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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  January 31, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PST

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chocolate. jillian: most important part of the day. stay tuned for that. "fox & friends" is coming your way. see you at noon and back here tomorrow. todd: bye-bye. >> record breaking cold blamed for at least 8 deaths as subzero temperatures ravage the midwest. >> if a mother is in labor the infant would be delivered and discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother. >> governor of virginia is accused of supporting extreme abortion rights as other state legislators battle over negotiations. >> the president is not doing anything crazy. what's crazy is that they are fighting him. we're going to build a wall one way or the other. >> mexico suspends its fast track visa program. that's not stopping two caravans on their way to the border right now. >> i think god calls all of us to fill different roles at different times. he wanted donald trump to become president, and that's
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why he is. >> there even god is like what the hell i can't take my eyes off of you people for a minute. >> the democrats need a little less caffeine right now. >> howard schultz pledging not to be a spoiler in the 2020 white house race. ♪ stay at home stay at home♪ stay at home ♪ stay warm ♪ cold as ice ♪ you know that you are ♪ cold as ice. steve: foreigner has been on this show and they have sung that song cold as ice and today is completely appropriate. according to the national weather service it's 3 degrees here at the fox world headquarters. but out wind chill index is 17 degrees below zero. and it's going to be cold all day long. it's going to be cold as ice. brian: if you want to get out of the cold a place a little nicer go to the north pole because it is a little
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nicer. ainsley: they are comparing chicago temperatures to antarctica it's really really cold. brian: we are indoors so it's good news for now. steve: within a half an hour we are going to go outside because it's national hot chocolate day. some producer came up with that idea. he will be in the building while the crew and us are outside freezing on national hot chocolate day. ainsley: that's right. we will be warming people up that are walking down sixth avenue. steve: our way of doing something nice for folks. in the meantime it is historic this deep freeze now linked to at least eight deaths at subzero temperatures devastate polarizations of the northern plains and the midwest. ainsley: this morning chicago is challenging its all-time coldest temperature on record. watch as boiling water is tossed up into the air and instantly turns to vapor. brian: look at this rolling cold fog rolling across lake michigan. story in wisconsin with parts of lake geneva
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completely frozen. steve: this polar vortex closing businesses, schools and thousands of flights. in chicago 2600 flights cancelled. ainsley: we have live team coverage. janice dean is tracking the storm in new york. we begin with ray bogan where it's minus 24 degrees. brian: we think it's ray. >> yes. it's me. good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. it was supposed to be about 20 degrees warmer today but it's not and it definitely doesn't feel any warmer. that's for sure. we are at the minneapolis airport this morning where they have been lucky enough to have relatively few cancellations and delays but around the midwest that has not been the case. travelers have experienced thousands of cancellations and delays. according to flight aware, the worst of those are at chicago's midway and o'hare airports. now, here's a funny picture for you, a frozen pants standing up here in minnesota. yesterday, there was actually a very serious situation when excel energy put out an urgent request to
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customers in some areas asking them to turn their thermostats to 60 degrees or lower and not use any other gas powered appliances. in an attempt to try to avert a gas shortage. the residents here in the midwest have really been feeling the pain. >> hard to take a breath in. it's affecting my lungs a little bit. >> it's brutal. it's the coldest i have ever been. >> now, yesterday, the thermometer at the national weather service here in minneapolis had a reading of negative 30 degrees on sunday it could be 75 degrees warmer. there is going to be a very big swing over the next couple of days. back to you. steve: and people are waiting for it all right, ray. thank you very much. a live report out there in minneapolis. brian: meanwhile out there live is janice dean. janice, it's bad here but not really nearly as bad as
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it is in the midwest. >> no. we have nothing really to complain about here in the northeast where the temperatures are cold and the when i wills are below whe wind chills is below zero. take a look at the maps. current conditions minus 2 air temperature. minus 42 is the wind chill. and when you look at chicago, minus 20 right now. minus 37 is what it feels like. these are dangerous temperatures. you really can't be inside. can't stress enough that if you have pets, if you have kids, if you are, you know, near the elderly, you need to bring them inside where it's warm. you cannot be outside for any great length of time. your skin will freeze. you will have frost bite. and it's dangerous, potentially deadly. there are your wind chill advisories stretching all the way up towards the northeast and great lakes. the good news as mentioned is this cold air is going to retreat by the weekend and temperatures are going to rebound into very mild temperatures above average as we get into saturday and sunday. all that cold air goes up to
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my friends and relatives in canada where it blocks. i'm allowed to say that. ainsley: they are used to it. ainsley: i was wondering how some of these poor individuals died because of the weather. and there was an elderly man in illinois trying to get into his house. they found him hours later he had slipped and fell. university of iowa student found behind academic building. steve: outside his dorm. >> young young snowplow. car accident in indiana. milwaukee man froze to death in a garage. keep in mind it's very dangerous. steve: most importantly because these are historic low temperatures, you can get frost bite in a matter of seconds. so, if you don't have to go outside, just as janice dean said, just wait a little bit, it's going to be blowing out of here in no time. by the weekend. all right. meanwhile, let's talk a little bit about a bill that was considered in virginia in the state legislature. it's house bill 2491. it sounds a lot like the
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bill that just passed here in new york state. where essentially you can have abortion on demand up until delivery. up until birth, extraordinarily. ainsley: go ahead, brian. brian: no, go ahead. ainsley: democratic governor in the state of virginia raffle northam, he did an interview and gotten a lot of backlash for what he said. listen to this. >> third trimester abortions are done obviously with the consent of the mother and with consent of the physicians, more than one physician by the way. and it's done in cases where there may be severe deformities. there may be a fetus that's nonviable. so, in this particular example, if a mother is in labor, i can tell you exactly what would happen, the infant would be delivered. the infant would be kept comfortable. the infant would be resuscitated if that's what the mother and the family
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desired, and then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother. brian: get backlash on that. this is one of the most horrific statements you could see and happening in unscripted situation. there is no pressure on him. not like he misspoke. he said he was taken out of context or people are misconstruing what he means. but he went out to straighten things out through a spokesperson saying, quote: no woman seek as trimester abortion exception in the case of tragic or difficult circumstances such as nonviable pregnancy or in the event of severe fetal abnormalities and the governor's admission actions would take in the event woman woman in those think,s sent would neighbor. attempts to extrapolate these comments otherwise is in bad faith. steve: it eliminates any required showing of severity. when the governor was talking about well, in some cases.
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well, not necessarily. it eliminates any required showing of severity of birth problems, the doctor and the mother can determine that the birth would impair her physical or mental health. and under the actual text virtually any claim of impairment that the mother would feel would be a cause to have an abortion right then. ainsley: we have a panel of doctors on. my understanding is you know in advance, you know well in advance if your child is going to have abnormalities, not to say that you should abort in that situation at all. but, third term abortion is something different. and delivering a baby and having the baby next to the mother outside of the womb and then making the decision to kill the baby, that's murder. steve: so many people have said it's infanticide. ainsley: absolutely. steve: look at the national media last night. how much coverage did this get on the nightly newscast according to the media research center i believe zero. none. brian: you have been abc, nbc, cbs, cnn and msnbc
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none. even if you think this is a great idea you would definitely think it's news worthy. i can't imagine thinking it's a great idea even if you are pro-choice. at the end of the day though, i also saw they did a reader this morning on cnn they say some conservatives seem upset. i thought some americans or human beings might be upset. and the other thing on this bill 2491 which i found disturbing, they say that if the woman is upset life threatening situation that's true. but could somebody use the term mental or physical health, could it be severe depression? steve: right. absolutely. brian: reason why you rid yourself of this baby after it goes nine months. steve: governor northam says the mother and doctor would have a conversation about the impairment. if it would impact impact her as he said physically or mentally. and in the bill it's okay. ainsley: bill it did fail in subcommittee. three were for and five voted against it. >> colorado, new mexico, oregon vermont already have no limits on the gestational
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abortion plan. steve: abortion up until birth essentially. a lot of people are talking about life and how unjust this is. ashton kutcher of all people retweeted an amazing video from a man who testified before congress with down syndrome talking about how important his life is and every life is important. we are going to play that for you some time this hour. ainsley: actor and special olympian. steve: he is indeed. jillian joins us with a lot of news. jillian: that's right. good morning. let's start with this story now. lawmakers have 16 days left to come up with a border security compromise. day one of bipartisan negotiations showing little signs of progress. >> smart border security is not overly reliant on physical barriers. >> smart tech knowledge is a part of a comprehensive solution but it's not the only solution in and of itself. jillian: if a compromise isn't reached by february 15th, we could face
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another government shutdown. venezuela's opposition leader calling for unity with democratic nations amid political chaos. juan guaido writing an op-ed in the "new york times" saying coat to end the maduro regime with the minimum of blood shed, we need the support of pro-democratic governments, institutions, and individuals the world over. guaido joining thousands of protesters in the streets after taking a call from president trump to reinforce the u.s. support. president trump announcing three judicial picks for the left leaning ninth circuit of appeals in california. comes after conservative backlash the white house was considering working with democratic senators kamala harris and dianne feinstein to select the nominee he is. two of the nominees were president submitted last year the third is new. the new england patriots l.a. rams getting back to business. holding first patrol car tises before facing off in the super bowl. hitting the gridiron in atlanta for more than an hour each. the rams taking over the
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facility. the pats at georgia state. all the marbles will be on sunday. steve: that's a good way to put it. ainsley: thank you, jillian. brian: with the migrant caravan on the move mexico no longer accepting the migrants with open arms. >> griff is live south of the border with a stunning reversal next. jillian: that didn't last long. remember the school leaders who sang hallelujah on a snow day? they are back for an encore ♪ sta stay at home ♪ stay at home ♪ keeping this tookus safe and protected... you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. there's brushing...and there's oral-b power brushing. oral-b just cleans better. even my hygienist said going electric could lead to way cleaner teeth. and unlike sonicare,
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for all the things that move you. ask your doctor about taltz. steve: thousands of central american migrants are on the move this morning once again after mexico has suspended its fast track visa program. jillian: they are inching closer and closer to our southern border as two more caravans are on the way right now. brian: griff jenkins necessaries all about it he is there in mexico city where migrants just hopped on trains, griff? griff: let me catch you up, guys. good morning. we are just outside that stadium in front of the subway station. you can see here just dozens of police officers that line the sidewalk. over this wall here is where the 2825 was the latest count of migrants but they came out just moments ago. you can look at some of this video and went up these
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steps. police are not letting us go up those steps. i tried to go with the migrants and a police officer in mexico grabbed me and escorted me out because the organizers don't want us to go up. if you see these thousands of migrants going on the subway, guys, what they are going to do is take a subway ride to another station where buses provided by mexico city's government for free will now drive them two and a half hours north to the town of kitaro where they will continue traditional journey the two u.s. border to towns like tijuana. you mentioned, ainsley, that reversal. it's quite a significant reversal on the new mexican president's administration that wanted to be very open arms and welcoming immigrants offering fast track temp russia asylum for --y asylum. they have stopped that they are not offering that anymore. they capped it at 12,600. those people will be able to
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get their card and their approval but no more. that's going to create a problem down on the guatemala-mexico southern border thousands already on the way in additional caravans and we know in february 16th yet another caravan will begin in san pedro to honduras where this caravan that we have been covering for the last several weeks began. so it is on the march and as you see, we have just seen this develop this morning. we are going to try and possibly move and get to where these buses are going to continue. but, the support from the mexican government in helping these migrants get their way towards the u.s.s. border continues this morning. brian: wow, thanks, griff. that's going to effect a lot of people. 10,000 plus said hey, i will stay here and work in mexico government looked like problem solved, mexico goes wait a second i don't know if we can handle. this maybe you need to call. steve: president made it yesterdayesterdaymade it clear.
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in the democrats opening bid absolutely zero physical barriers. they talked about 1,000 new customs officers, new car and truck scanners, limit the number of ice detention beds and focus on ice detention programs. zero talk of physical barriers. however, gets back to semantics it, all depends on what they're talking about. both sides feel by the end of the day, end of next week, they could be closer to a deal. unless there is a wall or a physical barrier or fancy, the president says not going to do it. ainsley: thousands ever them getting them out of mention co-city driving them two hours away and dropping them there. i'm not sure why they are doing that or driving them straight to the border if they are in support. thousands of people camped out or in shelters along the border in mexico trying to get asylum here. brian: they are trying to starve out ice and trying to push back on the border. we will have chris coons
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later on that. steve: maryland is going to stop prosecuting pot crimes. is that going to make it safer? a debate is coming up next on "fox & friends." what makes this simple salad the best simple salad ever? great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts.
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this is it guys. you ready? to have epix? absolutely. woooo! you'd laugh. oh, ow. [ chuckles ] you'd cry. look, look, look, look, look, look, look,. maybe even laugh while crying.
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what the fertilizer? sounds pretty great, right? riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight! just say, "add epix" and it can all be yours. it's easy to upgrade. and you don't want to miss out on everything epix. steve: marijuana cases will no longer be prosecuted in the city of baltimore, according to the states attorney. but the interim police commissioner fighting back saying, quote: baltimore police will continue to make arrest for illegal marijuana possession unless and until the state legislature changes the law. so, who is right? here with the debate former baltimore police officer retired major neil franklin and robert charles former george w. bush assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs. gentlemen, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> good morning.
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steve: hey, major, let's start with you. it sounds like the prosecutors say you know what? we are not going to prosecute that anymore and devote more time to more serious crimes. besides, but then you have got the state legislature that has to change the law. that's why the police chief says we are going to continue to enforce it who has the right idea? >> well, i don't agree with marilyn moz a number of things but on this one i disagree with her. steve: she is the prosecutor. >> the d.a. the prosecutor in baltimore city marilyn mosley. the citizens elected her into that position. and they support what she is doing. that's her job. now, just because the law hasn't changed yet in the state of maryland doesn't mean that she can -- that doesn't mean she has to continue to arrest people. it's her job to make a decision who is going to be charged for what in
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baltimore city. so she is getting out in front on this. let me explain something to you in baltimore city. one of the big problems we have in baltimore city regarding violent crime, here we are as, what the fourth year now over 300 murders. obviously the arrest of people for marijuana possession is not working. when you do that, when you continue to make these arrests for marijuana possession, you continue the breakdown of police community relations. i mean, baltimore city, baltimore city six times the national average for blacks being arrested. i'm sorry it's four times, if you are black in baltimore city you are six times more likely to be arrested. the national average is four. steve: major, i have read in baltimore, i think something like only one in four homicides are solved so the prosecutors say we want to devote the energies. >> well below the national average again. steve: indeed it is. robert, tell us why this idea of marilyn mosley in
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baltimore is a terrible idea? >> look, people are not in prison for possession. they are in prison for distribution. and so small amounts of marijuana possession is a false bowingy. distribution is the target. the reason is just the same reason it's a federal crime. the reason is it's addictive it leads to other drugs as elijah cummings from baltimore recently said i think last year end of last year. it is a gateway drug. it leads to higher potency use and that's what the harvard studies also indicated as neuroreceptors change people move over to opioids. in your blood system for 30 days. ultimately, at the end of the day, this is a binary choice. you are either for drug abuse and promoting it you are either for a drugged culture or against it frankly, i think everybody in maryland, particularly in baltimore, which has an acute problem ought to be against it. again, this is about distribution of a narcotic. this is about a distribution problem that has to be solved. and the only way you do that is push money in prevention,
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treatment and stop distribution. >> we should not be trying to solve a health crisis with criminal prosecution. it doesn't work. as far as people not going to prison. they go to jail they go to the baltimore detention center. arrest in the state of maryland is discoverable. when they try to get a job, when they try to better their lives. steve: it's on your record. >> the doors are closed period. >> what happens actually is people plead down. >> let's address this issue. let's address this issue with public health and education. we know that that works. and then we will have an opportunity to improve police community relations. that's where you solve violent crime. we can't do it without the public. steve: all right. robert charles final word. >> bottom line is you are either for promoting drug use or letting go or against it will at the end of the day people plead down.
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>> she is still prosecuting distribution. she is still prosecuting that. steve: chief of police baltimore is going to enforce the law. >> i'm glad he is. steve: still on the law. >> and waste our precious resources. steve: well, certainly just a fixed amount of manpower and that's a good point. major neill franklin and robert charles, thanks for getting up early on this thursday morning. what do you think about that? email us ats to. 6:29 in new york city. the left is on a race to radicalism with idea getting crazier and crazier some say. will the platform ruin their 2020 prospects? tomi lahren here with a reality check. she is come up as you can see right now coming up next. plus, say it ain't so, captain america not happy with america. it may be freezing outside. actually way below freezing. but we are warming things up because it's national hot chocolate day. cocoa on the fox square. walk by. get a free cup. j.d. has got hers. ♪ feels so fine
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kick your antacid habit with prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. in the projects i can't find the answers why people are all of a sudden chastising me for being successful. brian: what the heck has happened? welcome to the world. i love that he is breaking this debate up. i love that he is calling democrats out on the anger they have towards him, a liberal democrat just because is he a rags to riches story. ainsley: he should relate to everybody poor and the rich he has been both. steve: lifelong democrat he
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is saying all these tenets of the new democrat party, universal healthcare, the green initiative, free college, free everything. brian: free preschool. steve: that's just not tenable in this country. let's bring in tomi lahren who joins us from los angeles. tomi, what do you make of the left's attack on howard schultz? here is a guy who could easily run his own campaign for president. he would run as an independent because he says both parties are broken. but, in particular, the democrats have got all this stuff wrong. >> far left is incredibly threatened by schultz. they criticize success really odd to me. not as if chuck schumer or nancy pelosi or the rest of them are somehow poor. they just made their money on politics not business. again, i think that they also see something in howard schultz that reminds them again of donald trump. someone who has been successful. someone who inspires the american people and they don't like that one bit.
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brian: do you think that the president tweeted out he does not have the tenacity to stay in race like this. do you think he is staying in or selling books? >> i'm sure that's parts of it i'm sure he wants to sell books. he may be trying to remind the democratic party they don't need to go so far left. is he a liberal. he is a democrat. maybe is he worried about his own party. this race to the far left is really inspired by two things. it's extreme hatred of donald trump aka donald trump derangement syndrome but a deep misunderstanding of the american people and the silent majority. ainsley: democrats are trying to find their way and footing and alexandria ocasio-cortez is very successful. she is the darling of the democratic party and she is so far left and has these socialist ideas then the democrats are saying oh that works for her. maybe that's our ticket. bingo. if you look at some of the things. medicare for all. look at all of the candidates supporting that single pair healthcare. those individuals right
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there. those five green new deal six candidates supporting that debts-free public college. there are five democrats that are supporting that the left keeps going further and further left. >> there is a difference between being successful on twitter like alexandria ocasio-cortez and being relatable on social media platforms and being successful in real life. listen, the american people don't want a handout. we want the government's hand off. we want the ability to achieve the american dream in a safe and secure nation. this crop of democrats offer none of those things. they are not a threat to donald trump unless he fails to build the wall and then like i said before we are in for a real treat in 2020 if this is what the democrats have to deal with. steve: some here in new york who are talking about -- some democrats are talking about actually primariying alexandria ocasio-cortez because they think she is too far out there. she has now started fundraising. we have a sound bite for
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you, tomi, she talks about the future of humanity hangs on one issue and it has to do with the weather. >> i do not think for the future of humanity and for our country to continue to prosper that we cannot have another presidential cycle where climate change is not being asked about at almost every debate. of course, it would be amazing to see green new deal talked about. and it's starting. to say and so that's really exciting. but, i think it's less a hard litmus test on the specific issue and more litmus test on framing. so i do not think that the 2020 candidate can afford to not have an intersectional message that we, the story of race and class.
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steve: comes down to climate change, tomi. >> again, she talks about things that are popular on social media. she sticks to the talking points which has been successful for her. but i think the democratic party is going to fail if they stick to things like that. the average american cares about the economy and national security. she offers none of those things. brian: she also says that why does every billionaire think they are qualified to become president. essentially pay their dues. steve: starting with town council. >> well, again, this is some people have money. she doesn't have as much money as she wishes she had. let's go ahead and confiscate it from those who do. that's become the far left mentality. i think it's a losing mentality. i hope they stick with it and it will lead to their demise in 2020. steve: she certain solid popular and rock star with democrats on capitol hill. ainsley: she is. great job down in san antonio with brian. you all did a great town hall. brian: she was fantastic. it was great to see you there we talked about fox nation. your final thoughts on fox nation. we can catch you all week,
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right? ainsley: right. sign up. >> you can catch me every single day twice day on fox nation or border month or keep america safe month is starting next week. make sure everyone goes up and signs up for fox nation start a free trial. you will love it. steve: next month starts tomorrow. meantime, 21 minutes before the top of the hour. jillian joins us with a developing story. jillian: good morning. the feds are digging for clues after investigation into a sinkhole reveals a tunnel leading to bank. shocking discovery made in fort lauderdale. 50-yard tunnel only 2 to 4 feet in diameter baffling fbi agents who don't have a suspect. a power cord, a wheel barrel and generator were also found. the bank was never broken into. captain america is giving up his shield. heave rogers puts his super hero protest after is he framed for murder.
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comic written by a black columnist who rose to fame writing about white supremacy. do you remember the school administrators in michigan who went viral for this epic snow day announcement? ♪ snow day ♪ a winter cold day ♪ it's a great family day ♪ jillian: okay. well now they are back with a new song that's inspired by frozen. ♪ stay at home ♪ stay at home ♪ will this storm ♪ jillian: aren't they great? guess what you will see more of them they will join us live in the next hour. make sure you stay tuned for that. that's a look at your headlines. let's go outside to the lady of the hour janice dean.
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everyone wants to know what that weather is like. ainsley: don't compare me to an ice queen. hey, come on over here. what's your name? where are you from? name and town? janice: get over here. let's do the weather real quick. cold outside. not as cold as the northern plains. oh, go away. brian: tell everyone to jog in place. janice: here's the deal. here across the northeast not as cold as it is the northern plains and you were midwest. we digress because it feels like minus 48 in parts of wisconsin and minnesota and down towards chicago. wind chill advisories and warnings are posted. we will continue to monitor this. if you have friends and family, pets, children and the elderly you want to make sure they are indoors and you are protected meanwhile we are going to talk about hot chocolate because it's national hot chocolate day! steve: thank you very much, janice dean. we are celebrating national hot chocolate day with a hot chocolate bar here on fox square. ainsley: that's exactly right. here with hot chocolate
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making butch yamali. >> right. brian: dates back to 1860. washington went through that. >> washington and roosevelt was there. one of the most famous restaurants in america. steve: they have hot chocolate there? >> that's right. steve: we will be here until 8:30. stop by. go ahead and pour us some cups. you want us to personalize each cup. >> we have regular chocolate and white chocolate which makes it really good. ainsley: what's the most popular topping? >> marshmallows are great. there is s'mores. >> you can keep the cup. have a good day. ainsley: thank you for watching, sir. >> spiced hot chocolate for those who want an extra kick in it fireball hot shot. ainsley: fireball?
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>> how about kahlua? >> you can put all these things white chocolate chips. brian: whose idea was it to put all these things in hot chocolate. >> we tried it and it took off. ainsley: what's your favorite. >> fireball in a little hot chocolate. >> what's a fireball. >> cinnamon liquor. brian: do i have to pour my own hot chocolate? steve: sir, do you want a marshmallow? >> no, i'm good. steve: the idea is 3wu67 is going to be here 8:30 this morning pouring hot chocolate. we know the reality. as soon as the light goes off you are going back in the building. >> i'm going back inside. it's freezing out here. i had to wear a nice jacket. my valentine's day jacket. steve: folks want to stop by your place. >> 585 north broadway. steve: thank you for joining
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us on the coldest day in the history of "fox & friends." coming up. brian: andrew napolitano is coming up next. that's all i have to say. ♪ hey there people eligible for medicare. gimme two minutes. and i'll tell you some important things to know about medicare. first, it doesn't pay for everything. say this pizza... is your part b medical expenses. this much - about 80 percent... medicare will pay for. what's left... this slice here... well...
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that's the retirement plan. with my annuity i know there's a guarantee. annuities can provide protected income for life. learn more at retireyourrisk.org brian: back and warm. virginia governor under fire ravel northam for the bill that allow abortions up until the day of birth. that bill failed but just barely. ainsley: 8 states allow late term abortion. what rights do our babies have in the womb? steve: judge andrew napolitano. >> i'm particularly steamed about this governor of virginia who is also a physician who two days ago or earlier this week said if the baby survives the abortion, the mother and the physician can decide whether or not the baby should live. decide whether or not the baby should live. steve: that's murder it? >> is murder. he took an oath of the governor of virginia to
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preserve the constitution which requires equal protection for all human beings. they can't decide to let the baby die because of its age. that's a crime. steve: listen, judge, get angry at the state we live in. new jersey has essentially the same thing. >> state of new jersey very silently and without any public legislation done by the board of medical examiners appointed by roman catholic governors allows abortions up to the moment of birth. new york now and they celebrated it they literally danced as andrew cuomo signed this into law allow abortions up to the moment of birth for the mother's health. emotional, psychological or age. that's the definition of health. ainsley: did you ever have a case like this in new jersey where you had to decide whether or not -- because as a mom, i just can't imagine someone deciding to do that on the day of birth and waiting that late. >> did i not have a case like that. the cases are extremely rare. because most physicians refuse to perform abortions
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that late in the term. this former abortionist in pennsylvania kermit gosnell is in prison for the rest of his life for slaughtering them after they came out of womb. ainsley: what happens when the mom is carrying the baby. you deliver the baby and then they make a decision. inch infanticide. ainsley: it is. steve: when a pregnant woman is murdered that's a double homicide. >> that is correct. steve: what rights do an unborn child have? >> the court refuses to decide when personhood attaches. this is not an academic question. because if the baby in the womb is a person, then that person is protected by the fifth amendment which says no person can lose life, liberty, or problem without due process. brian: last question. president trump says this is going to motivate the pro-life community like never before. >> he is exactly right. these are democrats hard, hard left democrats like this governor in virginia
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who should resign base he refuses to protect babies. lose his license because he refuses to protect babies. the hard left is taking this up. this issue beyond -- ainsley: not just pro-life. pro-choice people are really offended by this. >> i would say. so. steve: thank you very much. ainsley: tough issue. remember the congresswoman who called evil. sparking new outrage by saying it's not a democracy. brian: she just got on the job. tom cotton wants the super bowl ring. his advice is not just for players anymore. how can you raise teens with some of the with tips from. so best coaches ever.im ♪ the hitch? like you, your cells get hungry. feed them... with centrum® micronutrients. restoring your awesome... daily. feed your cells with centrum® micronutrients today.
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brian: have you ever wondered why your teenagers listen to coaches more than you. brand new book called coach parenting. here to share some of their advice is the author and parenting expert erika katz. erika, you are an expert and you were frustrated your kids weren't listening to you. what did you notice how they were dealing with their coaches. >> my kids when i would ask them to do something they wouldn't listen to me. when my son's basketball coach would ask him to do something i'm on it, coach. what are the coaches doing that i'm not doing? i had this idea that i could learn a lot from football coaches because football coaches they have this big team of all these different players with different personalities. i wanted to see what i could learn from them. brian: you have a great roster of people. steve mayor niewchy for one. he writes parenting and coaching are a allot a like stay on players and kids.
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hold both accountable and respectful and give best effort of. you can't try to be their friend. coach can't be their friend. >> think about it when your coach is watching you, that's when you play the best. when your parents are watching, that's when kids are more buttoned up. but, remember, a coach can take away playing time and bench the kids. that's their leverage. what do we learn as parents? when our kids do something they shouldn't or don't meet expectations we have to bench them. so maybe if they like to go out on the weekends, if they do something they shouldn't, you take that away. brian: baltimore ravens coach john harbaugh got a brand new contract and he wrote this for you we pray to stay healthy and pray to put our best foot forward whatever is in our hearts it's okay to pray to win, too. bring some religion and some morals and virtue to parenting. >> with my son, when he was younger as a teenager, i wanted him to give back. so, his youth group took him down to new orleans after hurricane katrina because they wanted them to help. so if you can enlist
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faith-based groups to help you raise your children, it's just another layer. brian: lastly tom cotton gave you 90 minutes on the phone legendary giant and jaguars president wrote you can motivate by being constructive not just critical. buy in and join it i like what you did i think can you do better what are you doing? >> never want to tell your child that they are stupid. can you say maybe that wasn't the best thing that you could have done because you want them to buy in to your rules. they are not going to buy in if you are criticizing them personally. this is a really great tip from him. i actually use that with my own kids. brian: you don't have to be a sports fan to like your book it's called coach parenting. erika, great job. sounds like a fun project. >> i had a great time. brian: read all your books. make you a better parent. tom graves will be here. democratic side with senator chris coons, what does it mean for immigration? do we have a deal coming?
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michelle malkin will be here live. she is fired up about this abortion rule as well as immigration and dana loesch. all coming up over the next two hours as we slowly zoom out ♪ ♪ they customized my insurance, so i only pay for what i need. i insured my car, and my bike. my calves are custom too, but i can't insure those... which is a crying shame. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ do you want ready to wear clothing without all the hassle? you can, with bounce dryer sheets. we dried one shirt without bounce, and an identical shirt using bounce. the bounce shirt has fewer wrinkles, less static, and more softness and freshness. bounce out wrinkles, bounce out static. you may have gum disease and could be on a journey to much worse. try parodontax toothpaste.
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steve: it's historic this deep freeze linked to 8 deaths as temperatures devastate portions of the northern plains and the midwest. >> if a mother is in labor, the infant would be delivered and a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother. >> governor of virginia accused of supporting extreme abortion rice as legislators battle over abortion. >> conference committee yesterday in the democrats' opening bid absolutely zero physical barriers, both sides feel by the end of next week they could be closer to a deal. >> mexico suspends fast track visa program. that's not stopping two caravans on the way to the border right now. >> i have this moniker now of being i'm a billionaire don't trust him.
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>> far left is incredibly threatened by schultz. someone who is successful and inspires the american people and they don't like that one bit ♪ stay at home ♪ stay at home ♪ stay safe stay warm ♪ >> right in front of the fireplace this morning. steve: you heard the singers stay home. it is really cold. very busy thursday. you are indoors watching tv right now because there is an historic deep freeze throughout much of the country, so far linked to 8 deaths as the temperatures way past zero have done northern plains and midwest. this is video of the kankakee river freezing in
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chicago. ainsley: watch what happens when someone throws boiling water in the air it instantly. brian: frozen solid standing up in the snow in minnesota. steve: that's like the guy we had on our program yesterday started the live shot with a damp t-shirt by the end of the 90 second hit it was stiff as a board. brian: we all pull our pants up the same way. janice dean is tracking the storm here in new york where it is 4 degrees. janice: brian, come on this is a serious subject here. let's not talk about how you put your pants on. listen, across the northern plains and here in the northeast cold but not crazy cold like it is across the northern plains. there are your current wind chills minus 42 in chicago and minus 41 in chicago. minus 38 in green bay. good news this is the last day of it. stay inside. listen to your local officials and forecasters.
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wind chill alerts here, warnings and advisories in place. minus 30 to minus 65 degrees below zero for wind chill. that spreads across the great lakes and northeast today. look at what happens as we get into friday, saturday and sunday. minneapolis, your honor daytime high today minus 41. by sunday 45. and could see some snow on monday back into artic chill there look at chicago. zero is your daytime high today and then 53 on monday. so we just got to really get through today and tomorrow. that's where the worst of it is going to be. there is your forecast wind chill. watch as we go through time it retreats into canada that is great news. not saying the last of the cold air but the last of the worst of the cold air this year. fingers crossed. ainsley: hard to believe the high is zero in chicago. janice: it's crazy. we will be talking about this for a number of years. this cold air. brian: in kelvin minus 22, 76.
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steve: go out to colorado where they are used to the cold weather. syndicated columnist and author as well. michelle, let's talk about this story. we started talking about it earlier in the week. new york state passed this abortion law where women's reproductive rights act where you can have abortion up to birth. then we learned that apparently the commonwealth of virginia has been contemplating it and the governor who is a doctor, ralph northam wtop radio yesterday responding to how barbaric it was and he said this. listen to, this michelle. >> third trimester abortions, these are done with the consent of obviously the mother with the consent of the physicians, more than one physician by the way. and it's done in cases where there may be severe deformities, there may be a fetus that's nonviable. so, in this particular
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example, if a mother is in labor, i can tell you exactly what would happen. the infant would be delivered and kept comfortable and resuscitated if that's what the mother and the family desired, and then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother. steve: the baby would be delivered and mom and doctor would have a conversation whether or not to keep the baby. >> this is murder. this is brutal. and the mask is off. we are finally seeing the face of barberrism that the proabortion democrats really represent. and so much chilling about the video clip that cannot be walked back. steve: they tried. >> governor northam tried to do it. walk back is probably as chilling as the initial statement was.
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murder the baby a minus before birth and the dryness and the rusm will will will will abortion lobby has used i think the general public now is really seeing the honest face of it and it's about time the pro-life movement has been demonized for so long and there is a reason why you can connect the dots. the callousness with which the mainstream media treats the march for life protesters. we saw the anti-catholic bias of the mainstream media in the kavanaugh hearings and most recently just in the last weeks with the covington boys who were at the march for life antifemale movement when what this really have is an
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attempt to sabotage a movement that stands up for life and stands against the kind of evil that governor northam and the new york state legislature that video is getting around too. brian: the governor's spokesperson released a statement after interview and backlash. no woman seeks a third trimester abortion in the case of tragic. nonviable pregnancy or in the event of severe fetal abnormalities. reactions physicians would take in the event that the woman in those circumstances went into labor. attempts to equities trap plate comments otherwise is in bad faith. are we misinterpreting what he said? is there any -- i don't understand how a woman would actually be able to go through with that because there are actually delivering the baby whether or not to take the baby's life afterwards because she would have to deliver the child. but, hav have you ever known of any cases like this or women
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that would actually go through with this? are you worried about that? >> i'm absolutely worried about it and the abortion lobby. the death lobby is skilled in obfuscation. all you have to do is look at what happened with the case of kermit gosnell to know that this kind of infanticide goes on under the guise of choice and under the guise of reproductive women's freedom. what it really is about is normalizing infanticide and getting people to accept the evil and barberrism of it and that is why there is so much push back now. in oklahoma, for example, there is a state senator there joseph silc that wants to make all abortion a felony homicide. and i think it's the extremes that we are seeing that we are going to see backlash in the next year. brian: michelle, amazing. been reported that some conservatives are upset. some human beings, i would imagine are upset. i don't think you should say conservatives are upset. these are just human beings
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that say does it seem right that deciding after the birth of the baby that they should live or not because usually you go to jail for things like that. now in seven states it's allowed. meanwhile as we pivot to something less important that's politics. i am stunned about the backlash and seems on some degree is howard schultz the backlash the premise of him actually running for president as an independent candidate. the hate and anger that he gets only donald trump can identify with. now he is being attacked for greatest asset and that's being success story. listen. >> it's an interesting phenomenon in the last week or so where moniker now of being i'm a billionaire and so don't trust him because sea successful person. i grew up literally in public housing in the projects and i have succeeded in america. i always thought that was something to be celebrated, that my success should not be something that is
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punitive. my success is living proof of the promise of the country. i can't find the answers why people are all of a sudden chastising me for being successful. brian: is he pushing back on socialism and unaffordable programs that will never be implemented. he is actually doing the work of an analyst or a republican but remaining the democrat. how do you explain this backlash and this vilification? >> i wrote a whole book about it called who built that several years ago. diagnosing the war on wealth and job creators. the wealth-shaming that is in the d.n.a. of the mainstream democrat party. now we see howard schultz getting a rude awakening about that and unfortunately is hhe is going to be eaten alive by the wing of the democratic party which has become the center there i have a little bit of about
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it howard schultz has represented himself to be a progressive when it comes to demon needing conservatives whether it's his antigun position or even taking a lot of antibusiness distances himself to pander to the left wing. so, it's a strange, strange phenomenon and i have to say i somewhat enjoy it those of us who are defenders of capitalism have been attacked by this man himself and now is he getting a dose of his own medicine. brian: one thing is clear is he not a socialist. steve: clearly a capitalist. remember as well democrats are steamed at him because they are worried he would split the democratic ticket and donald trump would get reelected and that is -- all right. michelle, thank you very much for joining us today from colorado. >> you bet. brian: when it comes to healthcare, jillian, work at disar bucks and full time you have an option to get healthcare plan. he bucked his board to do it. steve: are you suggesting she is going to get a job at starbucks. jillian: i'm wearing the color? brian: get you an apron.
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jillian: president trump expected to give update on isis at the state of the union. secretary of state mike pompeo says the fight to eliminate the terror group is still ongoing. >> despite of the enormous progress that we have made and success we have had the threat from radical islamic terrorism is real. we need to continue to do all that we can to make sure there is not a resurgence of isis. this administration is committed this to that. jillian: this nation is expected to update plans to pull out of syria in his address. awarded $587,000 in damages after being attacked by his neighbor. renee boucher tackled rand paul on his lawn in 2017 leaving the republican with six broken ribs. he pleaded guilty and spent 30 days in prison u praising roger goodell. he told the daily caller the two have spoken recently adding quote their games have, quote, really been good other than one call. addressed that call at a
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super bowl news conference. >> it's never a good outcome for us. technology is not going to solve all those issues. the game is not official united stated by robots. jillian: the league admitted the call was missed but i don't think that makes any saints fans feel better. brian: i don't know what they want the commissioner to do. you want the commissioner to come down and send the saints to the super bowl. jillian: they are not going to play this game. steve: let's have the game in two weeks. brian: not going to happen. steve: thank you very much. voters in kamala harris' district in california like her idea of free healthcare. so how are they going to pay for it? >> just the way we have been paying for all these years. >> we're not paying for it now. how are we paying for that? >> taxes. steve: maybe. that's not all they had to say to lawrence jones. ainsley: one man kept are arguing with his life about spending too much on lottery tickets. he just got the last word. ♪
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>> brian: running on a platform of medicare for all tax cuts
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and make college free. can i add in free preschool. what do california voters think of their senators kamala harris and their progressive agenda. our next guest went tout find out. >> some of the positions she is taken she believes there should be a single pair system medicare for all. do you agree with that. >> of course dime absolutely. >> how do we pay for that. >> just the way we have been paying for it all these years. >> how do we pay for that? how do they pay for that? >> figure it out. campus reform.org editor and chief lawrence jones. lawrence, you had to go out to california and out of the cold to find out if kamala harris' plans will work there. right? >> yeah. i wanted to talk to voters and see if they felt like they can actually work. reporter well-liked but can
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she deliver and multiple people told me tax the rich. get money from someone else. they don't know how to pay for this stuff. >> california is great at that. so you went out and where did you go? what part of california? >> yes, i was in l.a. talking with voters around there. just getting their thoughts on the state of kamala harris. can she actually beat the president? we even asked him about the education system, if they thought it was practical. take a look. >> what about education? she believes that free college, free pre-k is that reasonable? >> really? who wouldn't want that, knock i just want to know where the money is coming from. they get school from free in their countries they come here for opportunity. >> how are we going to pay for that here? >> it's in someone's pockets so why not share. >> you like her policies even though he just told me that they weren't practical? >> the idea is good. >> the idea but it's not practical. >> it's not practical.
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>> you still like her. >> i still like her. brian: she was the attorney general there, too. >> you just can't make this stuff up. these people were willing, several people, actually, brian were, willing to say hey, it's not practical. we don't know how we are going to pay for it but we like her. this just shows you where this emotion driven progressive policy is taking this country. we see it on the college campuses every day. our young people feel like we should governor ourselves by our emotion. not adults. people that have a paycheck now doing the same thing. brian: lawrence, 20 seconds. she is trying to do what president obama did talk in generallalities will a mood and push. people are too smart for that now. they want to know how it's going to get done. >> that's why people should be concerned because obama won. because he connected with voters. let's see what happens now. brian: all right, lawrence. thanks so much. 10 minutes before the bottom of the hour. democrats pushing laws to allow abortion up to the moment of birth.
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most say that's a bad idea. should this be allowed? we have a panel of doctors to give us the facts first and then help you decide. call meeeee! (burke) a fly-by ballooning. seen it, covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ the best simple salad ever?d great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts. so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org.
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which plug in to extend the wifi even farther, past anything that stands in its way. ...well almost anything. leave no room behind with xfi pods. simple. easy. awesome. click or visit a retail store today. steve: a bunch of numbers and bunch of news. news by the numbers. >> first, 123, that's how many migrants, customs and border agents just arrested near huma, arizona, this video shows the group surrendering to officers after vehicle barriers were crossed. meanwhile, 48%. that's how many americans are not answering their telephones as spam calls skyrocket. the study by caller i.d. app. also finding americans got more than 24 billion robo calls last year. most of them at dinner time.
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and finally, $22,000. that's how much a man won in the lottery during an argument with his wife about playing the lottery. the kansas man says he realized he hit the jackpot as his wife was complaining about how much money he spent on the ticket. i think the 22,000 probably made her feel a little bit better. ainsley, down to you. ainsley: thank you, steve. virginia democrats facing immense backlash after state lawmakers put forward that bill that would allow abortions up until the moment of birth. the effort comes just one week after new york passed a bill loosening restrictions on abortion. a new poll finds only 15% of americans believe that abortion should be made available at any time during pregnancy our panel of doctors here to discuss this dr. nicole saphier down on the end. obgym dr. omar hamata and dr. you recall on the end:
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a hot topic to talk about. real liz stickily i saw a friend on the street yesterday. a lot of moms in new york were talking about this issue. a lot of my friends are very liberal in new york and still had a big issue with this. one said you know what? i really want to know the facts. why would this governor down in virginia, why would governor cuomo, why would they endorse this? because you are delivering a baby. then you make the decision whether or not to alberto the baby. have you all seen it go this far? >> never. i would have never imagined something like this to happen. we joined a list of six other countries including china and north korea that allow this. ainsley: exactly. >> no one else does. even europe as liberal as they are only allow 14 weeks. netherlands is the only country that allows after 20 week deliveries no. indication in the third trimester, no maternal or fetal indication for termination for abortion. there is for delivery. for ending the pregnancy because of other indications. ainsley: dr. saphier, you are a mother. you have a very personal story to that you have talked about on the air and you are a doctor. you went to medicin medical schl
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after you had your son. >> that's correct. political and religious rhetoric aside the legalization of is testing where we are going to go with american morality. and there are some countries that are making decisions for later term abortions based on social and health factors. americans are not there. and polling has showed that less than 15% of americans are actually okay with third trimester abortions. we have more people okay with a wall at our southwest border but we can't get that but all of a sudden these laws are being passed for this. and, you know, as a radiologist, we look at the ultrasounds. we find the far majority of things in the first, second trimester, you know, genetic testing. so from my standpoint, during the third trimester, i can't tell you why you would abort a viable fetus not for the maternal reasons or fetal reasons. these guys can attest to that. >> doctor, this is what the governor in virginia said.
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he said it's done in cases where there may be severe deformities or a fetus that's not viable. i had a miscarriage and my baby was not viable. we knew that in the first trimester. then i got pregnant again three months later we knew in the first trimester she was healthy. the doctor was able to tell me that. why wait until the third trimester. >> vast majority of cases you are able to diagnose early and decisions should be made early regardless of what your stance is on termination. it you should be done and concluded at an early point. this law to me is a wolf in sheep's clothing. it's couched as woman's healthcare it's really just a carte blanche for termination to term. and i spent my career fighting to get babies to 24 weeks to viability. and seeing those babies flourish. and to think that we, as a society, would legalize and give, you know, permit
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terminations in the -- and couch it as if this is a choice because of the mother's health as opposed to saying the choice is either stay pregnant or deliver. because as dr. ahmed said just deliver the baby and then take care of the baby. ainsley: they keep talking about the health of the mother. this would allow no longer do you have to have an abortion at a hospital or medical facility. no longer do you need an trawl sound. no longer do three doctors have to sign off on third trimester in virginia how can that be healthy for. >> doctor doesn't even have to perform it anymore. >> exactly and it's dangerous. it takes a lot of training to get to be an obgyn and even more training to do late term terminations. i can't imagine practically that ever happening somebody not a physician doing it what they are trying to do is remove all restrictions and obstructions to abortion whenever, however, whoever wants it. so, it's really not about the mom's health. >> viability deemed 24 weeks with roe v. wade and that was decades old science.
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babies are starting to live and thrive from 21 to 22 weeks. science and innovation has really taken off. although it's a long arduous course these children are surviving. we need to reframe how we are looking at things. this law is scary and frightens me on multiple levels. experts here tell you they disagree. ainsley: i know your story and i have seen your precious son now in college and cutest kid. ainsley: she had so many struggles. she went to medical school after she gave birth to her child and got pregnant in high school and had you to make a tough decision. >> this is not a pro-choice argument having today. this is third trimester. we are pushing our boundaries of american morality. that's the question for me. i think the pro-choice, this leftist agenda just taking us way too far. that is really concerning from a morality stand point. >> it's barbaric. it really is. >> this should not be called the reproductive healthcare act it should be called the revocation of unborn children's rights act.
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because that's really what it comes down to. ainsley: guys, new yorkers. even my new york friends here can't believe this. some of the most liberal people i know can't believe this. i look at the video of governor cuomo and all those women cheering. they lit up the world trade center in pink for this. they are celebrating this. >> at the base there is a memorial to the children who died in 9/11. ainsley: i know that's the irony here. >> they also made it so you cannot -- no more lethal injection for inmates in new york however can you now do late term abortions. the dichotomy is confusing. ainsley: migrant caravan is on the move. no longer welcoming the migrants with open arms. griff is live south of the border with the stunning reversal just ahead. plus, should the u.s. be able to strike first using nuclear weapons? two democrats, including elizabeth warren say no way. and extreme cold sweeping across the country as you know. rachel campos-duffy is live outside her house in wisconsin. there she is.
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we will check in with her coming up ♪ ♪ still fresh... ♪ unstopables in-wash scent booster ♪ downy unstopables
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because each job in energy creates many more in this town. energy lives here.
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ainsley: a live look in chicago as historic deep freeze is gripping the midwest. steve: it is the record breaking bitter blast throughout the northern plains and also the great lake states moving into the northeast is just about what is it 3 or 4 degrees here now. here in new york city. the deadly arctic blast as it sweeps across northern american, this morning, residents in at least states including our next guest recorded temperatures as low as the south pole. 26 degrees below zero today. brian: joining us now with a look outside her home smack in the middle of the polar vortex rachel campos-duffy. >> good morning. brian: all the kids inside
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you are outside? >> they are all inside. they have been inside for two days. and i tell you can place only so many movies, so many games of monopoly. i have been breaking up so many fights i can't even tell you. steve: rachel, it's 27 degrees below zero. that's the air temperature. when you factor in the wind it's got to be closer to 40 or 5 50 below zero. what does it feel like? >> well, i have got lots of layers on. so it's not so bad right now i-pets don't want to go potty outside. a lot of potty accidents inside from the dogs. it's cold. everything is shut down. the schools, the post office. we have a awesome ski hill here that my son works at. that's closed down. things have just slowed down because it's so cold. we have a warming shelter for the homeless here. it's normally only open at night.
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it's open 24/7 for the last couple days. ainsley: are you used to this or is this the worst you have ever seen it? >> i think this is the worst i have ever seen it. but i have to tell you walking outside for you guys is the first time i have stepped outside in two days. y'all know that i'm originally from arizona. [laughter] >> this is scary cold for me. steve: what about your husband? i know sean duffy, congressman from wisconsin. i know he works in the swamp. where is he today on the coldest day of the year? >> so he just got home last night. the congressional office is closed he is heading to the studio. he never stops and he is going out in this weather. steve: bring him outside. we want to see him outside. come on. come on. >> hey, sean, come out here. steve: this is the way it works. who needs a professional booker.
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just open the door and yell at your husband. ainsley: brian, tell him to get dressed. brian: put your coat on. ainsley: where is your coat? >> rachel has a bunch of layers. i have a suit and tie. i'm going -- 30 minutes. i wasn't ready for this. i will tell what you, it is so darn cold, your lungs hurt when you breathe in. and yes, it's absolutely crazy. actually, our cars don't start. a lot of people don't get that but your car doesn't start it's so cold and can't go to work. brian: i'm worried about the kids locking you out because they are probably sick of the supervision. now they are running this place? >> paybacks are hell, dad? >> can't go outside to play or make a snowman. they are on each other's nerves. >> coming to this weather makes the swamp feel cool.
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steve: i can't imagine. out on fron front porch. built a wall around your front porch probably warmer. >> we want to keep the heat in and cold out if we do that. ainsley: do they need a new congressman in arizona? because about this time are you thinking about moving with rachel's family neck of the woods? >> just a snow bird. the summers here are awesome. >> best place in the world for the summer. we pay for it in the winter, no doubt. ryan brian tell maria we say high. >> you can tell it's not really blowing right now. ainsley: is it frozen? >> last 24 hours the wind has kicked up. stand up. when that wind kicks up. freeze to death. steve: thank you both for showing us what it's like. ainsley: go back inside. steve: go back inside you have seven kids who want
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breakfast. brian: i cannot believe he was out there in just his suit. is he so tough. talk about tough, jillian mele is tough. >> i try to be. i'm just looking at them and sitting here looking like oh my god. it's freezing. get you caught up on some of the stories we are following starting with this. >> freshman congresswoman elan omar getting backlash for comparing america's ally israel to iran. >> still uphold it as a democracy in the middle east. i almost chuckle because i know that if, you know we say see that in any other society we would criticize it and call it out. the. jillian: earlier this month the minnesota democrat had to apologize for a 2012 tweet calling on people to quote see the evil doings of israel. democrats want to ban the u.s. from launching the first nuclear strike in potential wars. 2020 presidential hopeful elizabeth warren and armed services chairman adam smith
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proposing the no first use act. they say it would stop the u.s. from starting nuclear conflicts which warren claims most americans support. so, when you go to a basketball game, you don't expect a fan to hit the shot of the game. well, this one did. check it out? >> felt like he took -- that's one take he build that off. jillian: that the is president of the florida gator's student section. he drained the one handed shot from the third row of the stands before the gators beat ole miss that is incredible. look at that boom. steve: that's your shot of the week stuff. great stuff. brian: thanks, jillian. tom graves is part of the bipartisan group meeting on border security. will there be a wall, a barrier and can we avoid another shutdown? he joins us live next. steve: plus, these two school officials went viral for singing hallelujah
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steve: announcing a snow day. well, they are going to join us live for an encore and maybe a new song ♪ it's a great family day ♪ it's the end of our snow day song ♪ we will see you before too long ♪ be safe ♪ be warm ♪ and be with a 4 feet dragon ♪ this winter storm will break real soon ♪ please try not plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? new robitussin honey. because it's never just a cough. you mighyour joints...ng for your heart... or your digestion... so why wouldn't you take something for the most important part of you... your brain.
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ainsley: a fox news alert. thousands of migrants rushing to board buses after mexico suspends its fast track i have program. brian: griff jenkins joins us live from mexico city as the migrants inch closer to our southern border. griff? griff: yeah, guys, just want to give you a quick look at the scene here. what we have had are the 2,000 officials say that
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2312 migrants left that shelter an hour or so ago. and they have made their way to the other side of town. and they are getting buses. they are actually bum rushing these buses. police you can see here in the streets trying to control as one bus is pulling out. no, that's that one is going to keep going past us. it's a bit of a chaotic situation. now what you are going to see is a lot of the migrants rushing towards the buses that stop. and it's part of the chaos as these caravans work their way towards the u.s. border. now, what happened yesterday at the mexico city stadium is they said the buss are going to be provided to take them two and a half hours north to the town of katera and continue on the way to tijuana and places like that. what's important to know too, guys, they are just getting the news this morning they are learning that mexico's new administration obrador has stopped the temporary asylum and work visa program.
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that's not good news to them. they don't want to stop and talk with us much because they are trying desperately to get on these buses which seem to be fairly few and far between, guys? brian: wow. it's incredible. the numbers are huge. all right. griff. stay on top of it. ainsley: hand it over to steve who has more news for us. steve: thanks, ainsley. we will keep an eye on the traffic down there and go back live to mexico city in a element no. joining us now is a member of that bipartisan committee trying to negotiate for a wall. congressman from the great state of georgia tom graves joins us. tom, good morning to you. >> good morning. great to be with you. steve: okay. the president made it very clear yesterday when he tweeted out if no wall or physical barrier they are wasting their time. you saw the democrats present their plan behind closed doors yesterday. they are not talking about a wall. they are not talking about a physical barrier. >> you bring up a good point. in fact, yesterday i was very optimistic going into the meeting. these are great people. i work with them on a daily basis. we heard a lot of consensus
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about the need for border security. but, i left with some serious concerns, quite frankly. i expected it to be very transparent and open process. and i heard the democrats begin talking about some proposal they might have and i asked about that. and in fact they have had six weeks to come up with a proposal. and, yet, they sort of indicated there is really nothing out there. we're not real sure. we're not finished. we don't have anything to share with the public it should be scrutinized. since then i have found out there is a bill that has been drafted that's under lock and key in some house office building that is the democrats' proposal. it is their legislation that they are not sharing with the public. and we're 15 days away from the expiration of this continuing resolution. but what's interesting is that now i have a summary right here of their draft proposal and in no way does it include any additional funding for any border wall or barrier as they might refer to it. steve: okay. tom, as we look at these migrants down in mexico city waiting to get on these
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busses to transport them closer to the u.s. border, essentially the president yesterday tweeted out about three different caravans with close to 12,000 people. this makes his point that there needs to be some sort of a barrier. but, are the democrats playing semantics game where it's like we are not going to call it a barrier, we are not going to call that wall. but there will be something that looks like a fence. we will not call it that. >> they think they are in a definitions game. they are trying to find consensus on the definition of what we all know to be true and needed and that is a wall or a fence or an obstruction at our border that prevents any criminal activity from entering into our country and securing our country as well. so, but, the key point is if they are going to use these terms or lack of terms why are they keeping things hidden from the american people. keeping their ideas in fact away from them. had this draft proposal not been leaked to me, i wouldn't know about it i assure you no other members
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that i have spoken to know about this. and so, i'm hoping they will, you know, put a little sunlight in this process and let's be transparent. what's interesting as well yesterday we go through a couple hours of nice comments. they recess the meeting and then shortly thereafter adjourn the house to next tuesday and yet here we are not having any meetings after i asked for the schedule of meetings and when will we meet again? we are here to work. steve: indeed. the fact that the democrats are keeping the -- their bill, the proposed bill under lock and key is very curious. tom graves from georgia, sir, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you. thank you very much. steve: as we continue to watch the migrants about to board some of those buses if any will stop in mexico city to get them closer to the united states. meanwhile, two school officials went viral for singing hallelujah. it was a snow day. they are going to join us live for an encore. good morning, guys. ♪ stay home and just play ♪ it's a great
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we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome. ♪ ♪ it's a snow day ♪ a winter cold day ♪ stay home and just play ♪ it's a great family day ♪ ainsley: those school administrators in michigan turned into internet super stars for epic snow day announcement. brian: absolutely. the video of them harmonizing to the tune of hallelujah has been seen for man 1 million times on youtube. steve: singing school officials schwartz creek school superintendent ben mika and principle of schwartz creek high school jim kitschen in detroit where temperatures are way below zero. guys, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> good morning.
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negative 35 with wind chill here. brian: are people home are at school. steve: nobody is at school. >> they are home today. yeah. steve: ben, where did you guys come up with this idea to do something so out there? >> well, actually, we saw a lot of our colleagues from around the country doing it and we saw, you know, that would be kind of a fun thing to do. we have a lot of our community members and kids that were kind of egging us on a little bit. and so actually, jim texted me and we texted back and forth and that's kind of what led to it all. ainsley: correct me if i am wrong, that was two days ago when you closed and school is closed today. this is the video you released yesterday. watch this. ♪ stay at home ♪ stay at home ♪ this storm ♪ we'll see you back real soon ♪ when this vortex has
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passed on through. brian: that is so great. jim, are you guys pros? ainsley: it seems like it. >> we are not pros. we enjoy bellowing a joyful noise but definitely not pros as you can tell. ainsley: really good. steve: we would love to hear an encore. ben and mike, how about singing us to break? >> all right. >> all right. sounds good. ready? ♪ it's a snow day ♪ a winter cold day ♪ stay at home and just play ♪ it's a great family day ♪ ainsley: y'all are wonderful. steve: fantastic. ainsley: all the teachers probably love working for you and students as well. thanks for making school fun guys. >> thank you. steve: still frozen. ainsley: wonderful. we love our educators. steve: they are great and they are home today. ainsley: that's right.
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brian: gavin if our executive producer ever wants us to stay at home because it's cold i would love him to sing for us. [buzzer] steve: not going to happen. brian: dana loesch will be here live and senator chris coons. you know who they are ♪ new nyquil severe with vicks vapocool. the vaporizing, nightime coughing, aching, stuffy head, best sleep with a cold, medicine. to. . a better bank starts with looking at something old, and saying, "really?" so capital one is building something completely new. capital one cafes. inviting places with people here to help you, not sell you. and savings and checking accounts with no fees or minimums. because that's how it should be.
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steve: it is historic the deep freeze. now linked to a death. subzero temperatures devastate portions of the plains and midwest. >> if a a discussion would be ensue between the mother and physician. ainsley: the bill would allow abortions up to the moment at birth. >> we're seeing the face of barbarism that the democrats really represent. >> they want a bipartisan negotiation showing little sign of progress. brian: the migrant caravan on the move. america conot accepting the migrants with open arms.
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>> i think climate change needs not to be a nice thing for to us talk about but a critical thing to talk about. >> race to the far left is deep misunderstanding of the american people. ♪ stay at home, stay at home, stay warm ♪ steve: want to stay at home, air temperature in milwaukee is 17 below zero. the windchill in that region, closer to 40 and 50 below zero. devastating portions of the upper midwest, ohio valley and great lake states. the deep freeze, historic linked to at least eight deaths and there in milwaukee you can see right now, 17 below. ainsley: wow. check this out. someone throwing boiling water up into the air it instantly turns to powdery snow. brian: new video out of upstate new york. looks like blizzard conditions.
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mike tobin is live in chicago even colder, minus 16 degrees, mike. don't tell me you're used to this. reporter: colder in different environments. you see the spray off lake michigan, evaporation getting on railing on the dock. parts of lake michigan are not frozen over. so the water relatively is warmer than the air, you get a breathtaking scene with the mist. pan around over lake michigan. i'm slipping on the ice. the skyline of the city of big shoulders. this is a ghost town anything that had option to close down is closed down. this is what the people of chicago are saying. >> hard to take a breath in. affecting my lungs. >> roads are really bad, slippery.
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everything is freezing up. >> i'm boeing back home. reporter: amtrak canceled service in and out of chicago. yesterday they were lighting rails on fire to keep them from shrinking sheering off the bolts. as far as night delays we're up to 2500 flight cancellations. 7,000 flight delays. if you're traveling, look on your phone. on lighter note, people in minnesota, decided to make a sculpture, took pants, with water, froze them and made a sculpture garden of pants. bad news for everybody watching, expected to snow this afternoon. one more complication before we're out of the bitter freeze. steve: it has to warm up before it can snow. we know you got out of the crew car or satellite truck to do this report, but how long realistically in chicago, 16 degrees below zero, 25 degrees below zero, how long
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can you be in the elements before approaching frostbite. reporter: depend how tough you are. if your skin is exposed, frostbite can set in in matter of minutes. then it depends on the gear. opted out of gloves, went for mittens. make it a little longer. your toes give out. steve: what about your face? reporter: my face, my face hurts when i look in the mirror, so it will hurt anyway when we get out in the wind. ainsley: hard to believe that is america. looks like you are in antarctica. reporter: it is really beautiful. i hate to undermine the danger of the situation but this is just breath taking when you look at all of the steam coming off. that is actually the trump tower getting a morning glow. you see the john hancock, that is the trump tower. the john hancock and will list tower. i'm old school. i still call it the sears tower.
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steve: mike. excellent report in lake michigan. run into the car. we'll watch you. turn and walk into the vehicle. grab your cameraman. reporter: needs to come in. many tomas vasquez. tough guy. brian: too much of a pro. ainsley: doesn't want us to see him fall. walking on ice is tricky. steve: we'll talk a little bit about some video that has gone viral. we showed you yesterday when a legislator down in commonwealth of virginia by the name of tran was appearing to be questioned about her bill in the house down in virginia, house bill 2491 regarding abortion up to birth. well that is the video i'm talking about right there. the bill has failed in the commonwealth of virginia. but nonetheless -- ainsley: three to five.
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steve: people talking about how could it get this far? turns out seven states currently here in the united states, including the great state of new jersey and the state we're sitting in new york, where it is legal to have abortion up birth. ainsley: governor supports her. listen what he said in an interview yesterday. >> third trimester abortions, these are done with the consent much obviously the mother, with the consent of the physicians, more than one physician, by the way. it is done in cases where there may be severe deformities. there may be a fetus that is non-viable. so in this particular example, if a mother is in labor, i can tell you exactly what would happen. the infant would be delivered. the infant would be kept comfortable. the infant would be resuscitated if that is what the mother and family desired. then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother. steve: did you hear that?
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he just said what would happen in some cases is the baby would be delivered. the baby would be born, and the mother and doctor would then have a conversation about whether or not to keep the baby. ainsley: make sure the baby is comfortable. steve: while they have the conversation. ainsley: whether or not they will take the life of that child. brian: delivery, conversational tone, professional appearance, you think to yourself, am i hearing this correctly or is it me? is he actually saying the baby is born, then we'll decide whether the baby lives or not. steve: some cases. brian: so we want to clarify. tell me if this is clarification for you. no woman seek as third trimester abortion except in the case of tragic or difficult circumstances non-viable pregnancy or event of severe feet tall abnormalities, the governor's comments were limited to the actions physicians would take in event a woman in those circumstances went into labor. attempts to extrapolate these
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comments otherwise is in bad faith. it can also be the mental state of the woman, the woman could be going through extreme depression. does that mean we have to kill the kid. ainsley: we had panel of doctors, two of them ob/gyns. one of them said this was barbaric. >> would never imagine something like this to happen. we join a list of sick other countries china and north korea that allow this. >> during the third trimester i can't tell you why you would abort a viable fetus, not for the maternal reasons or fetal reasons. >> this is a wolf in sheep's clothing. couched as women's health care but. steve: why would you ever terminate? in some cases people terminate a pregnancy because of an illness or disease or down syndrome in some cases. i know that many women are
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checked, are screened for that. ashton kutcher, who has got, what, 20 million twitter followers, he posted on his facebook page the testimony of a man by the name of frank stevens, who was testifying previously before congress about people living with down syndrome in science and research. ashton's facebook says, everybody's life is valuable. he had a link, so that you would listen to this man who lived. >> no one knows more about life with down syndrome than i do. please remember this. i am a man with down syndrome and my life is worth living. [applause] the people pushing this particular final solution are saying that people like me
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should not exist. that view is deeply prejudiced by an outdated idea of life of life with down syndrome. seriously i have a great life. ainsley: he went on to say, talking about individuals with down syndrome, said we are unusually powerful source of happiness. harvard based study, people with down syndrome, parents and siblings are happier than society and large. surely happiness is worth something. steve: the headline for ashton kutcher on his facebook page, everyone's life is valuable. brian: how many retweets does that have? steve: five million. brian: wow. ainsley: powerful. steve: one of the things we're following here in new york city, jillian is following. jillian: good morning to you. 16 cars go up in flames in a
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parking lot in newark airport. firefighters in new jersey putting it out in just three degrees. overnight a fire destroyses paper factory also in new jersey. bitter cold forcing firefighters let the blaze burn itself out. no injuries are reporting at the 86-year-old factory. it is unclear how the fire started. president trump says he is very disappointed how the fbi handled the arrest of long-time associate roger stone. the president telling "the daily caller," he will think about asking the agency to review the use of force policies. senate judiciary chairman lindsey graham called the tactics unacceptable. stone is charged with lying to congress, obstruction and witness tampering. he pleaded not guilty. a driver wanted for stealing cash from his own truck is arrested after weeks on the run. mark espn knows is a was arrested at dmv in connecticut.
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he stole hundreds of thousands of dollars while his partner went into a mall to make deliveries and pickups. the money is still missing. pro wrestler turned actor, dwayne johnson, wrote, i lacked experience, lot of things, i'm not ruling out idea if i could make a bigger impact or potentially sure round myself with good people. brian: i don't know if he would be a democrat or republican. he is very pro-military. there is excellent chance i might be asked to run with him. steve: really? good luck. can you, do you smell what the kilmeade is cooking? brian: no. i have to come up with my own phrase. let him have that one. he is certainly most popular act tomorrow. highest paid in the world. steve: you want to be vice president? is that what you're saying? brian: we'll see how t works out. i'm not out of the running. ainsley: most hollywood is democrats. pro-military. are you --
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brian: i'm not sure he would not be a republican. ainsley: okay. brian: everyone is assuming he will be a democrat. steve: currently there is a republican who has the job. conventional wisdom. unless you're talking about a primary challenge. 13 minutes at top of the hour. bipartisan talks on border security to resume in capitol hill. will there be a wall or another shut down? christopher coons, the senator is part of the negotiation. brian will talk to him next. ainsley: sarah sanders is mocked by critics saying god wanted president trump to win. dana loesch is fired up about that. she will be hereta live. my mom washes the dishes... ...before she puts them in the dishwasher. so what does the dishwasher do?
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feed them... with centrum® micronutrients. restoring your awesome... daily. feed your cells with centrum® micronutrients today. ♪ >> i have a summary right here of their draft proposal and in no way does it include any additional funding for any border wall or barrier as they might refer to it. brian: congressman tom graves got a look at democratic plan and proposal and you heard what he just said, no barrier, no bollards, no fence. member of that bipartisan committee negotiating a wall, blasting democrats border proposal. will democrats be able to negotiate a deal? many look to chris coons
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somebody that will broker some type after deal. senator chris coons joins us right now. senator, that republican congressman was a little down about prospects of negotiation because of what he saw. is i right? >> i saw congressman graves well. i don't know if he is accurately portraying opening position of democrats on that. i am not on it. i would pay attention to nita low which, senior appropriator from new york, one of the top democrats who says everything is on the table. the government has been reopened. we should be having a wide open negotiation about how much money to invest in border security, for what types of technologies and what would be the smartest use of those invests to help secure our southern border. brian: have you been convinced, you know this issue, have you been convince ad barrier, sophisticated fences, a barrier would be effective like in major cities where most experts say they belong? >> well, as you well know,
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brian, we have 700 miles of barrier right now. there are places where that has made a big difference in dramatic reintroduction of flow into our country from mexico. and so there are places where that has been effective. we're upgrading with modern technology and surveillance would make it stronger and more effective. so i wouldn't rule that out. i'm one of many democrats who voted to strengthen border security. a lot of this difference or this fight has been between the president's rhetoric about a great big wall and reality, that the professionals, leaders in cpb and dhs and many democrats and republicans agree we can strengthen border security with modern technology. brian: they came up with the 5.7, 234 miles, said exactly where it is going to go. if you see that map and democrats see that map, would they be open to doing what the president says experts have told him we need? >> well, remember, i'm just speaking for myself here, brian. i would be open to a process where you have got experts
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deciding exactly where it is going to go. there was a disappointing big gap between what the president said when he gave an oval office speech, i think a week ago saturday and the paper that actually came over to the senate. there were lots of other issues embedded in there about changing asylum rules. as long as what we see on paper reflects that kind professional, independent, analysis of where we can best invest these dollars, border security is something that i and all democrats, who i work with in the senate agree we should invest more in. brian: right. i mean you both could say, they could say they got the barrier, you could say we talked them off cement wall, it could be a win-win. >> that is why i'm here, try to help make things like that happen, brian. brian: senator, thanks so much. you might have to step in if things break down because we have 17 days to another shutdown or problem. >> we do. nobody needs another shutdown. brian: thank you, senator chris coons. straight ahead, a big story we've been talking about all
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morning. controversial new abortion bill in virginia. a lawmaker who called out his democratic colleague joins us live next. new theraflu powerpods. press. sip. relief.
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♪ brian: quick headlines now. lawyers for accused drug lord "el chapo" will make their closing arguments. they claim he is being used as scapegoat for the real leaders of the mexican cartel the federal prosecutors are urging jurors to use common sense. they could start deliberations today. if convicted "el chapo" could face life in prison. with mexico' most notorious drug lord off the street, the new president is declaring the war on drugs is over. they will not use resources to go after kingpins but reduce
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murders. kingpins that is good for you. ainsley: a bill would allow abortions in virginia up to the very moment of birth. >> where it is obvious that a woman is about to give birth, she has physical signs about to give birth. would that still be a point at which she could request an abortion if she was so certified? she is dial lating. >> mr. chairman, that would be a, you know, a decision that the doctor, the physician, and the woman -- >> i understand that. i am asking if the bill would allow that? >> my bill would allow that. steve: the voice of the man you just heard questioning cathy tran. majority leader of virginia house of delegates. todd gilbert. mr. gilbert good morning to you. >> good morning, steve.
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steve: the more we learn about the repeal act, house bill the more grisly it is. why was it you took that tact in interviewing her and asking her questions about her bill? >> well, of course we were fully aware of the implications of the bill, that it would remove almost any reasonable restrictions on the right to and i borings, right up until the moment of birth and we wanted to hear her say it. while horrifying, none of her answers were surprising, if anything was surprising about her answers it was the level of honesty that she exhibited. steve: right. >> we appreciate it that. because it cast a light, a bright light on the agenda of our democratic colleagues, not just in virginia but all across the country. while we appreciate the honesty, we remain horrified at the implications of what might happen if they ever get the chance to make that the law of virginia. ainsley: yeah. with republicans in the
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majority, this bill did not actually pass. >> correct. >> it was voted 5-3, against this bill. but it is very scary, isn't it? to know that -- >> yes. ainsley: if republicans lose that power this could happen, children could be, many people called it murder. >> absolutely. this bill had 20 democratic copatrons and the full-throated support of the governor of virginia. and so, you know, it, i weep for virginia should this extreme agenda ever take a foothold here in our commonwealth. steve: i remember, you know, over the years, people have said, who are pro-abortion, they have said, you know, abortion should be safe, it should be legal and it should be rare. but in this case it makes it possible right up to the moment of birth and past birth, actually. we have, this morning, mr. gilbert, been playing a sound bite of the governor who was on wtop radio where he was saying that, what could happen
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is the baby would be born, they would make sure the baby is comfortable, and then the doctor and the mom would have a conversation about whether or not the baby should live. now the governors tried to say that is taken out of context, that is what he meant, he would never stand for anything like that. what is your message to the governor because that is sure what it sounds like? >> i don't know how you take that any other way. the governor basically discussed how after a baby is born alive, you would discuss whether and how to let it die and, just when you thought that this bill that we've been talking about wasn't horrible and horrific enough, the governor went and doubled down on this agenda and went well beyond even what we thought they were capable of. so my message to the governor we stand in opposition to this extreme agenda and i think even people that are pro-choice in virginia and america are horrified at what the governor said and what this bill did.
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ainsley: i want to ask you about kathy tran, because when you asked her if the mom is dial lating, this means she can still decide to terminate, she winced when you said that. >> yeah. ainsley: you're bringing light to her, maybe she didn't realize how extreme this was? but then she still voted for the bill. she wrote the bill. she knows what is in the bill. did she, i'm sure she is getting a lot of backlash. she took down some of her social media. what is she saying now? >> yeah. she is not saying much at least not to us. she released a statement yesterday basically standing hine her bill. i was looking right at her when she winced as you described it. she recoiled, as mother of four, she recoiled at my question and implications of it, i hope it gives her pause, other pause, how extreme these bills are, they are handed by planned parenthood and naral abortion advocates do so much to help them come pam taken time, i hope
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they are willing to draw a line, even for those groups that help the democratic party so much. steve: real quick exit question. the bill was tabled. there in the legislature in virginia. could it possibly come back? >> not this year but we have elections every two years in the virginia house of delegates. we have one this year. so this is all looming in the horizon, in very, in the very near future, that, we have battles to fight and just what the consequences of those battles might be. so we're ready for the fight. >> thank you for serving. i know a lot of republicans, a lot of conservatives out there, a cot of catholics are thanking you. steve:ed to gilbert. ainsley: grand new video, showing migrants getting on buses after mexico stop ad asylum program. steve: those are live pictures everybody getting on a bus that is already filled. waiting to see a long time to see a doctor, about to get the
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care they deserve, a new plan from the va coming up next. ainsley: time to warm things up. we're celebrating national hot chocolate day. we have a hot chocolate bar on the fox square. steve: where it is three degrees. ♪
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that's why tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites to find the lowest price on the hotel you want. your perfect hotel room for the perfect price! >> with a fox news alert. migrants fighting to board buses in mexico city. steve: they're pushing north, trying to get on one of bus us would take them two hours north of mexico city. that bus is actually moving, they are so desperate to get on the bus, they're clinging to the side, trying to climb up, not able to. brian: unbelievable. see a kid right in the middle. griff jenkins brings us pictures
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from mexico city. the migrants are lining up. hey, griff. reporter: guys, pretty dangerous situation, but you can see, if you pan this way, steven, you can see migrants still lining up to get on buses. the scene you just saw there, they're trying to rush their way on to them. and then just a little while ago, about five minutes ago, we had a situation where there were so many jamming the doorway, that they wouldn't get off. they rode about quarter mile down the road, clinging to the doorway, trying to get on the bus. now this is the 2312 officials say that were in the stadium. they were told yesterday they will be able to get a bus 2 1/2 hours north of here to go to carotoq, on traditional path to tijuana or up to the u.s. border. but comes on heels of the news, that the new low president obrador mexican government has ended one year temporary asylum and work visa program because it is simply had too many takers.
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they capped it at 12,600. if you look, these migrants here, they are waiting to get on the bus to continue to make their way north. as we've been reporting from the beginning, because we've been talking to so many migrants their final destination is the united states. most of them fully aware that they won't qualify for asylum in the u.s. but they intend to go by any means necessary. this is, just, one of the caravans that are currently in route. we are aware of one on februaryth, starting in honduras, as well as one on the 15th. more on the way, guys. brian: who is paying for buses? are they public buss? who is paying for those buses? port these buses are provided by the state of mexico, the government. they are telling people here that they had to pay 10 pesos, equivalent of 50 cents before they got on. but what we saw some people pay, eventually, just sort of devolved into the pushing on.
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it didn't seem to be in control. ultimately the bus being paid for by the state of mexico. each state in mexico occasionally will pay to keep moving them forward, assist them up to the u.s. border. brian: thanks a lot. appreciate it. that is unbelievable. griff, thank you. steve: shipping them out of mexico city so someone else has to take care of them. a big question, how long to the southern border. that is why the president is monitoring southern border. brian: we'll have drones to stop them. ainsley: jillian with headlines. jillian: we start with a health emergency spreading across the country. cases of the measles confirmed in three new states, georgia, hawaii, oregon dealing with mieses patients. there is measles outbreak in new york, in addition to 30 confirmed cases in washington state. the disease affects people who are unvaccinated. aclu says a california sheriff violated first amendment
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by blocking two black lives members on facebook. the organization said sheriff jones tried to void this is imperfect missable censorship that violates state and federal constitutions. the sheriff has not responded. the department says he is recovering from surgery. brand new guidelines will make it easier for our nation's heroes to get the health care they deserve. veterans can receive private care if they live more than 30 minutes for a va clinic or face a 20-day wait for health care appointment. the plan is to cut back va wait times that plagued the agency in the past. it goes into effect in june. a little boy forms a special bond with police through hand-drawn cards. ty, shows respect for law enforcement with pictures and special messages in washington state. >> look at that. thank you for being my friend. you're the best friend ever. i think the other best friend ever. you started this whole thing, right? >> i like police officers.
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they're respectful and i am too. jillian: how cute. ty hands out card to first-responders all over the area. he prays for them every night. we should be more like it. y. let's go outside to the frigid cold where we find janice dean. janice: you need to come out here my girlfriend. jillian: no. janice: look at temperatures you will see where we got minus 23 in green bay. minus 41 what it feels like in chicago. we'll start to improve over next 12 to 24 hours. even by the weekend we'll rebound considerably with temperatures in the 40s and 50s across the u.s. we have to get through today. international falls, ice box of the country. windchill is same. minus 21 in chicago. green bay files like minus 23.
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windchill advisory, still really dangerous. we want people definitely to take care, if you have kids, pets elderly, check on them. the arctic air will retreat. high hi, my friends come on over here. what is your name? >> kate. janice: do you want hot chocolate? >> yes, that would be delightful. janice: its national hot chocolate day. best hot chocolate i had. steve: best way to warm up on cold winter's day especially with the cold vortex which is hot cocoa. we have some, here to help us celebrate with our very own hot chocolate is butch. he is the owner of the miller ag e in long island. >> oldest restaurant in america. janice: 1672? my goodness, you look fantastic.
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>> all the hot chock late i'm drinking. everything here is hand made. steve: butch, you have all of the things you can add to the hot cocoa. >> toppings, hot chocolate bar. we have adults, we can put a little spice. janice: i like that. steve: here is the problem. put jimmies, m and m, more sells in your coffee, they are frozen solid. they are like little pebbles. >> pebbles in the hot chocolate is great. ainsley: steve, put a marshmallow in mine, please? i love a marshmallow. >> it is 5 degrees outside. ainsley: what about the sambucca? you know you want some. >> is it viable? ainsley: do your customers want liquor in their hot chocolate? >> absolutely.
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makes an adult drink. janice: no longer a a kid as drink. why can't you open that up, butch. >> i can't. steve: it is frozen. butch, you're a good source for joining us. janice is looking for any opportunity. ainsley: it warms you up. >> keeping you warm? ainsley: thank you very much. if you're in the area, try his restaurant out in jericho. steve: "fox & friends" on coldest day of the year. white house press secretary sarah sanders mocked by critics for saying this. >> god calls all of us to fill different roles at different times i think he wanted donald trump to become president. steve: dana loesch all fired up about that. ainsley: super bowl champ,
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need a change of scenery? kayak searches hundreds of travel sites and lets you filter by take-off time, layovers and more, so you can be confident you're getting the right flight at the best price. ♪ kayak. search one and done. ♪ ainsley: white house press secretary revealing the true reason president trump won the presidency. >> i think god calls all of us to fill different roles at different times, i think he wanted donald trump to become president. that is why he is there and i think he has done a tremendous job in supporting a lot of the things that people of faith really care about. steve: got wanted president trump to be president. well sarah sanders got mocked for those comments. democratic congressman ted lieu tweeting, dear @process tear
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sarah sanders, i hear you speak for god. here is a tip, if you open your heart and eyes, god is sending a lot of signals @realdonaldtrump should step down or not run again. also how come your boss committed so many since? brian: dana loesch, who is right, ted or sarah? i. >> i think ted needs to take the planks out of his eye. i am happy to have a biblical debate with him. the way people tried to paint her, they want to mock the perspective through which she sees this. and i can't, it is difficult to take seriously, you all were just discussing this morning what is going on in virginia, also what happened in the state of new york. i find it difficult to take lectures on morality from individuals of a party who think it is perfectly permissible and moral to murder infants up until, and even in some cases
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according to governor northam after birth. so those same individuals who have no public condemnation for what is happening here, i guess they own that now in their party, they want to mock sarah sanders for an aspect of her faith. if these individuals are familiar with their good book i think they would realize, god is all powerful, permit me to bible thump for a moment. god is all powerful. doesn't matter who you are, he doesn't matter who you are, he will use you. saul tarsas and david. god according to my pastor, god doesn't call the equipped. he equipped the called. steve: there is there double standard here? >> there is always a double standard talking about people of faith. there are certain people on the outside that don't understand faith. they don't understand a
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christian's relationship with god. i don't think they understand the grace that is in the faith. and so think mock what they don't know. they misrepresent what they don't know. and it is just, it is mean-spirited. if they want to have a discussion on policy, et cetera, that is fine. to mock a woman for faith-based observance is. ainsley: her father was a pastor. she is on a christian network talking about her faith. brian: football hall-of-famer rams great, marshall faulk, with his prediction for the big game which i believe is sunday. ainsley: let's check with bill hemmer for what is coming up at top of the hour. >> good morning. much of america refrains frozen the system is deadly. how long does it last? we'll take you outside. wall negotiations and future battle over isis. what president might say in the state of the union on tuesday night. this as the culture wars in america heat up over abortion. we'll have a big line.
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we'll see you in three hours. starting in ten minutes. top of the hour. and help keep you active and well-rested. because hey, tomorrow's coming up fast. nature's bounty. because you're better off healthy.
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♪ >> countdown to the super bowl is on as the patriots and the rams hold their first practices in atlanta. brian: with only three days left until kickoff we're with nfl hall of fame running back of st. louis rams, formerly of the colts marshall faulk is on the couch. you've been in the big game twice. you won and you won. last time with tom brady. >> we started whole dynasty. i got to see unfortunately him win his first super bowl. wasn't fun, exactly. >> which rams team is better or
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the one from 2002? >> not fair to even ask that question. these young rams, how they're playing what they have done with very little experience, i am impressed. they are doing a great job. they have done a great job. to go on the road, hostile environment in new orleans and win that game, you know, i was like, i don't know. but how they won it, it was, just amazing to me. steve: we'll get to your prediction in a moment but when you're a player, you know you will play the big game on sunday, okay, it is thursday, what going on up here? >> you're trying so hard to make it a normal week, a normal game. ainsley: that's not going to happen! >> that's it, it is not normal. you're trying to suppress all your feelings and all of your emotions and hopefully you have someone dealing with your family and all the other stuff that is going on. you get to focus on football, but not like a home or away game. you're staying in a hotel all week, which you never do that. so many things are different. but the team that handles all of that stuff the best is the team
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that usually wins. brian: rams cornerback came out said, tom brady at 41, you can see his game dropped a little. when you look at tom brady, as in his 20s than his 40s what is the difference? >> he is better now. brian: he is better now? >> he is more cerebral. he will take what you give him. we will not let him throw the ball deep. he can throw short an beat you. we'll not let him throw short. he will three deep or he will run the ball. ainsley: what is your predictions for his career? >> he can play as long as he wants. steve: who will win the game. >> i have to go go with the rams. ainsley: you have no choice. brian: talk about your partnership. partnership for foundation for drug-free world. that is pretty broad thing. what is your goal? >> educating people. think about all the information in the world when you want to learn about something. why not if you're young, learn what is going to happen. if you're an adult, you want to
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indulge, understand what it is that you are doing when you're indulging. brian: especially age of legalized pot. where do you stand on that? >> to each their own. i say no but to each their own but educate your seven, if you choose to indulge. ainsley: where did you grow up? >> i'm from new orleans. so understand -- understand, you play for the rams, you're from new orleans. i'm at that game. people keep asking me, i can't lose. i cannot lose. brian: talking about howard schultz, rags to riches story, so are you. you didn't have much, now you have a lot. >> that's true. steve: can you stick around for "after the show show"? >> sure. ainsley: thank you, marshall faulk. steve: you're watching "fox & friends." ♪l' l? [dog sfx] hey, mi towel, su towel. more scent plus oxi boost and febreze in every gain fling.
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>> tomorrow i'll be at the super bowl at the landmark diner, not the hotel.
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i'll be in buck head. be there and eat there and i most likely will pay for most of your meal. why are you laughing, marshall? >> see you tomorrow, everybody. >> bill: good morning. millions are facing brutally cold weather outside. at least eighth deaths blamed on this storm. you should see it outside. good morning. good to be inside. i'm bill hemmer, welcome back, julie. >> julie: i'm julie banderas in for sandra smith today. the coldest temperatures in a generation. closing schools, grounding flights and forcing the postal service to have to cancel deliveries. windchills plunging to double digits. for casters saying stay inside. >> i think the word cold is not a proper way to

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