislative oversight authority, getting them to testify, it will lose by the supreme court and the federal courts are not going
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to help congress try to pry secs out of the president. >> laura: guys, thanks so much. big conversation. we are going to be hitting all of these issues in the weeks and months to come. big fights ahead. up next, president trump and fast food again? yes. yes. t>> tech: at safelite autoglass we know that when you're spending time with the grandkids every minute counts. and you don't have time for a cracked windshield. that's why we show you exactly when we'll be there. .. i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release its own insulin, like it's supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it works 24/7. it comes in an easy-to-use pen. and i may even lose a little weight. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don't use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes,
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>> laura: it's time for the last bite. president trump was not following former first lady michelle obama's healthy eating >> time for the last fight. donald trump was not following
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michelle obama's healthy eating initiative when he hosted the clemson tigers tonight. >> burger king all-american competition, burger king, wendy's and mcdonald's, big macs, quarter pound with cheese, everything i like, that you like and i know no matter what we did there's nothing you can have that is better than that. >> clemson played a great game. some decent food, no chick-fil-a, where is the chick-fil-a. all the time we have to night. shannon bream and the fox news it might team, >> apparently what he said was racist. we will talk about that with the panel and debate it. have a great night. we begin with a fox news alert, new video of the

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