tv FOX Friends FOX News February 26, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PST
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u.k. one smashing into the other two had become entangled incredibly nobody was seriously hurt. jillian: rurej cat gets tangled in a can of dog food: >> president trump is set to land in hanoi in two hours for summit 2.0. >> this trip could be a before it even happens. >> require doctors to treat babies born alive after a failed abortion. the president calling it one of the most shocking votes in the history of our country. >> this green new deal could cost up to 93 trillion. >> is it okay to still have children? >> she just keeps spewing this stuff and there is nobody to tell her no. >> democrats in the house are forcing a vote on a resolution that would stop the national emergency. >> this is not about politics. it's not about partisanship.
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it's about patriotism. >> what's interesting the president is not going to build his wall. this wall is already being built. >> jon stewart pushing correct me if i am wrong to stop the 9/11 victims compensation fund. >> the trump justifiable department is doing an excellent job so now it's congress' job to fund it properly. >> coming to your city. play our guitars and sing you a country song. brian: if we could get a house band they would probably be my first choice. ainsley: really big and rich. brian: show up every day and be in a good mod. every song is upbeat and optimistic. pete: hard workers. ainsley: they have a bar in nashville. brian: john rich does. and it is the redneck rivera. it's right by the water. it's unbelievable. it only opened a few months
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ago. pete: ainsley i are in your city every day. you will. brian: usual. pete is in for steve. makeup note he needs more time than steve. my schedule now to your schedule. right to a fox news alert. president trump is set to land in hanoi for a matter of hours for his big summit with kim jong un. ainsley: the president gearing up for summit 2.0 with the north korean leader. pete: our own ed henry is live in hanoi with what we can expect. ed, good morning. >> good to see you all. it's interesting because kim jong un is on the ground here in hanoi. took him three days that train ride from pyongyang to here in hanoi. he got a red carpet welcome as you noted. that train car is armored. concerned about his grip on power, this dictator gets the red carpet welcome. his security detail was very aggressive about trying to not let the u.s. media and others to get photos of him
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and whatnot. his goal is to try and rebuild his shattered economy. he want to lift u.s. economic sanctions that were imposed on north korea because of its nuclear program. president trump though, of course, doesn't want to lift those u.s. sanctions until kim jong un actually follows through on the promises made on round 1 in terms of their summit tri which was back in singapore last june where they signed a document that was a framework that he, kim jong un, was eventually going to move towards denuclearization. dismantling his nuclear program. he has stopped the nuclear testing. we don't see rockets flying over japan and elsewhere for now. that is a positive step for the president in terms of pushing back on kim jong un and trying to give diplomacy a chance. president trump by the way still aboard air force one at this hour on hills way here to hanoi. we expect him to land in the
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next couple hours. we see him there at joint base andrews. two refueling stops to get here. just a long journey of 18 hours or so. bottom line before we left the president expressed optimism about what they can accomplish. >> i think we can have a very good -- a very good summit. i think we have a very tremendous summit. we want denuclearization. going to have a signing summit which is even better. so hopefully we can get that completed. but we are getting very, very close. >> you have seen some media outlets suggesting a nightmare scenario in their words would be the president giving in to kim jong un. nightmare scenario would be a nuclear war. something that the president has pushed back on and is actually saying to the world let's give peace a chance, guys. pete: ed, thank you very much. we appreciate it. ainsley: they will sit down tomorrow the president is supposed to arrive at 9:15. a little delay. brian: he wanted his train to go 37 miles per hour
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because the president's plane goes a little faster. pete: maximum speed air force one 631 miles per hour. ainsley: national security purposes. pete: dictator afraid to fly. remember the stakes of this. ainsley: i heard ed say yesterday he has to bring his own potty on when he gets scared when he goes to the bathroom that they will get his d.n.a.: fascinated so so terrified people are going to do something to them because they are dictators. brian: other thing to point out talking about incremental steps. lay out a road map. so type of gradual denuclearization. are they going to talk about any type of liaisons between the two countries without setting up embassies? are they going to talk about ending the war or looking for remains? there are three things they could do kind of easily. the fourth thick about dismanhattan links a plutonium manufacturing
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plant. that would be even bigger are they ready for that? ainsley: that's going to take some time. you can't expect too much. this is the second meeting and a lot farther than we have been in the past. they haven't tested any missiles lib. brian: saw what libya did. three years had it all out. all those missiles were sitting in north carolina. we see what ukraine did after the fall of the berlin wall and the eastern block. they said we don't want nuclear weapons. come get them. south africa cans something very similar. that's not going to happen here. it has been done before. ainsley: continuing to build. pete: watch this closely. the president scheduled to land about 9:30. the united states a little bit late. we will follow. this any new developments we will bring it to you. important piece of legislation yesterday voted on in the u.s. senate. called the born alive act. what it would mean is a doctor is obligated to ensure that a newborn infant in any sort of procedure if
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born alive is protected as a result. pretty common sense piece of pro-life legislation. well, ultimately it came to a vote and it did not pass. it needed 60 vote threshold here are the list of democrats who ultimately voted against the born alive act. again, an infants born alive should be kept alive. it's out premise of this build. kamala harris, amy klobuchar, cory booker. sherrod brown. kristin gillibrand. senator elizabeth warren and bernie sanders it is orthodoxy on the left in the democratic party you don't vote against anything that planned parenthood doesn't want you to vote against. ainsley: this bill ensures if a woman is trying to have an abortion and baby is born alive the doctor would have to admit that child into the hospital. what is the alternative. these democrats are okay with letting the child die in the mother gets to decide? is this what the governor was talking about when he said we would make the child comfortable and have a discussion what to do with this child?
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brian: those people you mentioned 44 democrats who voted against it the list you went through are all people running for president or almost virtually consider running for president in the case of sherrod brown and the rest have basically declared. the democrats who voted for the born alive act casey manchin and doug jones. if you want to note mindset of democrats, senator tammy duckworth says this is an attempt to bully doctors out of giving reproductive care. we know the partisan extremist playbook comes out of one base not in in fact but in fiction steeped in ignorance and misogyny. senator ben sass says are you kidding me? i proposed this. if a baby is born they should do everything to keep that baby alive. pete: kind of side where no side wants to give an inch u as a result common sense goes out the window. ainsley: interesting so many of those individuals care about the children and the women down on the border but yet when it comes to our own babies being bocial alive they want to make the
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decision not to allow that child to survive? it's just unheard of. the president was tweeting about it. he said this will be remembered as one of the most shocking votes in the history of congress. if there is one thing we should all agree on it's protecting the lives of innocent babies. there was another tweet he put out, too. the democratic position on abortion is now so extreme that they don't mind executing babies after birth. brian: listen to this. a survey just put out by marist 80% of americans support abortion being limited to the first three months of pregnancy. increase of 5 percentage points since last month. things are changing on the pro-life, pro-choice debate in this country. and a lot of people say it's down to 3-d imaging that comes down ains hearing the heart beat. pete: special interest powerful. maintain a grip on the issue. ainsley: 08% are fine with it in the first three
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months. brian: basically a dead heat. pro-life 48% of americans identify as pro-life. 47% as pro-choice. pete: all about the first trimester, second trimester, third trimester. this is the fourth trimester they are talking about. brian: the green new deal. put out. dick durbin so confusing read it three times the democrat from illinois. he says he doesn't even know what it means. most other democrats, especially those running for president are going along with this green new deal. cost to it it's going to cost $93 trillion. that's $600,000. all of you are responsible for. but we have no choice. the world will end in 10 years. ainsley: that's according to a nonpartisan group. when you hear the story it seems like democrats don't care about babies born in america and do plan about the planet. aoc is even wondering if
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people should just stop having children. listen to this. >> our planet is going to disaster if we don't turn this ship around. so it's basically like there is scientific consensus that the lives of children are going to be very difficult. and it does lead, i think young people, to have a legitimate question, you know, should -- is it okay to still have children? pete: this is an unvarnished perspective of the new left. the orthodoxy of the left. take this to the bank. is the religion of climate change. they truly believe it's world war ii. the world is going to end in 10 years. our economy is $20 trillion annually. they want to spend 93 trillion to do the radical control of our entire economy and it's because they believe. i mean, at some level they believe this is the most important issue. ainsley: if it's $600,000 per family, per household. kamala harris said it's not about the cost but rather
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the return on investment. brian: food security for every living person $1.5 billion. guaranteed greenhouse 1.6 and 1.2 trillion. 5.4 trillion zero emission means grounding of flights and building up of high speed trains which has gone so well out in california. ainsley: you forgot the best part of it people unwilling to work. brian: they now admit that was a mistake on their website. pete: we will be kim jong un riding on trains. brian: why do democrats kowtow to a 29-year-old or 28-year-old when they know that this is not plausible? listen. >> she just keep doing this stuff. there is nobody to tell her no. there isn't a single person in the democratic party to tell her no. regardless of cortez's ignorance and her just blatantly being wrong about practically everything she is passionate about
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there is nobody on the side of reason who can combat her ideas. i'm talking about in electoral politics. her ideas take off because there is nobody willing to say you don't know what you are talking about. be quiet, come back when you grow up. brian: mike bloomberg did and howard schultz did two grownups. pete: dianne feinstein tried. walked it back. it's like your kids spew nonsense at you. quiet, quiet. learn something before you come back to me. they let her keep going. ainsley: she normally is on the side of the democrats. brian: meanwhile straight ahead. speaking of climate change, bernie sanders has sounded the alarm. >> climate change is a global crisis. it's existential threat to our country and the entire planet. brian: how does he explain spending hundreds of
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thousands of dollars to fly on private jets? ainsley: plus, a 7-year-old girl brings the house down with the national anthem. the performance going viral this morning. ♪ red glare ♪ the bursting 3-in-1 copd trea. ♪ trelegy. the power of 1-2-3 ♪ trelegy 1-2-3 trelegy with trelegy and the power of 1-2-3, i'm breathing better. trelegy works 3 ways to... ...open airways,... ...keep them open... ...and reduce inflammation... ...for 24 hours of better breathing. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. trelegy is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling,.. ...problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. think your copd medicine is doing enough?
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planet. >> we have got to transform our energy system away from fossil fuel to sustainable energy. pete: that's bernie. turns out senator bernie sanders is so concerned about climate change that he reportedly demanded. demanded private jets while campaigning for hillary clinton in 2016. according to the. if ec, federal election commission, sanders spent over $300,000 on private flights in the two years following the election. here to react is marc morano, the executive director of climate depot.com and the author of the politically incorrect guide to climate change. mark, thanks for being here. walk us into the mindset that is i'm the cheerleader against climate change yet, i demand private jets? >> yeah. this is amazing. you have got beyonce, jay-z, katy perry and bernie. what do they all have in common the hillary clinton campaign all paid them fly around and campaign for her in private jets.
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bernie sanders has made his career out of what they say keeping fossil fuels in the ground. the probable is he can't keep from using them lavishly in the air. this is rank hypocrisy on the level to could compete. outside of al gore electoral politics bernie was the guy as the number one climate guru and here he is just can't keep himself out of these private jets. he could have flown commercial. pete: we just played what bernie sanders said in the past. this is new sound. listen. >> when i talk about human rights. do you know what that also means? it means that our kids and grandchildren have the human right to grow up in a planet that is healthy and habitable. climate change is real and caused by human activity. pete: is this the religion of the left? in fact the u.n. climate chief has said when he stepped down quote global warming is my religion, unquote. for bernie to do this and have this kind of hypocrisy,
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this has a corrosive effect. the public doesn't buy what they are selling when they do. this bernie is only shooting himself. what's ironic is the hillary campaign, they are eating themselves here. you rarely ever see climate activist on the left pointing fingers and going after each other for hypocrisy. this is a rare moment to see this. usually climate skeptics and others pointing out the hypocrisy. pete: they are all trying to climb on top of the heap together. marc morano the book is the politically incorrect guide to climate change. if you have ever driven across the country it takes a long time. it's not fun. i would rather take a flight. mark. thank you. >> thank you. pete: second summit with kim jong un high stakes. what needs to happen to make sure north korea gets rid of its nukes? a panel is here to discuss. they are going to talk to brian. ♪ ♪ my teeth have always been a very sore spot for me,
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and see how you can have an even better x1 experience. simple. easy. awesome. ♪ jillian: good morning to you. back with quick headlines now. univision jorge ramos has been freed. interview with disputed nikolas maduro came to a head after showing him a video maduro didn't like. shows venezuelaingens picking food off garbage truck. ramos and six others were detained for two hours. meanwhile vice president pence met with opposition leader juan guaido in colombia where he announced four sanctions against four maduro associates. an american held captive in yemen is free after 18 months. in a statement, president trump thanked the united arab emirates for playing a role in bringing danny burch home. he added danny's recovery reflects the best of what
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the united states and his partners can accomplish. the texas oil worker was living in yemen and married to yemeni national when he was reportedly kidnapped by rebel fighters in 2017. a look at your headlines. brian send to to you. brian: here we go. a fox news alert. in just a matter of hours president trump set to arrive in hanoi for summit 2.0 or super summit number two. kim jong un the denuclearization talks is what we are hoping for. we don't know exactly what he is hoping for. here to weigh is our panel prognosticators playing the role of lisa booth lisa booth. also young republicans outreach joseph pinion playing the middle seat. row chilly richirow chilly rich. what do you. >> i hope is he able to get them to denuclearization. i'm not confident. this is a regime made promises before in the past. under the clinton administration they had promised to freeze their
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nuclear weapons program only for the bush administration to find out they were use ago loophole to continue to make these products. so i'm really not too confident not to say that the president does not have the ability to do, this it's just to simply say that i think he should dial back the fact on twitter he said, you know, north korea is no longer a nuclear threat. well, that's not really true. i think this is going to be a step-by-step process to get us to that point. i'm hoping is he successful. brian: do you have an incream meant step, joe that works. >> you have to get at the very least some type of ronald reaganesque trust but verify step-by-step process toward denuclearization. brian: you want to see a framframework with a chart with date. >> meaningful claw backs because, again, realistically, obviously just giving north korea the silent treatment was not working. there has to be some type of way where we as a nation can have framework to see what's going to happen. brian: joe silent treatment
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is not right. patience. >> don't give me the silent treatment. brian: let's have international experts hunt for remains for the 1950, 1953 war. and then maybe a third pillar we talk about inspectors. what do you see? >> look, i think we are still pretty early in the talks, right? i don't know if we are going to get that much concrete steps out of this meeting right now. brian: that's a problem though. >> i know we are holding the meeting in vietnam to basically show north korea what could be in the sense that we were once at war with vietnam. now their economy is getting stronger. that being said. if having nukes is if having nukes means stability for kim jong un and power, why would he want to give those up even for economic stacket. and also the concern here is there is a lot of challenges in deal with north korea. you look at the fact that china is key to north korea regarding trade. you look at there has been a study out in 2017. 52 country were found in
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violation of u.n. sanction. also military options aren't great given the proximity of seoul in south korea and the amount of deaths and ghiz that could lead to. brian: ultimate back stop in china. if they give up the nuclear weapons. you know south korei got your bo invaded. some type of monitors there. in comes the aid and possible investment. meanwhile, let's change gears just a little bit. a new democratic candidate and somebody else speaking out. senator gillibrand speaking out yesterday about climate change. listen to how she quantifies it. >> let's just take what the green new deal is. global climate change, severe weather is the greatest threat to humanity we have. scientists have just reached the conclusion it's happening far quicker than we know. what new yorkers and people across this country knows when severe weather hits people die. it destroys communities. brian: if she want to approach this like nasa's
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race to the moon, what do you think rochelle? >> i watched this interview and i wasn't pleased with her performance or answers at all. she didn't really answer the question u i'm still not really sure exactly where her stance is as far as paying for things such as the green new deal. the idea of climate change, yes, climate change, obviously is, a very serious issue; however, how we address climate change, we have to have sensible solutions. and i don't think that necessarily imposing a tax on billionaires is the way to go about it. brian: pretending that every rainstorm is the world coming to an end. >> that was also very strange to me. brian: listen to this. i was fascinated by this poll. what matters most to you? it is number one the economy. number two, healthcare, again by the way, number three education, number 4 terrorism, number 5 social security. o'clock at climate change. what's going on? >> reality is always going to be thto be it's the economy,
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stupid: america is finding out what new york everywheres have known for a long time about kirsten gillibrand. we have patrol car that tim and tunism and kristin gillibrand. she wants to be the farmer want daughter. when i'm. brian: this is what i stand for vote for me or not. >> she is not that person. >> none of it is true. in politics you have political tunism and that's what defines gillibrand. this is someone who when she ran as maybe congress she joined the blue dog coalition and a rating from the nra and now an f rating. talked about the need for decrease deportation. now she wants to get rid of ice. this is someone who promised voters that she would carry out her term for senate just recently in the last election and now is running for president. so she is a complete and utter fraud and that is going to be the biggest thing that prevents her from ever getting in the white house. brian: democrats will be her
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regulator and governor. they will be interacting before they even get to the president. guys, great debate. we need another hour. >> i'm sure you could put it in a word, right? get some more time. producers? brian: not even the robot cameras. coming up straight ahead. michael cohen reportedly called president trump a criminal during his public testimony on capitol hill. probably do it behind closed doors today. how far will we know he is telling the truth? a judge will weigh in. and, should lakes have the same rights as people in that question is on the ballot today and we are serious. ♪ snoite ♪ (burke) at farmers, we've seen almost everything, so we know how to cover almost anything. even rooftop parking.
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better. so hopefully we can get that completed but we are getting very, very close. ainsley: right to our fox news alert. president trump is set to land in hanoi, vietnam in just a few hours. brian: i think it's going to be 9:30 eastern time. gearing up for high stakes talks with kim jong un in vietnam. it's going to officially start tomorrow. steve: receiving a red carpet welcome upon arriving for summit 2.0 is what they are calling it the talks are expected to begin over a private dinner. let's bring in ed henry our fox news chief national correspondent live in vietnam for us. ed, how are you doing? >> great to see you are, fantastic. brian: let's talk about what to expect. we know the president arrives in a couple of hours today. we know he is going to meet with vietnamese leaders, but do you sense that there is a direct game plan or is the president going to see what he has got when he looks across the table? >> i think it's the latter because the president signaled way back last june when we were in singapore covering the first round of
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this summit that he likes to get a read on someone. and go with it if terms of what he has long called the art of the deal. in fact, i think it was at the news conference at the end of the singapore summit where the president said within five seconds of being with someone in a room he can get a read on whether or not is he going to get a deal or not which way they are headed. this is someone who he has lavished praise on. they have exchanged letters. president obviously has to be careful about that because kim jong un is somebody who has got a litany of human rights abuses on his ledger. who has murdered people. at one point -- has an awful human rights record. somebody who is now at the peace table saying that maybe he will give up his nuclear arsenal if the u.s. will lift the boot off the throat in terms of economic sanctions. so the president clearly has a gut feeling that there may be a deal here to be had. so there is a lot of naysayers trying to talk this down. but you have got to give the
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president credit for trying to make it work. ainsley: we saw him arrive in the armored train and then he got in a limo and there were body guards surrounding him. apparently some running alongside the lim limo? >> yeah. that's pretty standard. this is someone, a dictator, who is concerned about his grip on power. he does not often leave his home turf of pyongyang. there is a reason for that remember, he is ordered the killing of a brother. other relatives. political rivals in north korea. and there, you know, newt gingrich said here on the program yesterday, there is only so many summits that kim jong un is going to do out of a fear that when he leaves this country it might be hard to come back at some point if the military in north korea turns on him. that's another screw this president has to turn, which is that time is going to run out for kim jong un eventually whether it's his grip on power back home or a imings of that with
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combination of that with the economy. is he very cash poor because of these u.s. sanctions. so the pressure is on kim jong un even though you hear a lot of democrats and those in the mainstream media who say the pressure is on president trump. president trump is the one at the table trying to get a deal here. pete: ed, you are over there giving this summit a fair shake. what will happen? what will we get? >> sure. a lot of the media here on democrats same thing. already throwing cold water on the summit. listen to them. >> just as he is meeting with kim jong un,. >> mike: calicoen is on capitol hill: how could that impact the negotiations we see in north korea? what could we see the president give away. >> he felt like he got a good press after the last one. and he figures another photo op. might do that. >> you can get president trump will want to have a news conference to get attention for any progress
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he makes. >> the timing of the michael cohen stuff. oh gosh the president of the united states wants to have a positive news conference photo op. i covered a lot of presidents, democrats and republicans. get a deal here. if this president can do a number of things, one thing that might be on the table is a formally i understanding the korean war there was an arm tis decades ago but they did not formally end the war. if that's on the table here and they get that done and kim jong un feels like he gets that out of the way. and gives him some room to then start cutting deals denuclearization. and, by the way. they move for denuclearization and avoid a nuclear war, that would be a pretty darn good thing for
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any president. so, why focus on quote, unquote, positive press? how about focus on avoiding a nuclear war. brian: that's a good thing and allies love the fact we are doing. this says a lot. south korea and japan said i love what you are doing to the region and even having these talks. ed: as does china they don't want a nuclear war. pete: thank you. ainsley: jillian has headlines. jillian: we continue to follow this story out of colorado. investigators start searching a landfill today in hopes of finding the remains of a missing california mom. kelsey berreth disappeared on thanksgiving day and her body yet to be found. her fiance patrick frazee was arrested and charged in her murder. frazee's girlfriend said he beat her to death before burning her body it could take months to find her reiss mains. today voters in ohio will decide if lake erie should have the same rights as a human being. the lake erie bill of rights would allow people to sue on
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the lake's behalf over environmental issues. supporters say it's necessary to protect the lake. years after it was contaminated with toxic algae. critics say the move would poorly effect industrial job growth in toledo. a 7-year-old brings down the house. watch the national anthem. listen to it. ♪ perilous fight ♪ o'er the ramp parts we watched ♪ jillian: they are telling me to talk but i wanted to keep listening to her. going viral for her performance at ucla basketball game. the former "american idol" contestant has done this before dominating a performance at a soccer game last fall. that is a voice you could just listen to all day long. ainsley: i love she uses the hand, too. it's adorable. brian someone else who uses her hands when she gives the
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weather janice dean. am i right? japan january yes. look at these wonderful people. >> cynthia, corpus christi texas. >> and. >> janey from apock can a, florida. >> you are with her. >> absolutely. janice: happy retirement, my girlfriend. i can't wait to be you some day. it's cold. it's not florida. i might come with you. zero in minneapolis. cold air coming in from canada. wind chills across zero across the northern plains and you were midwest. a little bit of lake-effect snow over the great lakes and the northern plains. then we are dealing with this big storm system moving into california. heavy rainfall for the bay area and we could see upwards of three to four feet of snow. so that's your forecast as we head through the next 48 hours. all right. wave to steve, ainsley and brian in the studio where they're all warm. brian: and pete. pete: i will play steve any day.
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janice: big round of applause for pete hegseth in for steve doocy. pete: thanks. transgender athletes running back into the headlines in one state after two runners win a girl's qualifying race. one runner who lost to them says it's not quite fair. she will join us. this is a real headline live. >> plus, michael cohen will reportedly call president trump a criminal during his public testimony on capitol hill tomorrow. how will we know that he is telling the truth? the judge here to weigh in ♪ ♪ under pressure ♪ ♪ oh! oh! ♪ ozempic®! ♪ (announcer) people with type 2 diabetes are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? and you may lose weight.
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he will claim president trump engaged in criminal conduct while in office. pete: the personal attorney begins three year prison sentence in may after pleading to bank and tax fraud. he has admitted to lying to congress. can we really trust what he has to say? brian: here to weigh in fox news senior judicial analyst and host of liberty file judge andrew napolitano. judge, michael cohen comes to the table behind closed doors today and tomorrow in public with 8 federal crimes. >> tax evasion, making false crimes to congress and one count of lying to congress. why should we believe him tomorrow? >> we shouldn't believe him unless there is something to corroborate what he is going to say. this dynamite piece that the "wall street journal" broke a few hours ago says he is going to testify that president trump committed crimes while in office. now, this is entirely new. and it doesn't say the "wall street journal" source wouldn't say exactly what these alleged crimes are. but, no prosecutor would put michael cohen on the stand. no lawyer, prosecutor or defense counsel would put michael cohen on the stand
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and assert that he is credible without a mountain of corroborating evidence to support him. are we going to get that? probably not. this is not a legal hearing. by the way they're one today we are not going to see and thursday we will not see. brian: in front of the senate judiciary committee. judge: thursday all bells and whistles. brian: congressional oversight. judge: does he have corroborating evidence or is he just going to try to ruin the president's trim to vietnam. ainsley: how he s. lieud to d -- how is heallowed to do tha? >> crime fraud exception. i would imagine this is what they are going to say that michael cohen and the president engaged in criminal acts. that is a high bar over which to jump but they are going to have to do it. brian: they will say he
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in-flighted or deflated his personal worth and business worth to avoid paying property taxes. they will also point out. this and you probably think this is important they are going to say the cfo allen wifnberg who limited immunity was a part of all of this. could that be the corroboration? >> it could be. mr. wisenburg has an agreement with the prosecutors here in new york city not to be prosecuted for his participation in these events if he truthfully reveals them. is mr. weisselberg going to testify? i don't know. this is not a courtroom where you put a witness on the stand and corroborate them. this is a political gathering. they don't care about corroboration. pete: this is all about the quick clip they can get to play on cable news. judge: headline from vietnam. from the president's behavior in vietnam. brian: push back look at his credibility. why did you fire your attorney? who is paying your legal fees. question his personal conduct with or without donald trump. there is going to be push
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back on the right. >> they're will be famous prosecution were you lying then or are you lying now. or are you just a liar? that's the question. brian: that's before they colorized movies. that's a long time ago. pete: thanks, appreciate it. >> have you heard democrats say before there is a crisis at the border. >> there is not a border security crisis because manufactured one. >> manufactured by the trump administration. pete: okay, thanks. guess what just happened at the border to prove nancy pelosi and her party wrong? ainsley: transgender athletes running back into the headlines in one state an two runners won a girl's qualifying race. one of the runners who lost to them said it's not fair and she will join us live. ♪ kno ♪ i work hard to protect this tookus. to take care of any messy situations.
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♪ ainsley: the debate over transgender athletes is reigniting thanks to the connecticut state track championship this past weekend. carrie miller and andrea both transgender high school sprinters to female. they took first and second. next guest failed to qualify for regionals by two spots. and she think if the competition were fair she would be heading to the next race. she is leading the charge to try to change the state's policy on high school transgender athletes. high school runner selena joins us now. thanks for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> you are welcome. so you are friends with these two individuals and you are proud of them, you say, for wanting to be
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themselves and true this themselves. but you have a problem with them running in the female matches? >> yes. it is unfair to have someone who is a biologically a male run with the girls who have notunder gone anything in terms of hormone therapy. ainsley: what would you like to see the solution? i know there is seven states that say they do have restrictions for this. transgender athletes they have to compete under their birth gender. is that what you think would be fair? >> i don't think that would be fair. to to be competing against them. ainsley: what would be fair to you? >> i would think it would be fair is to either implement the same policies that the ncaa and the international olympic committee have or have them run as an exhibition type event. ainsley: what do the olympics do? >> they require your who are hormone levels to be under a certain level.
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ainsley: how does this personally effect you? >> it personally effects me because i missed out on qualifying for further meets and showing off what i can do in front of college coaches and furthering my career in track. ainsley: have you thought about transferring schools? >> no. they are not in my school. ainsley: oh this is a state -- okay. so you are at the state level. >> yes. ainsley: and then you told our producers that you are missing regionals because of this. explain that. >> so, the top six spots qualify for the new england meet. and i came in 8th place. and the two transgender athletes came one and two. so if they weren't there, then my friend and i from another school would have been in those two spots and would have qualified. ainsley: are you in a tough position because you see these individuals you compete against them? >> yes.
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as the number one choice of hospitals pampers swaddlers is two times softer and wraps your baby in our most premium protection. because everything that touches your baby should be this comforting. pampers. the #1 choice of hospitals, nurses & parents. brian: president trump set to land in hanoi in a number of hours for big summit with kim jong un. >> a nightmare scenario in their words would be the president giving in to kim jong un. actually the nightmare scenario would be a nuclear war. jillian: today the house will vote on a measure to block president trump's national emergency. >> we had ha wall would save a fortune. you have it you are not going to have borders and a country. brian: yesterday voted on u.s. senate doctors voted on tone sure a infant, if born alive is protected and did not pass. here are the list of democrats who ultimately voted against the born alive act.
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>> 7-year-old girl brings the house down with national anthem. performance going viral this morning ♪ and the rockets red glare ♪ ♪ life about joy it's all about ♪ pete: the will to walk away. those lyrics could be prophetic in what we are dealing with in vietnam. walk away, walk in. brian: ronald reagan walked away from that gorbachev deal. he said goodbye. pete: i want my "star wars" initiative. shoot down missiles. ainsley: kim jong un took armored train going 37 miles per hour for three days. pete: only goes 35 miles per hour. brian: must have been in the
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sleeper car. pete: he probably was. ainsley: our president is on his way there. supposed to arrive 9:15. brian: 10:05 the motorcade will arrive at the hotel. he will spend today a meeting with the vawsms president and talk about what a success story that is and what kind of insight he might be able to give to the region and now vietnam views north korea. they have had a huge riff between those two countries even though vietnam was one of the first to recognize north korea in the 1950s when the peninsula actually divided. since then they have been a little separate as vietnam is very separate from china, too. we have a real ally there. pete: we sure do. we didn't but we do now. the president before he left the white house had this to say about the high stakes vietnam summit. listen. >> i think we can have a very good -- a very good summit. we have a tremendous summit. we want denuclearization. and i think they will have a country that will set a lot of records for speed in terms of an economy.
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pete: brian, as you talked about, when the president famously when he walked into these rooms, he said i'm going to read the room. i'm going to read my opponent and determine what's possible and see where it goes from there. that sends a lot of people into a tizzy because they don't see a template. but, ultimately this president has done things, negotiated things others have not. the establishment doesn't love it. but it's a wait and see moment right now. ainsley: just think about the fact that they are not testing any missiles right now and they haven't for the last two years since president trump has been in office which is pretty phenomenal. they are still building them, of course, hard to tell a country to not build missiles to protects themselves. for them not to test them says a lot. brian: liaison offices between the two shouldn't be hard to set up. liaisons, a wave communicating. so far the low level talks have not yielded anything since the last summit. that's a bit of a problem. however, indications from south korea that north korea is willing to deal about denuclearization. what is concerning to some is south korea is too
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compliant with north korea. in fact, they said they would be looking for a pledge to denuclearize without inspectors on the ground which is a nonstarter obviously from our side. i think the next thing would be name a site. a site that matters a lot and dismantle it. and that's this complex of 390 buildings. that's the major source of plutonium that's been in existence since 1986. can we get some inspectors and begin to take it apart? they have done other things in terms of bomb-making that is slowing down. that we have picked up. we also know we would like that dash filled in between 20 and 60 bombs. we would like to know what is actually accurate. we also have a great idea of what they are building and where it is. we would like to know when they declare it is it the same list? ainsley: kim jong un wants to have a good relationship it appears and wants to have communications, open dialogue with our president. he also has to consider his military and what his individuals want in his country and has to please them as well.
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pete: his grip on power is what he cares about. he has been willing to trample all over his people for decades. ainsley: doesn't want to look weak. >> if you appear weak you lose your job. we know they have developed the technology to miniaturize a nuclear bomb and missiles that could reach our shores. we have to care about south korea but we care about our security even more. we can't live under a nuclear umbrella where they can threaten us no matter what. these why these talks are important. that's why everyone in the meeting needs to chill out and give this president an opportunity to see what happens. brian: look at japan. mr. president we will put you up for a nobel peace prize and look at south korea we can't believe the progress and how donald trump has engineered us to this point. it makes you wonder what the rest of the world thinks of us or what do we think the rest of the world thinks of us? i was surprised by these numbers? ainsley: according to a gallup poll the u.s. believes looks somewhat favorable in the world's eye. >> the reason this seems like surprising number
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overwhelming mountain of coverage this president gets is negative. especially here at home and internationally. the europeans and others. we have been told that they don't like this president. yet, americans see through that and they ultimately say, listen, if we are putting america first and we are strong, our economy is good. our military is big. we see that as favorable in the world because there is a reservoir the patriotism in this country that never gets accounted for in these polls ever. brian: that's interesting. i think the european when we had that meeting over in munich last week. senator living room mentioned never seen such negativity towards america how down they were about america's going it alone strategy if you listen, it's not going it alone. america first doesn't mean america alone. pete: maybe you should build a military. maybe you should have actual troops and you could have a say at the table. brian: he is talking to all of europe. i know you are watching. pete: yeah, that's right. ainsley: let's go down to d.c. because today the house is going to vote on a measure
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to block president trump's national emergency on southern border. brian: not much going on today. sorry about this. first ever vote by congress to stop an emergency declaration. pete: griff jenkins joins us more from d.c. >> 59 declarations in history. 31 still in effect. today will be a first. speaker pelosi explains why. >> this is not about partisanship. it's about patriotism. we would be delinquent in our duties if we did not fight back and to overturn the president's declaration. >> kevin mccarthy says the president is doing what is necessary. >> the president is going to get the full 200 miles that the experts said we need on these barriers to protect us. to have the border secure. and that's what the president said he would do. and he has a responsibility as a president. >> should have done it the first 100 days. >> speaker pelosi just
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visited. they closed a bridge. they busted more than 2 million in cocaine and marijuana. as for that resolution, it will go to the senate next if it passes the house some republican notice senate already supporting it north korea senator thom tillis becoming the second along with alaska's lisa murkowski that say they will vote to block the president. guys? pete: thanks, thom tillis. i'm sure north koreans will love that choice. that's the reality. right now we are debating. talk to border patrol agents or not whether there actually is an emergency at the border. ainsley: a lot of conservatives say there is they call it a crisis. our president calls it a crisis. a lot of the media say it's manufactured. watch this. >> there is no security crisis at the border. >> president trump must stop holding american people hostage. must stop manufacturing a crisis. >> the only real crises that is at the border, which is not a border security crisis because humanitarian one.
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>> this is a manufactured crisis and a crisis that manufactured by the trump administration. brian: it is not true it is chaos at our border. and that's why and it's been that case for 20 years. that's why george bush got 500 miles of fencing. that's why barack obama got 133. and that's why this president wants to finish the job. he has the prototypes. the 22 miles has already been financed. it's already well underway. here is the president talking about why for the millionth time he says we need it. >> if you don't have it, you are not going to have borders and not going to have a country pretty soon. if we had a wall it would save a fortune. save it on not just not having to pay military. if we didn't have that wall it would be impossible even for the military to stop. unlike other countries, we don't let people get shot, you know. we don't have people standing there with the most sophisticated machine guns in the world and use them. many countries do.
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many countries do. we can't do that we can't do that. this country can't do that but the barrier does it very simply. brian: i just laugh about those 58 national security officials who weighed in say saying there is no crisis at the border and we shouldn't do the declaration. those people are the people who voted for president obama and republicans who hate trump. george bush know what is chuck hagel is live. he turned on him the second the war. ainsley: republicans could do the same thing and get a list of people who thinks it's a crisis. pete: guy like thom tillis a conservative in north carolina. a toss-up state but a lot of trump supporters in north carolina to vote to block the resolution on it i don't feel like that's a great move for him. brian: you need 20 to overcome the president's veto at the are not close. ainsley: i do want to hear from you guys friends@foxnews.com. pete: brian is going to try an awkward tease.
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brian: that couldn't have been more awkward. off to a great start. pete: jillian, over to you. jillian: leave them up to brian. pete: why do i supply. brian: if you want a lack of chemistry nonstop shopping. jillian: terrible bizarre story happening right now. amtrak train with 183 passengers is stranded and has been for more than 36 hours at this point. the train from seattle to los angeles was forced to stop in oregon sunday night for a tree on the tracks. riders say they are running low on supplies. >> they just did an announcement that they are making diapers for some of the kids that are on the train. >> amtrak says it's giving people food and water and trying to bring in a new train. the problem is, the conditions are terrible right now. heavy snow and downed trees all throughout the area are blocking the tracks. and closing roads in that area. so, we will stay on top of that and keep you posted. today michael cohen will testify before the senate intelligence committee.
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president trump's former attorney expected to be grilled on several topics in a hearing that could last more than 10 hours. a public hearing in front of the house oversight committee is scheduled for tomorrow. according to the "wall street journal," he is expected to testify that president trump engaged in criminal conduct while in office. also today, voters in chicago hit the polls new mayor in historic race. there are 14 candidates, the most the city has ever seen vying to defeat rahm emanuel. emanuel announced last year he would not seek a third term. election officials say these three democrats are leading the pack and are neck in neck. in no someone secures 50% of the vote today the top two candidates will go to a runoff in april. congressman eric swalwell admits he was rightfully roasted for this selfie. we telling you about. this the california democrat posted a picture it's snowing in new york, i need coffee. the closest cafe is inside trump tower. this is me walking to an
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alternative. his post quickly went viral. >> i was rightfully skilled about that on twitter. that's why i love twitter sometimes it's just a cathartic place to go. we can dish it out and you better be able to take it. jillian: critics pointed out there actually were plenty of other coffee shops swalwell could have gone. to say. brian: finally someone said i screwed up. 13 minutes after the hour. ainsley: senate democrats block a bill that could have saved babies. brian: inspiring story behind this wing that will have you smiling all morning ♪ ♪ like the fourth of july ♪ baby
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hm. i'm thinking... will i have enough? should i change something? well, you're asking the right questions. i just want to know, am i gonna be okay? i know people who specialize in "am i going to be okay." i like that. you may need glasses though. yeah. schedule a complimentary goal planning session today with td ameritrade. brian: a fox news alert. almost two hours exactly, president trump will land air force one in vietnam. for summit 2.0 with kim jong un. the denuclearization talks will be in full swing tomorrow at this time. what can we expect? fox news contributor morgan ortegas is a press department officer fresh off trip to munich. she joins us now to tell us
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what possibly could happen today. morgan, no one knows exactly. you can't be wrong in prognosticating. can you give us an idea what tangible could emerge. >> if we don't prognosticate then we don't have a job. let me give you my opinion what i think could happen. i think we will see a number of incremental steps here. i see this as a trust building summit. i don't think that you are going to see some sort of major, you know, end of nuclear weapons throughout the world. but a couple of things that most north korea watchers will be looking for. one, does the president bum on economic sanctions? so far he has expressed that he is willing to build a more trusting relationship between the two parties. but not willing to move on those sanctions and that is clearly important to kim jong un. the other is do we come out of this with tom sort of piece declaration. we have talked many times on your program, brian. that is something that the north koreans desperately want. the south koreans are supportive of. that is a very, very big
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carrot to give them. we will need something in return for that. brian: one thing we did do much to the chagrin of many in centcom. costly show of trust there that's one thing kim jong un can say they actually got. he also gets recognition by seeing again what the world's most powerful leader that helps and also have a friendly news there. we also understand that almost everything in that country has been cleansed. any anti-american propaganda written on walls or signs has been taken down and nobody speaks ill of president trump. is that showing the culture of anti-americanism is beginning to be erased? >> good points, brian. a couple things. one things is dealing with this theater. to the larger point here what do we have to deal with coming in? president obama's national security team said whenever the president had to deal with north korea that was going to be the greatest challenge on the world stage. so we are seeing a real
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pivot, finally a real pivot to asia by this administration. i think the north koreans, and the iranians and others are playing a game of chess try fog figure out if they can wait out the president or not. china doesn't have same luxury. china something hurt greatly by trade sanctions. we are see very two high stakes negotiations with the north koreans and with the chinese happening at the same time. so the fact that we're not -- listen, in 2017, we were geared up for a war. both sides were. and we had gone through decades with working with the north koreans again and again and again and ways that did not work. so that's why this summit is so important because we were prepared for war. go back to that same war footing but that would be bad for the world that's where we are. brian: while china might want to wait out this president, north korea likes this president and thinks maybe this is their best shot of normalcy. we will see how they play it they are not stupid people. they will have a game plan.
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morgan, thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: straight ahead, senate democrats block a bill that would protect babies being born after failed abortions. a woman who survived an abortion reacts next. 'll glow to if i book direct at choicehotels.com". who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com if ywhen you brush or floss, you don't have to choose between healthy gums and strong teeth. complete protection from parodontax has 8 designed benefits for healthy gums and strong teeth. complete protection from parodontax.
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show me my wifi password. hey now! [ ding ] you can even troubleshoot, learn new voice commands and much more. clean my daughter's room. [ ding ] oh, it won't do that. welp, someone should. just say "teach me more" into your voice remote and see how you can have an even better x1 experience. simple. easy. awesome. ♪ ♪ pete: welcome back. time for news by the numbers. first, 100 years. that's how long it's been since the grand canyon became a national park. president woodrow wilson signed the bill into law to preserve the land for future generation. celebrations scheduled throughout the day at the grand canyon. next, 20 feet. that's how tall this serious game of jiang go got setting a world record. the ca caterpillar company using 600-pound facility in illinois. the game lasted for 28 hour
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hours. >$540 that's how many this man spent. paid the trips. and told the girls to get out of the cold. i passed one of those stands in minnesota. i should have done the same thing. that's on the bucket list. ainsley: can you send girl scout cookies to the troops on their website. a bill designed to protect newborns against infanticide defeated on the senate floor last night. senate democrats blocked the born alive abortion survivors protection act which would have required doctors to treat infants born after failed abortions. melissa oden is an abortion survivor herself and a founder of the abortion survivors network and she joins us now. good to see you again, melissa, thanks for being here. >> thank you, ainsley. ainsley: you are here today because you survived an abortion. tell us your story. >> i am 41 years old. i survived a failed saline infusion abortion back in 1977 that was meant to
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poison and scald me to death from the outside in. i actually endured that procedure over a five day period. on the fifth day my biological mother's labor was induced with the intent of me being expelled from the womb as a deceased child and accidentally i was born alive. ainsley: how did you find out this story? >> i was actually 14. i'm adopted. my parents were told, of course, about what i had survived and that the doctors had a poor prognosis for my future. and so they knew that when they adopted me. but, you know, lovingly took me into their hearts and their home yeah, i was 14 when the truth came tumbling out through unplanned circumstances i'm the first person to admit, ainsley, it was absolutely devastating. ainsley: i'm sure. you spent your life's work now making sure this doesn't happen to other babies. democrats blocked the republican bill. what was your reaction to that? >> yeah, i was there right outside chambers last night when they voted.
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and i was disappointed. i still am today. but i'm certainly not surprised. i think the democrats who voted last night against this bill really showed us sacrifice lives like mine to keep abortion on demand right there. ainsley: this is unbelievable. in your case you being born your mom and her doctors could have decided not provide you medical care. that has to hit really hard. >> and the democrats continue to say things like, right? like this sun necessary. i'm living proof that this is necessary. and i'm actually going to be meeting a nurse later today in minnesota who was there in the neonatal intensive care unit when another nurse rushed me in. in her words she said she just gasping for breath and i couldn't just leave heir there to die. ainsley: tell us about your life sense. you have your own children. you are a mom. generations are affected. >> they are. you know, i have two little girls 10 and 4.
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you know, i look upon their lives every single day and know that they never would have lived if that nurse, that day, wouldn't have been willing to rush me off to the nicu. no child should have their hands left in the hands of their abortionists or a medical professional to somehow decide to provide them medical care. this bill not only to ensure would have provided medical care but that there is penalty when there is failure to do so. ainsley: are you somewhat thankful for this conversation? i know many of us were appalled when we heard the governor of virginia say what he said about a baby being born at the very end and making the decision not to allow that child to survive. and we were all, most of us, many of us were horrified especially those of us who are mothers. are you glad this conversation is out there so that we can have a dialogue? >> absolutely. yeah. it's really unfortunate that we are seeing this legislation sweep across the nation and the democrats blocked this bill. but you are right, ainsley. it's a great opportunity to have a really in-depth
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conversation about late term abortion, about infants who survive abortions. this is just the beginning. that's what i was talking to the republicans about last night outside chambers, right? we are going to continue to have this conversation and continue to see bills like this introduced. and, you know, i have great hope because we have great republican legislators who are committed to life. the president is so committed to life. and really our nation is full of people who identify as being pro-life and are wanting to do something about it. ainsley: melissa thank you so much for your time. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. coming up she is a fugitive cop killer hiding in cuba. why did one airline honor her for black history month? governor mike huckabee democrats blocking the born alive bill. sean hannity goes for a wild ride through the streets of vietnam. the story behind that video coming up next. ♪
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brian: still in traffic. that is sean hannity without gel hitting the streets of vietnam on two wheels. ed henry almost hosted the show. ainsley: he jumped on that scooter bumper to bumper to get to that show last night. he made it just in time for air time thanks to that driver weaving in and out of traffic. where is his helmet though? pete: no helmets needed in vietnam no one ever falls. pete: showing this video showing how chaotic the streets are in downtown hanoi. >> has anyone. ainsley: there are no lines and no lights. >> i love no lines do your things. survival of the fittist.
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ainsley: what in the world? pete: no traffic lines you just make your way. ainsley: i have been there before all this unrest it was like that too. bring in governor huckabee now he used to be in arkansas where they do have lines when he goes to drive he is a fox news contributor author of mayor, medium and done well. make the most of your life. you are taking your life in your own hands if you are driving over there have you been there. >> one of the places i have not been. i will tel tell you guys are dead wrong about sean hannity and the scooter. it was not to get to his show on time. sean has now bought in on the green new deal and he is trying to just decrease his carbon footprint so he was riding a scooter rather than taking one of those big cars like bernie sanders would take. brian: right. only problem is. >> you have got to get it right. brian: he might consider grounding one of his planes. i don't think is he going to go that crazy. let's talk about what sean is doing there.
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the touches down 9:00 a.m. eastern time today. heading towards denuclearization and number two is i'm not in a rush. where is -- what can we hope for knowing the president is of two minds? >> >> i have said this many times this whole situation with north korea is not an event. it's not going to happen at one great meeting that everything sort of comes together. tapping process. because have you two countries, one of which for 70 years has lived in isolation the likes of which we have not seen in the modern world. you have a president who, in less than two years, has accomplished more than others have accomplished in the combined 70 years in getting them to the table. having them sit down and open the possibility of denuclearizing. this is a significant level of progress. will it all be finalized this week? probably not. but i think it's another huge step the president has made and he ought to be given credit for it. pete: why can't our media
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here understand that very fact that it is a process? it's not just about a photo op. what reagan did, brian, as you pointed out on the show with the soviets took time, it took credibility it took walking away and then come back. why can't we get arms around that in the 21st century? >> >> it's real simple they hate donald trump. they just hate him. they can't stand that he is successful. they can't stand the employment numbers. they cannot stand the fact that we are strong in the world. that we are rebuilding not just overall jobs but manufacturing jobs that the previous administration said would never come back. they have come back. they are just blowing up over the fact that he is succeeding and they can't understand why. get it because is he doing things differently than has been done before. and thank god he is. because we are seeing our country come back to life. ainsley: i know as a baptist minister you have spoken out against abortion. you are pro-life. we just interviewed a lady who has been on our show before. she is an abortion survivor.
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and she was on reacting to the democrats blocking that republican bill. listen to what she had to say on our show just a few minutes ago. >> i have two little girls 10 and 4. and, you know, i look upon their lives every single day and know that they never would have lived if that nurse, that day, wouldn't have been willing to rush me off to the nicu. no child should have their hands left in the hands of their abortionist or a medical professional to somehow decide to provide them medical care. we need this bill not only to ensure we are provided medical care but that there is penalty when there is failure to do so. ainsley: governor, her mother went in for an abortion. it took three days of saline injections and then she was induced and delivered a child that had survived all of that miraculously. and that was the lady we just interviewed. what's your reaction? >> i wish all of those 44 democrats would look her in the eye and tell her they wish she was never born.
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that's basically what they are saying with voting against this bill. let me be very clear. even if i was not a christian. if i didn't have spiritual and biblical convictions about life, my gosh, i'm a human being. i would like to think that we are a civilized enough people that we are not going to go the way of the canaanites. i think if the democrats continue on this path, they should rename their party the canaanite party and give credit to the canaanites of ancient days. they murdered babies and thought they were doing in religious superstition. they had some more noble purpose in their mind than just their own convenience and wanted to get rid of an unwanted child that maybe someone else would have wanted. i find this so appalling. if the democrats are going to base their 2020 election on the killing of a fully developed child, then i say let the games begin and there are a lot of democrats in this country, a lot of them who do not share those convictions. and are appalled by this new venture into infanticide.
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brian: just so you know tammy buck worth on the push back say this bill is an attempt to bully doctors out of giving reproductive care. we know the partisan extremist playbook comes out of this. one based not in fact but in fiction. steeped in ignorance and my a subjecmisogyny. bully doctors you out of giving care. that was her take on what ben sasse actually introduced. >> brian, there is nothing reproductive about killing a baby. that's where they have taken language and destroyed it it's not reproductive. it's counter productive to reproduction. when you kill the thing that's being reproduced. i mean, that is on its face ridiculous for her to say something like that. and it's ridiculous for these democrats to defend infant side. god help them for doing so. pete: they love talking about being on the wrong on right side of his industry. we know where they're on this one. thank you very much for being here. we appreciate it.
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ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has headlines. >> let's start with this. jetblue is apologizing for honoring a cop killer during black history month. look at that the airlines says crew members put up the display at jfk airport in new york. it included a poster of joanne chez march with facts about her life. one reads she became the first woman to be placed on the fbi's most wanted list after escaping to cuba from prison where she was serving a life sentence for the 1973 murder of a police officer. jetblue has removed the poster. listen to the crowd's reaction when a circus stunt goes terribly wrong.
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jillian: a young baseball player with one arm is off to a great start this season. 7-year-old hitting a home run in florida youth league. he has become an inspiration and somewhat of a celebrity known for his other sport which is golf. he credited the st. louis cardinals for his baseball skills after spending time with the team at spring training. awesome, right? ainsley: cute. pete: very, very cool. brian: we minds me of jim abbot. janice dean is outside with the wind. janice: have a crew you are from the south except chicago over here. right? how are you doing? three and a half weeks until springtime. >> awesome. [cheers] janice: take a look at the maps real quick and i will show you how cold it is here in new york city. that's the wind chill. it feels like 13. feels like minus 15 in minneapolis. we have wind chill advisories across the northern plains and you were midwest. as well as as a chance for a little bit of snow flurry activity. gulf coast seeing showers and thunderstorms. and big old system moved into the west coast.
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going to bring heavy rainfall and feet of snow across the sierra, nevada mountains in towards the rockies. say hi to people at home. >> hey, my grandson nolan, miles and my granddaughter liza. ainsley: say hi to brian, ainsley and pete inside. [cheers] pete: a lot of spirit. ainsley: a lot of spirit? pete: where is your spirit, brian? brian: still there. got it. i'm really looking forward to going to this tease. pete: i will do it now. vice president pence slaps brand new sanctions on venezuela as he visits colombia. next guest was born in venezuela and says it's time for a military response. brian: one comic book website taking aim at the man of steel does superman always have to be white? dean cain superman himself is here to respond. >> i came to help. that's still how i feel.
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pete: welcome back. vice president mike pence meeting with vendzen opposition later juan guaido as u.s. increases pressure on maduro, the dictator to step down. u.s. announced new sanctions against the maduro regime. they say their opposition, oppression over freedom will not win. listen. >> i truly do believe that despite the brutality of this last weekend, where five innocent civilians were murdered. where truck loads of medicine and food were burned, that the mow men stomach is on the side of freedom. >> debbie was born in vendz. wife of dinesh. thank you for joining us, deny. give us your take. you understand country in a way that most of us do not. where are we right now? >> so, the situation in venezuela has reached a culminating point of no
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return, really. on the ground. as you mentioned mike pence was n colombia to talk to the lima group about the situation in venezuela and while sanctions are great. maduro will not step down the sanctions. i believe we have to help the south american countries with a coalition of perhaps military intervention to boot the man out. remember, is he a tyrant. >> of course. americans watching have heard terms like coalition to get rid of despots to introduce freedom before that haven't ended as well as we had hoped. how do you make sure a freedom here is an outcome. >> phil, right now the situation is really bad. not only in the region, but i think many people don't understand that the situation in venezuela is a
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national security threat to america. hezbollah has training camps there. iran has their sights on the uranium in venezuela. we all know what they want their uranium for. so, you know, instability in the region is not good for anybody. people are trying to immigrate to colombia and brazil causing a lot of turmoil in those countries. i believe that with planning, perhaps, you know, having maybe not boots on the ground but maybe arms to these coalitions will help. i don't think that things are going to end well, unfortunately. but, maduro has the military on his side. many of these military people are -- they are called -- these were actual criminals in prison and let
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out by maduro in 2013 so they could be his thugs. they took arms away from people. they disarmed the citizens. pete: yep. >> they don't have any way to defend themselves. it's really, really bad. pete: it is very bad. debbie, what do you say to democratic candidates flirting with the idea of a similar system, call it democratic socialism. collectism, whatever you want, command economy. what why is it so dangerous, briefly. >> it's dangerous because you take the ability of people to make a decent living and you have the elite government running the entire country. you create, you know, you create shortages of food which people in vendz do not have anymore. you create shortages of medicine. no medicine. it's not a glamorous lifestyle. people don't understand that
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people are equally miserable not equally well-off. so, socialism is not what people paint it to be. pete: yeah. yet have you got candidates like bernie sanders saying bread lines are a good thing. limits the ability for humans to flourish and prosper. >> absolutely. pete: thank you. migrant caravans marching toward our southern border for months. one college's guest speaker compares them to jews fleeing the nazis, the outrage growing on campus this morning. plus, on this program, we have got congressman steve scalise and texas governor greg abbott all here live on this tuesday edition. stay with us. ♪ restoring your awesome... daily. feed your cells with centrum® micronutrients today.
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brian: migrant caravans are marching toward our southern border. some members even vowed to cross illegally. but the way it's being described university of wisconsin guest lecture today may surprise you. ainsley: according to the events description it will explain that migrants are in many cases refugees protected by international law as were jews during the nazi era or bosnians during the ball can war. pete: joining us now to react is campus reform media director cabot phillips. cabot, if you would, explain this lecture and the view of history that it has. >> the idea certainly is to say that our country must be compassionate and let them in if we don't let them in then we are now on the side of nazis and being anti-bigoted and xenophobia. in this case of course there is a room for a debate on migration. very complex one. it's not a historical to claim that the polit plight
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migrant and offensive to jews around the country and the world. this is also kind of the new par for the course on the left. where if you don't like an idea or person, you compare them to hitler. if you don't like a certain group of people. you say oh, they are on the side of nazis in this case and sad to see and it stifles real debate. pete: yeah it, does. ainsley: it's so political though, this is a public institution. wouldn't it be better to have a debate instead of just one view? >> it absolutely would. i think on many college campuses and around the country many americans are afraid of getting involved in these controversial debates because some times on the left they are accuse of being these horrible people and accused of being nazis for having differing opinions. the immigration issue has been you are with us or you are anti-immigrant and in this case you are with us you are on the historical side. brian: invite speakers with a wide range of views to lecture on current events, jacobo garcia international
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commentator on war and disaster and conflict. who will speak on the parallels between the central american caravans and previous mass migrations during the ball can and nazi era germany. >> when you start with that kind of rhetoric, when that's the starting point a lot of people are afraid to bring up questions for fear of being labeled that many students i'm sure asking questions about the migrant caravan saying look, i'm reading caravans that show that the caravan can be used to smuggle in drugs and sex trafficking and other horrible things like that. they are afraid of being associated with this kind of rhetoric. detracts we are a country of laws. when you start at this point you ignore the rule of law and we are a country based on borders and walls. pete: universities almost never put up statements like that in defense of conservative speech. >> always a liberal point of view. ainsley: let us know how it goes if it does happen. i'm sure there will be protests. brian: thanks, cabot. ainsley: president trump arriving in vietnam in an hour from now. our live team coverage
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continues next. brian: plus jeopardy fans aren't happy with the new all star games and one of those all stars is firing back. i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call . . . . ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. ♪ whoooo. did you know the exact same hotel room... ...can have many different prices? 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! raquen... rakutahn... rakooten...
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♪ >> president trump is heading to hanoi, vietnam, as he gears up for summit 2.0. >> we're seeing two very high-stakes negotiations with the north koreans and with the chinese happening at the same time. ainsley: senate democrats block a bill that would protect babies born alive after failed abortions. >> the democrats, they showed us they're willing to sacrifice lives like mine to keep abortion on demand. >> democrats will base their 2020 election on the killing of a fully-developed child. then i say let the games begin. brian: this green new deal will cost $93 trillion. >> our planet is going to be a disaster. is it okay to still have children? >> she just keeps spewing this stuff. there is nobody to tell her
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know. brian: michael cohen reportedly called president trump a criminal during his testimony on capitol hill. >> this they have corroborating evidence or will he try to ruin the president's trip to vietnam. ♪ brian: how do we do that every day. i feel like i'm walking through the glass. i'm right here, materializing on the second floor, somehow through the glass. ainsley: we're glad to have you here, pete. pete: appreciate it. that is why i have only two days. i'm out tomorrow. brian: i want other shows to accept the challenge. we use the entire studio. we use upstairs, downstairs, in between. we actually use the stairs. ainsley: we have different names for everything. the fishbowl downstairs. we have the demo area. we have the living room. this is the curvy couch. brian: weather stand. ainsley: weather stand, rail stand. brian: read fox news alerts. ainsley: try it out. brian: president trump is set to
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land in hanoi in just about an hour. high-stakeses talks with kim jong-un. ainsley: president gearing up for summit 2.0 with the north korean leader. pete: ed henry live in annoy. reporter: only one spot here, we call it the hanoi set i suppose. bottom line, kim jong-un joined us here in the capital city of vietnam. he arrived last couple hours. it's a long train ride. three days or so, couple thousand miles from pongyang to hanoi. he is going through the second round of summit that begins hours from now. his goal is to try to get the u.s. boot, if you will, off his throat. those tough economic sanctions. i would like to see them lifted. president trump's position, is he wants to see steps towards denuclearization which was promised in singapore before providing some of that economic relief. what is interesting is, with the president due to arrive just
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over an hour or so from now, air force one has been in the air for a long time. two refueling stops along the way, to give you an idea of the distance. you have democrats back home in the united states talking down this summit before it has even started while the president has an optimistic tone. >> listen, i want the president to succeed but i am deeply skeptical that the president based upon his first summit with kim jong-un is headed in the wrong direction. >> i think we can have a very good summit. i think we'll have a very tremendous summit. we want denuclearization. reporter: we have gotten to the point maybe you never would have expected where you have president trump saying, give peace a chance. guys? brian: yeah, i mean let's keep our fingers crossed. i thought we could be on the same page with this. it is amazing, ed. ainsley: ed, doesn't that say how important it is to kim jong-un to ride for three days on a train, 35 miles an
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hour to get here to do that? reporter: absolutely. some say that it may have to do, sort of a family thing because his grandfather took some train trips to here in vietnam from north korea decades ago and traveled by train. maybe he wanted to retrace the steps there. let's also remember, he is very paranoid, kim jong-un, about his personal security because of his perhaps precarious hold on power back home. and so that was an armored train of course he was traveling in, guys. pete: unclear whether they upgraded the train since his grandfather took it many years ago. thank you, ed. brian: i wonder when cushion was invented. i'm not sure edison had a role. ainsley: i think i prefer air force one. brian: absolutely. i heard they had to evacuate the entire press hotel, looks like they thought wrong when it came to what north korea wanted. ainsley: traffic jam was unprecedented.
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they blocked off the highway for 105-mile stretch so he would feel safe. pete: to your point, vietnam didn't have as much time as other locations to prepare for this. they are catching up to provide security. brian: we heard vietnam was the site before christmas. i don't know how much time they needed. so the big debate on the left this so-called green deal. if you listen to dick durbin late last week a democrat, not even a moderate, i read it three times, it makes no sense. i asked senator markey the cosponsor what it actually mean? that didn't stop senators gillibrand, harris, bernie sanders, cory booker from endorsing it right off the bat. ainsley: it will be extremely expensive but some of the democrats said this is the cost you have to pay to keep our country safe. they're so worried about the environment and they're even worried about people who are not willing to work. if you don't care about getting a job, sit at home on your tail,
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we'll pay for it. pete: we learned about a new cost, it is kids, you shouldn't have them. alexandria ocasio-cortez she likes to put out videos on the internet while cooking she talks stream of consciousness, this is good way to find out how people really feel. this is her yesterday talking about climate change and your kids. listen. >> our planet is going to be a disaster if we don't urn turn this ship around. basically there is scientific consensus the lives of children will be very difficult and it does lead, i this young people to have a legitimate question, you know, should, is it okay to still have children? brian: we did some math what we can make of this document. it turns out the cost would be roughly, shave a billion or a trillion, $93 trillion, or $600,000 per household. that includes the, some of the things include in there
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resolution jobs guaranty which will cost 6.8 trillion f you want a job you can get a job. approximately 49,000 per household that will cost. universal health character, that was listed that is 3trillion on its own. the cost of 10-year transition to make every single building low carbon electricity grid, that will be $5.4 trillion. guaranteed green housing 1.6 to $2.2 trillion and secured food for every individual. 1.5. ainsley: basically costs you $65,000 as a family every single year. that is where you get the 600,000 per household, because over the course of 10 years. pete: considering our economy is $20 trillion, what they're attempting to do would bankrupt it. she says don't have kids because it will hurt our country. if you don't believe in kids, families and the flag, you're effectively admitting to civilizational suicide. she is saying don't have kids,
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it is world war ii, we'll not be around in 10 years. when you stop believing in your own country, your own values, free market economics you give up what made you special in the first place. she is the clear view of what the left believes today. brian: understand something, this is an anvil in the democratic party. it is beginning to blow up the democratic party because no one can rationalize this. kamala harris has no answer for it over the weekend because it doesn't make any sense. as i mentioned, dick durbin, senator feinstein gets berated by bunch of children that the world ends in 10 years. gets screamed that. had to get them out of her office. no mains, no cattle, no electric power, no foss till fuel, we can't have children, wow, she has us up for a bright future. ainsley: this is from rob, people stop having children aoc describes where will the taxpayers be found to finance
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her idea. brian: we should have kids to pay for something. pete: great idea. she wants people to end one of the most fulfilling roles in life because of be substantiated claim. what does she think, china, russia, india, all the middle east will do about the fossil fuels. brian: same exact thing. because it makes so much sense. pete: we're all good. brian: bernie sanders sat down for a town hall yesterday. woe not answer the question are we a socialist nation, are we going to be socialist. but he did kind of talk what he would do as president? >> democratic socialism means to me is having in a civilized society the understanding that we can make sure that all of our people live in security and in dignity. we have got to, as a right, end the kinds of discrimination, racism, sexism and homophobia that exists. so to me when i talk about democratic socialism what i talk about are human rights.
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pete: should not be lost on us, potentially the leading figure in the democratic party is defending and advancing socialism. we get used to it because we hear it every day. this is the united states of america. that is why the line as the president had we'll never be a socialist country resonates with some people. it is at our doorstep we're debating it right now. ainsley: see what is happening in venezuela, i had been there before, i had been there years ago, just to watch a country, look at this, this is what socialism looks like. pete: when elites say they have it all covered, they will command everything, that is what you get. brian: he would not answer the question is maduro a dictator. he wouldn't answer it. he went on to say humanitarian aid should be let in. you think so? when people try to give your people food because they're eating out of dump trucks you think you should bring food in? is that type of international leadership. he is looking past the others in
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democratic party. he is i will bring a lie-detector test to the debates. ainsley: numbers you're reading out from american action forum. get over to jillian with headlines for us. jillian: extreme weather causing travel nightmares. in oregon 183 passengers still trapped on a train for nearly 40 hours after a tree falls on its tracks in snowy conditions. one woman says an inbegin finally arrived, but crews still need to clear the tracks before they get the train out of there, and get stranded passengers to safety. amtrak is getting passengers food and water and union pacific to solve the problem. strong winds stop a norwegian cruise ship from being doing in new york city. the ship is expected to arrive this morning. michael cohen will testify before the senate intelligence committee. fox news senior judicial analyst, judge andrew napolitano joined us earlier with a preview. >> no lawyer, prosecutor or
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defense counsel would put michael cohen on the stand assert he is credible without a mountain of corroborating evidence to support him. are we going to get that? probably not. jillian: according to "the wall street journal" cohen is expected to testify president trump engaged in criminal construct while in office. u.s. border patrol close as port of entry in laredo, texas. a hearing group of migrants walked across a bridge into the u.s. after getting impatient in shelter in mexico. the migrants asked how to apply for asylum before turned away. cpb reopened bridge. "jeopardy" champion is slamming critics of the all-star series. austin rogers who won 12 straight games in 2018. if you don't like it, watch the other "jeopardy" episode for the other 94 weeks a year, you
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losers. they have critiqued the all-star format which competes teams of three with each other. i haven't seen the all-star "jeopardy." there you have it. brian: if anything can get that thing, break even, most popular show in america for 500 years, that is a great story. ainsley: are you good at it? do you and your family do it? brian: i find myself to be borderline genius. [buzzer] pete: what was "jeopardy" like in 1650? brian: only played during the day. everyone had black and white tvs. 13 minutes after the hour. house democrats vote on new gun control law. congressman steve scalise survived a assassination attempt. democrats blocked from hearing his testimony. he will talk about it here next. pete: anthony weiner just got out of prison. i know you're thrilled.
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the new 2019 ford edge cancer, epilepsy, mental health, hiv. patients with serious diseases are being targeted for cuts to their medicare drug coverage. new government restrictions would allow insurance companies to come between doctor and patient. and deny access to individualized therapies millions depend on. call the white house today. help stop cuts to part d drug coverage that put medicare patients at risk.
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help stop cuts to part d drug coverage thanksmrs. murphy. unitedhealthcare, hi, i need help getting an appointment with my podiatrist. how's wednesday at 2? i can't. dog agility. thursday at 10? sorry. n tuesday at 11? nope. robot cage match. how about the 28th at 3? done. with unitedhealthcare medicare advantage plans, including the only plans with the aarp name,
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brian: nearly shot to death during a congressional baseball practice back in 2017 but now our next guest is calling out democrats for refusing to hear his testimony as they vote on the most high-profile gun control legislation in years. here to explain, house minority whip steve scalise. so, steve, what are they proposing you wanted to put your point of view in? >> well, good morning, brian. first of all they have a number, two different gun control bills they're bringing this week under speaker pelosi's new majority and one of the bills will make it very hard for you to loan a gun to a friend. for example, let's say your neighbor has been beaten by her boyfriend. she has a temporary restraining order against him, she knows you have a gun. can i borrow the gun tonight, i think he will come hurt me, if you do that you could go to federal prison for a year, have 100,000-dollar fine. those are the kind of things in this bill. it is dangerous, anybody that has firearms that, you know maybe has a friend wants to borrow their gun to try it out
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to see if they will buy one. you can go to federal prison doing something that pace i -- basic. brian: why would they want to bar your testimony? legislation looking at all sides, why stop all sides? >> i think that answer its own question because they didn't want to hear all sides. they just wanted to hear the side of people who are promoting gun control. they didn't want to hear the side of people, my case, it was guns, people who used guns properly that saved my life and everybody else on that ballfield t happens all the time in america. where people actually use a gun to defend themselves. by the way, that is what the founding fathers intended when they believed it is not just the government's right that tells you can have a gun, it is your own personal life to be able to protect yourself. brian: steve, from their perspective, let's say i go to gun show, do a background check, can't get a gun, have problems with the background, go to neighbor, i have extra gun, buys from him, sells it to him, isn't
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that problem, wouldn't that legislation stop that? >> if neighbor knew you had a problem he couldn't make the transfer legally. there is already a system in place. if they ban to make the system better there are ways to do it. a lot of cases by gun crimes, brian, we found out federal agencies not doing their job. maybe local law enforcement not doing their job. in the parkland shooting they had the kid's name in database where he said i will be a school shooter, they let him go. who is held accountable? why not have a hearing with the fbi agents who touched the case and ultimately let him go and ultimately became a school shooter. we have people accountable to do their job. don't put more laws on the books that make you felon. brian: travesty that nadler and company won't let you speak. that shows they're insecure about their legislation. >> great being back with you. brian: straight ahead, one comic book website taking aim at man
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of steel, superman. why does he need to always be white? dean cain, superman himself, is here to respond going over his background. she's treated both my children since they were born. bridgette: i feel that my np cares about me as a person and not just if i'm sick or not. molly: and i really love my nurse practitioner because we have such a strong connection. i know that whenever i call, she'll be there for me. my name is molly and we choose nps. np: consider an np. when patients choose, patients win. (driver) relax, it's just a bug. that's not a bug, that's not a bug! (burke) hit and drone. 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 cold and flu fightings. machine. you put in your machine. press the button to brew up powerful relief.
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activity. brian? brian: all right. as rumors swirled in hollywood who will be the next superman, a comic book website wants to know does superman need to be white. ainsley: they seem to be forgetting one of the most famous superman's to hit the small screens, star dean cain, who is part japanese. pete: he sent the website a cheeky reminder. you're about 25 years too late. he joins us to react. dean, thank you for being here. >> good morning, thank you. pete: great response. when you first saw the article what went through your mind? >> i laughed obviously, pete. that is kind of ridiculous, when i was first cast as superman, we first started doing the role, the internet was in its infancy, people were posting things. somebody posted something like, we wanted superman, not sushi man. those sorts of things were going
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crazy, things like that obviously my given name is tanaka i am a mixed race person. clearly superman doesn't have to be white. the fact they completely omitted me from the article to begin with was kind of comical. i thought it was pretty funny. so much has to be about race and gender and identity politics these days, they need to do a little research first. ainsley: did you hear back from the person that wrote the article. did they make the changes? >> yeah they updated the article to include me, called me of japanese descent. idea about the article, could superman be a person of color. of course superman could be a color. superman is ideal, more than a race or a color. superman is about the, you know, truth, justice, and the american way. i believe that about fairness, about equality of opportunity, not outcome. about you know the integrity of the family unit.
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sanctity of life. that is the kind of stuff that superman always stood for, always will. brian: not based on a true story i don't think, according to sources. so we don't have -- comic book resources updates the article. the purpose of the article was to raise a question about fans would react to person of color playing superman today, not to suggest it had been done before as dean cain is actor of japanese descent. we acknowledge the original article should have mentioned him. there would be no controversy, do you agree? >> i don't think there would be any controversy whatsoever. pete: none at all. >> i don't think -- when henry cabot was asked to play superman i remember a lot of questions, coming in could a british guy play superman? is that weird. he is kryptonian. there was talk of michael b jordan. i know really well. he is a great guy.
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has all qualities and characteristics to play the character, play him wonderfully well. i wouldn't have blinked if michael played the character, make it about that doesn't make any sense. ainsley: what was reaction on twitter? >> the twitter reaction was, when i first heard of it. i didn't see the original article. someone, somebody who follows me or something like that posted it. twitter is pretty toxic and awful. sometimes little gems and jewels come across. someone posted it. i had seen that it brought me to my attention. go back to find the article. i thought it was funny. goes back to sushi man comment. it is kind of ridiculous. i'm glad they updated the article, it should have never been out there to begin with. pete: i share your anger. we make everything about race. the color of someone's skin. if you go to the logical conclusion, should i ask the question, can the black panther be played by a white guy? is that where we to with the conversations? >> that is what it sounds like.
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it doesn't make any sense. even own my twitter banner, martin luther king, jr., i have a dream that one day little children in this nation will be judged not by the color of their skin but on the content of their character. i believed that i always believed that i don't see race, color, creed. i don't see that when i consider work and jobs things of that nature. i don't see it at all. so that is because you're white. i'm not exactly 100% white. i have, i have encountered it in my life. it is something that exists. i don't think we should make anything about that. black panther could be white, green, orange yellow. brian: i want superman that can have two full-time jobs as avenger and works as a reporter. is that too much to ask? i don't care. get both done. >> kilmeade, brian, rip it open, show the s. brian: don't have time. i don't have that yet. >> thank you very much. ainsley: thank you.
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pete: president trump set to land in vietnam any minute for high-stakes summit with kim jong-un. bill hemmer live in hanoi. we'll check this with him. ainsley: remember activists and kids confronted dianne feinstein about the green new deal. >> i have been doing this for 30 years. i know what i'm doing. ainsley: the group is back for more. this time police made some arrests. ♪ last years' ad campaign was a success for choicehotels.com badda book. badda boom. this year, we're taking it up a notch. so in this commercial we see two travelers at a comfort inn with a glow around them, so people watching will be like, "wow, maybe i'll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com". who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom. nobody glows. he gets it.
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this is a very difficult job. failure is not an option.a. more than half of employees across the country bring financial stress to work. if you're stressed out financially at home, you're going to be too worried to be able to do a good job. i want to be able to offer all of the benefits that keep them satisfied. it is the people that is really the only asset that you have. put your employees on a path to financial wellness with prudential. bring your challenges. >> we want denuclearization. we want a signing summit which would be better.
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we're getting very, very close. >> fox news alert, president trump set to land in hanoi within an hour. brian: president is gearing up for high-stakes goal of denuclearization with kim jong-un, taking place in vietnam t will officially start tomorrow. pete: the north korean leader receiving a red carpet welcome with summit 2.0 what worry calling it. the talks are sit to begin over dinner. bill hemmer is america news's room host is live. what did you expect as the summit unfolds. >> it is nighttime here, about 8:34 in the evening. good evening from hanoi. it's a fascinating thing to be here in vietnam. if you go up and down every street, you see three flags aligned with each other. it is north korean flag. the vietnamese flag and united states of america flag. i don't know, brian, ainsley, when last time you thought about
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that concept in the same frame but this is where we are under a trump presidency and i was talking to lindsey graham last week before i left out of new york, i said what is your expectation, what should we be geared up for this week? he said bill, it is like a 12-step program you're probably on step two right now. i think, guys, that is the easiest way to understand this. of the singapore was step one, in all likelihood, hanoi is step two. there will likely be a summit after that. mike pompeo referred many times with his interview with chris wallace on fox fund sunday there will likely another summit. my question to mike pompeo last week, what if you don't get what you're looking for? i think the fallback answer is, the sanctions have worked. they can crank them up even more and if they're unable to move the ball forward here in hanoi, that would be the likely route the u.s. government takes. now what do we get tomorrow? what do we get thursday?
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i think you get another step in this process but, my feeling right now is that you will not get a giant leap forward in this nuclear, non-nuclear struggle, guys. ainsley: like you said, step two. what about security? kim jong-un arrived on the train, got into a limo, security guards running along theside of limo. they're not announcing which hotel he is staying in for security purposes. can you talk about that a little? >> a great point, ainsley. we're trying to get an official word where the meetings will happen. just a half an hour ago we got information where the vietnamese president and president trump will meet tomorrow. nothing with regard to thursday. the reason for that, they are super concerned the vietnamese government about security. they want to make sure things stay safe. we have no reason things will not go that way but they're being extra cautious.
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about the train ride, what a thing it is in 2019, leader of tens of millions of people who feels compelled to take a train ride through china? change trains at border, fin get in a car, finish the route 110 miles to south in hanoi. his grandfather did similar tour in 1968, in 1964. there is precedent for that. i want you guys to understand, the audience to understand this, part of the main reason president trump wants to have the summit in hanoi, he wants to show president kim what the country has done. you think after the wars between the chinese, japanese, french and americans here in vietnam that the communist rule for last 40 years they have done enough reforms to keep the economy cooking along. man they have been moving for the past 15 years one could argue and it worked they want to impress that could chairman kim
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he can do the same thing in his country if he makes his choice to go denuclearization. brian: vietnam is still communist. they put in market principles. they look at china as adversary rather than ally. north korea used to be tight. they had a rift. maybe this will mend. are you prepared to work with sandra smith again? >> yeah, indeed we sell. i call it a saggy form of communism, brian. they allowed it to grow and expand, take their economy wit, keep their people happy, the party being happy. see president trump land in 40 minutes. you will see that live. michael anton, danielle hoffman, cost of thousands coming to you live 9:00 top of the hour. ainsley: we'll be watching. brian: hemmer has the resources. he has a huge budget. pete: he could do it. brian: jillian mele, talk about a big budget. jillian: massive. whatever it takes.
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congresswoman ilhan omar deletes controversial tweets that triggered major bab lash. one accused them of a lobbying group paying members of congress to israel. an organization is defending omar's comments. cair does not feel there is anti-semitic meaning in tweets, due the to the brevity some took the as much. she will be at a cair event next month. when diane fine stain said this to a group of kids. >> you come in here, say it has to be my way or the highway. i don't respond to that. jillian: 39 members of activist group behind the incident are under arrest. they have bombarded majority leader mitch mcconnell's office on capitol hill. the sunrise movement is a group that supports the green new deal. how about this? a texas man plans to spend his golden years at the holiday inn,
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after a thorough cost comparison, kerry robinson writes on facebook, in part, quote, no nursing home for us. we'll be checking into a holiday inn. you see, he did some research, says a nursing home would cost about $188 a day while a long-term hotel stay costs about 55 bucks a night. comes with free breakfast, free shuttles, a pool and other amenities. brian: turn down the bed every day. fantastic. pete: i'm a huge fan of holiday inn. ainsley: wouldn't you need a nurse? what if you need a nurse? jillian: you don't live in what if, ainsley. ainsley: nursing home provides nurses. that is what you're paying for. brian: you plan on retiring to four seasons? pete: no, holiday inn. adjoining doors actually. moving on, ice tsunami spurs evacuations around lake erie. ainsley: incredible video of
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30-foot high chunks of ice pushing up against the road. brian: janice dean is not seeing video for first time but to respond. janice: not a tsunami but ice dam. what is your name? >> carol, from wisconsin, burnett medical center. high to all the residents. we love fox news. pray for you daily. janice: fantastic. >> jared andrews from jacksonville, florida. hi, dad. janice: how do you like the weather? >> it is great. janice: glad you're dressed appropriately. no ice jams here in new york city. 26 in new york, with windchill feels colder than that. zero in minneapolis. winter hanging on in the northern plains. thunderstorms and show us across the gulf coast. cold across the northeast and great lakes. the storm system moves into the west coast bringing he have had rain for bay area, potential for feet of snow in mountains across california and the northwest.
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there is the forecast today. wave to pete, ainsley and brian. >> hello, pete, ainsley and brian. hello "fox & friends." we love you. brian: okay. janice: fantastic. brian: give them a hug, janice. ainsley: thank you for the prayers. pete: love it. >> she said that she prays for us every day. pete: super nice. that is great. brian: 18 minutes before the top. hour. disgraced former congressman anthony weiner just got out of prison. he may have found his next career already. ainsley: scared to ask what that might be. high taxes, liberal policies are driving people out of blue states like new york. texas governor greg abbott says new yorkers are welcome in the lone star state and he joins us live next. ♪ after months of wearing only a tiger costume,
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to take care of yourself. but nature's bounty has innovative ways to help you maintain balance and help keep you active and well-rested. because hey, tomorrow's coming up fast. nature's bounty. because you're better off healthy. ♪ jillian: welcome back, quick headlines now. 9,000 pot related convictions go up in smoke. prosecutors in san francisco
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erasing or redoings the crimes going back to 1975. the non-profit code for america helped identify eligible convictions after california legalized marijuana. convicted sex offender anthony weiner is reportedly ditching politics for pot. according to "the daily mail" the former democratic congressman met with a potential business partner for a marijuana project. weiner was released from jail this month for sending inappropriate text messages to a minor. brian. brian: thanks, jillian. the house set to vote today to block president trump's national emergency declaration but is this vote even about the border crisis to democrats? >> this isn't about the border. this is about the constitution of the united states. this is not about politics. it is not about partisanship. it is about patriotism. we would be delinquent in our duties if we did not resist, did not fight back to overturn the
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president's declaration. ainsley: texas democrat congressman joaquin castro led the house effort but the governor of the great state of texas says there has been an emergency on the border for decades. pete: we welcome him now. texas governor greg abbott joins us in studio. >> honor to be here. pete: got bigger when texas shows up. >> everything is bigger in texas. pete: indeed. talk to us about this. is there a crisis and democrats denying it? >> kilmeade was. there we had thousands of people gathered just across the texas border in eagle pass texas, there is no fence, there is no wall. we had to deploy texas department of public safety troopers as well as national guard to make sure this caravan did not come across the border. understand this, there are more than 300,000 people coming across the border every year into the state of texas. remember the drug busts that have taken place. couple weeks ago there was a
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massive meth drug bust that took place. last month remember there was more fentanyl, very dangerous opioid, that was found coming across the border that could have killed every man, woman, child in texas, new mexico and arizona. so this is serious. the president has authorized by laws that already exist to, build fencing on the wall to prevent people from coming in and bringing drugs in. understand this, also -- brian: beto o'rourke says pull off the fence that is there. we don't need it. this is a joke. it doesn't matter. >> we've seen fencing work. remember when the caravan came to california, it was the fence in california that prevented the caravan coming across the border, point one. point two, i have seen the fencing work in texas. fencing has been there more than a decade in the state of texas. it has done a good job making sure we address the people coming across the border illegally. brian: just so you know, i thought we were on first-name basis until now. you did a great job on the
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special in san antonio. we have something else to talk about. ainsley: tell us why you're here in new york? >> i am here because i was invited by financiers here in new york to make a present take to them, why it is so much more profitable for them to leave new york an come to the state of texas. we have a growing and thriving finance industry in the state of texas. much lower costs. and while new york is imposing more taxes on them, in texas, this session we're working on cutting taxes in texas. ainsley: these are big companies want to leave the state of the new york because it is so expensive to live here. >> these are brand names everybody on wall street will know very well. people across the country will no very well. i will not give you any names right now, but i tell you some. biggest names on wall street are thinking about coming to the state of texas. brian: amazon is looking for another home because we kicked them out because they would be too profitable. real quick, are you concerned about the red state turning blue with all these californians and new yorkers going there? >> you know, very interestingly,
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exit polls were done in the last election up this past november and what we found is, almost 60% of the people who have moved to the state of texas from other states voted for me in the election. and so it is republicans who are leaving california, new york, and places like this. like what is happening right now. people fed up with taxes in new york are coming to texas. brian: they vote to raise taxes and leave us with them. >> if they come into texas they better remember why it is they left new york or left california and leave those bad policies behind. brian: put that in your pitch. governor, always great to see you. >> brian, good to see you. brian: see you on radio in a little while. >> sounds great. brian: straight ahead, live pictures out of hanoi where president trump is about to arrive with the second summit with president couple. he will be there in 12 minutes.
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pete: we are back with a fox news alert. president trump moments away from landing in vietnam for summit 2.0 with kim jong-un. the denuke talks set to begin tomorrow so what can we expect? ainsley: harry kazanis, director of korean studies at center for national interest. thanks for being with us. what can we expect today and tomorrow? >> i think two words, peace declaration. i think what the president is trying to do, really restart the negotiations with the north koreans. if we're trying to get them to give up the nuclear weapons what can the united states do to incent them to do that? what can we do to make kim feel like he can actually give up the ultimate weapon? if trump goes to hanoi, look i'm willing to end the korean war, i'm willing to prove that the united states is not a threat, that is the best thing we can do. considering we see reports to that effect i think it will
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happen. brian: do you think exchanging envoys, by the way air force one is landing. harry, splitting the screen with them. the president is supposed suppoo disembark in 26 minutes. he is right on time after the long flight. as the president lands here, how much do you believe that having, exchanging envoys would matter? having semipermanent office in both countries? >> i think it's a big deal. i go back to 2017, officials would tell me it would take sometimes days to get messages to the north koreans. if you're in crisis, think about the cuban missile crisis, at least with the soviets we had embassies. we could talk with one another. it may be over primitive communications like we have internet but at least you could talk with the adversaries. if you can't talk to the north koreans, maybe if some day they test missiles again we would be a crisis moment. that is not a concession.
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that is reality. pete: harry, we're watching landing area here in hanoi, these developments how much closer do they bring us, how do they prevent war? how much closer do they bring us to peace? >> if we have a peace declaration, i think that sets the tone for us to really test kim jong-un's intention. if he told the people, he told u.s. negotiators, he told the south koreans he wants to denuclearization. if we set up peace declaration, we set the conditions, we're not at war anymore, we'll be able to say to kim, look, we're not fighting anymore. are you really serious about doing this? if at that point he still won't give up the nuclear weapons, we know the game is up. brian: harry knows this as well as anybody. studied it for years. been up close and personal. thanks so much for joining us today. it will be exciting couple days. >> thanks, guys. ainsley: president trump just arrived in vietnam. mores "fox & friends" moments away.
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down in hanoi, vietnam. they are -- it's 9:00 at night there. the president is set to meet with kim jong-un and start the summit tomorrow. >> we'll be covering it all. >> bill: thank you, guys, as you mentioned, president trump on the ground in hanoi, vietnam. getting ready for his second summit in eight months with k*im k ifm. the north korean leader arrived a bit earlier and received a red carpet welcome as the world watches to see what will come out of another round of meetings regarding the highest stakes on the planet. nuclear weapons. good evening and good morning from vietnam. i'm bill hemmer. sandra, great to see you. we'll be here throughout most of the week watching the history play out for us. hello, sandra. >> sandra: looking forward to your coverage. i'm sandra smith. the stage is set.
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