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tv   Americas News HQ  FOX News  January 20, 2019 9:00am-10:00am PST

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we'll be back hopefully at our regular washington, d.c. headquarters next sunday morning. 11:00 eastern. we'll see you then with the latest buzz. eric: democrats say no as president trump lays out his new proposal to end the partial government shutdown. he's offering dem prairie protections for the daca recipients in exchange for funding for the border wall. the question today, will it work? welcome to "america's news headquarters," i'm eric shawn. arthel: i'm arthel neville. the president is urging democrats to get on board that he says could lead the way for bigger reforms. jarett tenney is with us from
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washington. reporter: this gives democrats some of what they want with immigration in exchange for what the president want. with the sweeteners of temporary legal status for the 700,000 dreamers. access to work permits and social security numbers. the other is a 3-year extension for workers with temporary status. in return the proposal addresses a number of immigration priorities including some with bipartisan support. $805 million for drug detection technology. 75,000 addition ago border agents. and $5.7 billion for the president's wall. lawmakers have been meeting with the white house the past few
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weeks. but before this announcement was even made. house speaker nancy pelosi was shooting it down, saying in a statement, it's unlikely any one of these provisions alone would pass the house, and taken together, they are a non-starter. mike pence suggested this is a starting point for congress. >> it's a legislative process that will begin tuesday in the united states senate. and it was disappointing to see speaker pelosi reject the offer before the president gave his speech. look, the president is offering a solution. and what we have from democrat leadership is just sound bites. the american people want us to work together to resolve these issues. reporter: the senate is scheduled to take up the president's proposal tuesday. arthel: nancy pelosi is calling
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the president's proposal a non-starter. reporter: gop leaders are praising this proposal. but not all of them are jumping on board. you have a lot of immigration hardliners saying the president's proposal is essentially amounts to amnesty. the president pushed back on that on twitter saying, no, amnesty is not a part of the offer. amnesty will be used on a much bigger deal, whether on immigration or something else. he warns, be careful, nancy. the hardliners say they plan to offer some amendments of their own with the hopes of making this more palatable for them and their constituents. eric: lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are reacting to the
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president's proposal to end the government shutdown. democrats say the offer from the president giving temporary protections for the daca recipients in exchange for funding for the border wall, they say it's note a compromise. here is debbie dingell who spoke with maria bartiromo. >> he put on the table things that have been rejected by the house and senate before. we'll put on the house floor six bills that have been negotiated by senate and house conference committees to reopen the government and reopen those 600 agencies. let's get in a room and have a real cushion about how to keep this nation safe. reporter: democratic leaders don't like the president's offer, and they say they won't
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negotiate while the government is partially shut down. here is what the third-highest ranking democrat in the house said about that. >> i can't see keeping federal employees, 800,000 people, out of work while we go back and fourth on negotiations. these negotiations could take three or four weeks. we ought to open the government up. get the government open. get people back to work. then sit around the table and see where the common ground is. reporter: president trump said he want a deal on the border wall before reopening the government. some republicans say the democrats aren't underred in making a deal or giving the president any win on this issue. and they are saying the president will have to declare a national emergency. >> with caravans being formed
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and the criminality coming in, the drugs, the human trafficking coming in. note everyone, but there is a significant minority of people coming in with malevolent intentions. reporter: western said to start talks now with the president week reward for government shutdown. he says the democrats shouldn't have rejected his offer before he even made it yesterday. arthel: we'll bring in john busy, the associate editor at the "wall street journal." lots to talk about. let's start here. which items in the president's proposal show a good faith effort toward a way to end this shutdown? >> having more surveillance at the border. having more judges to determine who should get in and who
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shouldn't. and who should be granted more asylum. having more technical support at the border. all of those things have been pro peetsed before. there is also proposed before a republican solution to this and democratic solution to this. it was keep the government funded and discuss the border wall later on. all those options have been rejected. the democrats say a lot of this has been on the table before. a temporary extension of daca. should we give you a temporary wall for permanent extension of daca? would that make sense? it's not a clear exclusion at this point to impasse between the democrats and republicans. arthel: nancy pelosi wants a permanent solution. is that something that should be
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put in this proposal or be kept separately all together. he's navigating between moderate republicans in his own party, and those in the party who say this is already what you are proposing is a form of amnesty if only temporary. we want a tougher line on illegal immigrants in the country and they should be sent out of the country. the president is trying to navigate all of those points. the democrats are thinking about 2020. the president promised the wall. he needs a physical representation of delivering on that promise. we are not going to give it to him. arthel: the first part of your answer saying the president is stuck between different factions and his base gave me the image of a pinball going in around that machine being bounced around. is the president boxed in or can he get to that place where he
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can score? >> we'll have to see. but right now it looks like boxed in. these factions are competing for the president's attention and the president's resolve. but the president in this particular round of deal making kind of boxed himself in by saying he would take credit for shutting the government down. he felt it was important enough, he felt this discussion of a border wall was significant. it was worth having this kind of energy put into it. so now he's taking responsibility for it and a majority of americans are saying the republicans have done this. but what his advisors are calculating is the voters won't remember the shutdown,. arthel: they will remember the wall you didn't give us. nancy pelosi put out a statement
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yesterday. the democrats support smart, effective border security solutions. increase infrastructure investment at our ports of entry, including additional ports and roads. advanced technology to scan for drugs, technology and contraband and advanced technology to detect unauthorized crossing. more customs personal including filling the more than 3,000 customs and border patrol vacancies and more immigration judges. what is the likelihood at the very least of, you know, reopening the conversation so that -- reopen the government, i should say, then reopening the conversation. >> that's what the democrats are arguing for. you reopen the government. you shouldn't hold the government hostage. there is know connection between shutting down the government and building a border wall.
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but the president feels otherwise. he feels this is the only thing that will get the attention of the democrats. this has been decades of negotiations between these two parties. there has been no comprehensive immigration reform that everyone agrees needs to happen. sometimes some overwrought by the president. but if there is a problem there, there is a resolution that needs to be derived for the dreamers. there need to be better surveillance at the border. all of these things have been discussed for decade. can this be done in the form of a government shutdown? >> it's doubtful. arthel: a tweet from nancy pelosi is situation is original in the president's proposal is not good, what is good is not original. the democrats will vote next
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week to add additional border security sphurnlding for ports of entry, advanced technology for scanning vehicles and drugs. >> it's artful language. it's true, a lot of this has been discussed before. speaker pelosi is playing politics here as well. whether you decide that's inflexible or the president is being inflexible is up to the political inclinations of the individual. she is not going to relent on something she knows will come back and damage democratic opportunity in 2020. that's funding a physical wall. >> which players are exposed to the greatest political peril? >> those democrats and republicans who are in the middle may be at greatest peril if they are forced to take a position on this, that doesn't
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really align with their own thinking. they are thinking ahead to the 2020 election. but at the end of the day the public may be blaming the republicans for giving more blame to republicans for this. at the moment. but as this grind on and you have this many people going without paychecks, this kind of dysfunction in government. this kind of service, basic services the government is responsible for managing that are unrelated to borderer security not getting executed, i think both parties. arthel: there need to be compassion for the people. arthel: john bussey, always good to talk to you. eric: there is a storm dumping snow across the northeast and drenching coastal cities. people are bracing for what's coming next. we have fox news team coverage
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on all the latest developments of the storm. first let's check in with jackie who is live in our newsroom with the latest on this storm which has been pretty wet in new york. reporter: the storm is responsible for several deaths and thousands of canceled flights, not to mention car crashes. in chicago, the first storm of the year brought freezing temperatures, icy roads and poor visibility. a united airlines plane skidded off the runway at o'hare. now the issue is the wind. gusting up to 35 miles an hour. in ohio, five counties declared snow emergencies. route 24 was shut down after a big rig slid off the road and
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blocked lanes. but new englanders put on a brave face. 250 additional crews were brought in. but the biggest concern is whether homes will have power to watch the patriots game. >> the ice more of a concern than the snow. the ice is harder to deal with and that's when the power lines go down. >> just make sure the generators are ready and the chicken wings are ready. reporter: the president warned people to take the storm seriously. large parts of the current dry are suffering from tremendous amounts of snow. amazing how big the system is. wouldn't be bad to have a little bit of that old-fashioned global warming right now. state officials are warning
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anyone in the path of this storm. don't hit the road unless there is a need. arthel: we'll go to adam klotz, our meteorologist. he'll give us this freezing cold forecast. what do you say, adam. adam: it will get really cold in the next 12-24 hours. right along the coast, rain inland. we have seen areas 12-18 inches of snow. everything in the ping stretching from central connecticut. everything in the pink, that is ice. that will cause the power lines to go down. still a large area we are under all sorts of winter storm warnings that will continue to slowly move off the coast. but the temperatures, the wind, that is going to stay here. here is our future radar. i think by the time we get into the evening hours, this is 4:00 p.m. the mid-atlantic is cleared off.
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still it continues to push out by the overnight hours. completely dry. dry air moved out. there will be lake-effect snow for you. but then what happens? the temperatures start to plummet. this scene idea of what some of the wind chills are right now. the temperature in the next half-hour or so. 24 degrees in d.c. we'll look at temperatures falling down in a lot of cases to the negative. it feels like 14 degrees. i run you through the overnight. this is early tomorrow morning. the temperature in new york city feels like negative 8. it will get cold and any moisture on the road will freeze. we can be seeing some cars sliding off tomorrow morning. just because the system is gone doesn't mean everybody is out of the woods. arthel: feels like i need to
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stay inside. arthel: people need to look after their pets and elderly neighbors who live alone. eric: there may be a deal on the table to end the government shutdown, but that's not helping security lines at the nation's airports. there are growing tensions between syria and israel amid claims the deflected air stick. what that means for the plans to withdraw from syria that is gunder way. arted. get going with carnation breakfast essentials®. it has protein, plus 21 vitamins and minerals including calcium and vitamin d, to help your family be their best. carnation breakfast essentials®.
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all in the same place as your live tv. its all included with your amazon prime membership. that's how xfinity makes tv... simple. easy. awesome. eric: syria is claiming it blocked an israel airstrike. benairstrike.benjamin netanyahu claims they have made hundreds of strikes. reporter: israeli warplanes targeted positions near the syrian capital. they provided no evidence for
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that claim. we do know two planes were head to damascus from iran. those planes turned around when the attack began. it was actually fired into israel but was shot down before landing in the country. images taken at the ski resort show two trails of smoke from the dome system. >> we have a permanent policy to strike syria and hurt whoever tries to hurt us. this policy doesn't change when i'm in israel or a historic visit to chad. it's permanent.
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reporter: the event comes as israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is in chad. up n. ambassador from israel called on the u.n. to try to address the ballistic missile program in iran. many of the strikes we have seen against iranian targets in syria have been trying to target these missiles that are currently being held by iranian proxies. arthel arthel: the impact of the partial government shutdown being felt at airports across the country. travelers having to endure longer wait times with a number
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of tsa employees missing work. reporter: they are starting to call out because of financial reasons. they are not being paid and there is no end in sight for this shutdown. an entire tsa checkpoint was closed saturday in baltimore. others are trying to help by organizing food drives or cooking lunch for tsa workers. there are people protesting outside airports to show support for airport workers who aren't being paid. >> i know i will be okay a little bit longer, but some of my co-workers are struggling. they are going to banks and other people are bringing food in. some of the airlines are feeding
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us. we are surviving. but we are going to get hurt. reporter: one major concern is the upcoming super bowl in two weeks. they are planning double the number of travelers in atlanta. arthel? arthel: thank you. eric? eric: as the shutdown is continuing, did you know hundreds more of central american migrants have crossed into mexico and they are on their way here. griff jenkins is walking along with that new caravan and he has a live report from the ground next. as president trump is set to meet again with kim jong-un. there is a plan to send the dictator a sharp message.
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otto warmbier officials and his family say was beaten and tortured by kim jong-un's thugs. >> otto warmbier was a young man who went on a trip overseas. that's something that's typical in this country. al one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy. and last year, i earned $36,000 in cash back. which i used to offer health insurance to my employees. what's in your wallet?
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tiny little southern town in mexico about 65 miles north of the border. hoping the migrants move along. people in the blue are with child welfare because a large portion of the 3691 the aforementioned folks on the border. some 700 of them were minors. these folks on the road under civil protection. it's been hopping the migrants as they convert to get onto cars to catch rides from willing people coming along. speaking of buses, this morning in the town where most of the migrants were down for the night provided 10 giving them a ride along the journey.
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one interesting person that i've meant was a gentleman named alex. but he was a daca recipient. he got a letter saying he had 24 days to deport himself to el salvador where he was born but he grew up in indiana. now he's amongst his caravan coming back towards the u.s. border trying to figure out what he'll do next as he watches the battle play out in washington. arthel: his home as he knows it is indiana. reporter: that's right. i told him what are you going to do recess i don't know in minnesota just want to get back to the life ideal. he came as an infant to the u.s. arthel: griff jenkins, thank you for that live report. eric. eric: you know the name on a warm, the student from ohio to
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become a victim of the unforgiving regime. here is a look at otto you've never seen. a hot summer day in new york city on eastside manhattan street sitting on a stoop waiting for a friend in the spot where he's sitting ironically happens to be three boxed on the same ave. that later this year could bear the otto's name. a blunt in stinging message to kim jong regime. he planned to move to new york city for a paid internship at a financial firm. he was in the new york university dorm and plan on pursuing a career after he graduated from the university of virginia. tragically he never made it. the 23-year-old spent the summer locked in a north korean prison cell and returned home to die. becoming a heartbreaking symbol of the brutality of the north korean regime.
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there is a dramatic plan to honor him. >> this'll be ingrained in the memory. >> java rally, republican of staten island once the street with the north korean mission to the united nations is located to be renamed sub 675 way in a blunt and reminder of his fate to the north korean diplomats. >> he represents everything we value and our freedom. we want people to look up and see the street sign and recall this was a life given out essentially in the face of an absolute dictator and authoritarian government. eric: 22 years old when a foreign study trip to the hermit kingdom only to return home with severe brain damage and in a
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nonresponsive stay. u.s. officials and his family say he was beaten and tortured while in prison for 17 months after being charged with tearing down a propaganda poster inositol. the north korean government on the 13th floor of this building on second avenue one block from the u.n. headquarters on manhattan's east side. fox news observed the north korean diplomatic corps commuting to their office in 2 million a park in diplomatic parking zone. they would have to pass some 675 way everyday. >> are you afraid of offending the north koreans? >> i'm sure they would be offended. we've improved our relationship with the chinese. we've improved our relationship with the post-soviet union. >> new york city's long history of honor restrictions for provocative causes. the russian u.n. mission has a street sign declaring it --
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honoring the late activist under sakharov and his wife elena boehner. it was named tiananmen square corner to honor the victims who were killed during the 1989 tiananmen square protest at the north koreans did not respond to our request for a comment about the plan. the regime has denied otto was beaten. $501 million in the last while. kim jong un's regime is viable in the hostagetaking and extrajudicial declaring a larger word is appropriate to punish and deter north korea. the new street sign would send a lasting message. >> the renaming will go a long way in reminding people of american values and how awful
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authoritarian to cater shipping is. eric: the new york city council will be signed into law by new york city mayor bill deblasio. a permanent reminder of the freedoms and values of our country that otto warmbier represented. the measure still has to be proposed as a bill. that has not happened yet. it is still just a proposal but it comes as the proposal for otto comes as the white house has announced a second summit next month between the president and kim jong un as they push for a nonnuclear north korea. is that even possible considering pyongyang's long history of evasion and deception. christian white income of armor advisor to george w. bush administration. first, the legacy of otto
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warmbier. but an obvious simple ask for kim jong un if the north koreans investigated what happened and charged responsible for his death. it would be a goodwill gesture by kim jong daca un. >> their whole political system is based on other repression, complete until the repression of any kind of dissent. as has been said before you could be drunk in north korea and say one off-color thing about the tater and no one will hear from you again. they have this pattern of doing this increasingly to foreigners, westerners including americans and putting them into prison on a bunch of charges. an american pastor at the trump administration did a lot to get them out. it's within their power raising human rights is very important. the nuclear stuff is the most
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important issue but human rights are to be on the agenda two. eric: nuclear is the overriding issue. but look at otto who came from our country for that trip. last week federal judge has found north korea guilty and fined him $501 million. the warmbier will never see that money. kim jong could find something and potentially abide by u.s. law. >> yeah, that would be a good gesture. at same let's get to the bottom. whose authority was incarcerated and on whose authority was he tortured and killed in that could lead to a broader discussion. we had a very important dialogue coming out of the helsinki act of the soviet union on human rights to understand why warmbier is essentially killed the north koreans. japanese had a number of
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citizens who were of dark did they north korea. eric: that went on for decades. >> is still an issue. the question of how many objectives are still alive, but many are unaccounted for and it doesn't make any sense of a police state with north korea that spies on everyone doesn't know what happened to them. also the fate of 100 north koreans in a network in archipelago if you will a political concentration camps inside north korea. these are important issues to discuss. >> will he come clean? >> i think things can change. the big question with kim jong un whether he does want some fundamental turn. in the sense you have this movement from stalin and the soviet union when he died in 1953 and there was a relative liberalization within a repressive time. it could have been. we haven't seen a lot of signs. little glimmers of hope. a lot more marketing committee
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and north korea were not everything is dominated by the state. statehood distribution networks are breaking down and that's perhaps a good sign. a black market which would think of is that in our economy but in a repressive totalitarian state, that is a glimmer or if you will a break in a totalitarian police state. eric: christian comest a heiress who see the harp and daring, heartbreaking pictures of otto. we will stay on the story. the attempt to honor otto warmbier and then to kim jong un a sharp message. we'll talk about the nuclear issue when we come back. utrs us. ♪ means to fight the hardest battle, which any human being can fight and never stop. does this sound dismal? it isn't. ♪ ♪ it's the most wonderful life on earth.
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eric: so christian, what do you think concretely can come out of the second summit? >> the best thing would be for a meeting of the minds on the sequence of disarmament. in singapore you had trump and kim agree on the concept of
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denuclearization but not who goes first. north korea wants sanctions relief and economic ends from south korea. we want them to give up nuclear stuff first because we've been burned twice before in the bush and clinton administration. if they can get through that would be big progress. eric: what about the thought that only one what he wants is for us to remove the 28,500 troops so you potentially can have a conquest of south korea. >> i think that's unlikely. without a ground force him on the south korean military was a basket case. not that way anymore. half a million people well armed. we sold them high-tech equipment, given them some stuff. morbid top of the 20,000 troops or a tripwire to guarantee the united date to be in a word. i don't think north korea's -- eric: do you think kim jong un would really give up its nuclear program? they did commission one or two
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areas with the launch pad and testing place. they also have not had any ballistic missile firing but also reports they are continuing building a nuclear program. >> it requires it's anyone's guess including senior white house officials realized there hasn't been a lot of progress on disarmament which is not a great sign. they only realize they have one big chip to play in this game. i can't give you a clear answer. it really is a coin toss. it would be worth trying because the alternatives are worse if they can talk and diplomacy are all inferior to what the president is trying to do. eric: the meeting set for sometime later next month. we'll keep up on our reporting. christian whiton, thank you as always for your insights. arthel: robert mueller steam pushing back against the codger burchell buzz feed report their president trump directed his former personal attorney, michael cohen, to lie to congress. what's prompted a special counsel to react so strongly?
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>> the president expressed his appreciation to the special counsel for clarifying that report was inaccurate. but i think what it says more about is the obsession of many in the national media to attack
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this president for any reason, for any allegation and for any report in the media. arthel: mike pence talking about words of thanks to robert mueller in response to his rare statement refuting the best leader poured in the past is personal attorney to lie to congress about a proposed trump tower project. hans von pekoske is a legal fellow at the heritage foundation and a former just this department official. former justice department official. pulling dramatics. hence, what does your gut reaction to mr. muller's rare response and why did he deem it critical to publicly dispute is feed story. >> people really need to understand that it is a rare occurrence that the federal prosecutor will issue a statement just beauty and a media report and that raises
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very serious questions about the credibility of the buzz feed report. he may short-circuit any speculation that members of his staff broke federal law. grand jury proceeding, the evidence they collect, those are secret and in fact the justice department manual on procedures says the justice department's top lawyers can be prosecuted for criminal contempt if they disclose grand jury materials. i suspect what he was trying to do was say this story is not correct and therefore short-circuit any speculation that anyone in his office may have leaked grand jury material. >> let's try this on for size. could this in any way be enough for by the special counsel to take a sniffing dog off the
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trail? >> well, i don't think the special counsel would issue a statement in which he is basically misleading the public are telling a falsehood. if you say this was not correct, no, i'm i think that true and i don't think it's going to put out some kind of misleading statement about it. >> as we've reconfirmed our reporting, we've seen no indication that any specific aspect of her story is inaccurate. we remain confident in what were reported and will share more as we are able. so we will share more as we are able. what do you make of buzz feeds approach? >> well, you know, if they had gotten hold of grand jury materials of whoever they got them from is indeed trouble with the just this department, we'll see. there's been a lot of prior stories that have come out from the media, making claims about
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the mueller investigation, which has turned out not to be true. we won't know the truth of any of those until mueller completes his investigation and everything he's done has made public. right now what we do know is the special counsel has said with the speed is claiming is not true and since buzz feed is at revealing their sources are, we have no way of verifying what does he do saying. arthel: von, this story will continue. thank you for joining us on this sunday. cold sunday. thank you very much. >> eric and i will be back with more news from new york in just a moment. and last year, i earned $36,000 in cash back. which i used to offer health insurance to my employees. what's in your wallet?
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>> grandpa: looks great! >> tech: thanks for choosing safelite. >> grandpa: thank you! >> child: bye! >> tech: bye! saving you time... so you can keep saving the world. >> kids: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ arthel: we begin with the fox news alert. two and the partial government shutdown, drawing sharp reaction from both sides of the aisle in a televised address saturday, the president offered a three-year extension for 700,000 daca recipients in exchange for border while funding. democratic party leaders met the proposal calling it ineffective as republicans praised the press for his willingness to negotiate but not all in the gop are fully on board. hello, everyone. welcome to the new hour of straight and seven. eric: hello, everyone. thank you are joining us on sunday. eric

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