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tv   Fox and Friends First  FOX News  June 3, 2019 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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queen, welcoming the president for this state visit. before leaving washington, no surprise, the president as his his want did have a chance to address reporters. whenever he gets a chance to talk about a visit he usually tries to lay it all out in brief. he talked a bit about the visit during this time with reporters before leaving washington, in particular, though, he talked about the deep historical, cultural and economic ties moving forward, in particular post brexit. listen to what the president had to say about that. >> we'll be going to the u.k. i think it will be very important. it certainly will be very interesting. there's a lot going on in the u.k. and i'm sure it's going to work out very well for them. as you know, they want to do trade with the united states and i think there's a an opportunity for a very big trade deal. >> reporter: opportunity indeed. as you continue to enjoy the live coverage and the live pictures as air force one, the presidential aircraft taxis and
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makes its way here to the u.k. earlier, you all mentioned what promises to be a very exciting schedule for the president of the united states. in addition to meeting with the british royals, queen elizabeth, prince charles, camilla, the visit to buckingham palace, there's so much we're looking forward to here for the president. a rare state visit for the president of the united states of america. i want to show you pictures of when the president was last year, back in 2018. we're not talking about small demonstrations here, folks. we're talking about by the hundreds of thousands. they turned out into the streets. again, both for and against the president's last visit here. i think that's stoked in part by london's mayor who despices the president of the united states, mayor kahn writing an op ed that said a lot about the president's visit. he wrote this, it's so unbritish to be rolling out the red carpet
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this week for a formal state visit for a president whose behavior flies in the face of the ideas of america, was founded upon equality, liberty and religious freedom. very interesting contrast. the president not long ago tweeting a response, a bit of punching down there. i will give more details about that, but obviously he has called the mayor of london a poor mayor in the past. don't forget, we have more news to cover. we talked about trade and we talked a bit about the change of leadership here. there's also change on the trump team back in washington. kevin hassett is stepping down. the president making that announcement on twitter. we'll see who might be in the running to replace him. for now, back to you in new york. >> the president traveled to london last year but that was a working visit. if you could for us, explain the significance of a state visit and how much more important this
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one is than last years' working trip. there's a lot of pomp and circumstance surrounding these next three days, i assume. >> reporter: excellent question. i'i'm glad you asked that. you can come here as the leader of the free world and have a working visit as it were. you meet with the prime minister, you do lots of economic discussions, you also spend a great deal of time talking about defense cooperation and security cooperation. in this particular instance, we're looking at more of a very formal setting, a chance to really discuss the historical ties between our two nations. it is quite an honor many it's an elevation, frankly and a recognition of the long-standing relationship between the two countries. there's a lot to be said about that and in particular there's a lot to be said about why the queen is choosing to do so now. it's an l elevation of not just this president. it's also an elevation and mindereminder of the long-standg
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ties between our countries. i should point this out. when you have a working visit, we really get down into the granular details, we get a briefing before and we lay out each one and we tell the viewers at home what's happening. in this case, a lot more pomp and a lot more circumstance, guys. >> kevin cork, live for us in london. kevin, thank you so much. right now, you're looking live, the door of air force one open. we are awaiting the president's arrival down those steps. clearly, a member -- members of the british military there to greet him, walking in perfect step there. it's always a beautiful sight. we do love the bomb p and circumstance. but as -- pomp and circumstance. there are so many issues we need to discuss. we're going to bring in kne nigl ferage. this is like a sporting event where you get to talk to a player in the whil game while te
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event is going on. you are the player in the game. $64,000 question for you. what does this trip by the president mean for brexit, if at all? >> it means a lot, actually. i mean, there's a big debate going on this morning, should donald trump have said the things that he said, in particular, saying that he rather liked borris johnson, that he thought i should be britain's chief negotiator in brussels. should he intervene? obama flew to london during our referendum telling us to vote to stay in the european union. so i think in many many ways trump has ever reason to get involved in this. of course, brexit isn't just a british issue. it's actually about the future of the entire western world. are we going to be part of these big conglomerates like the european union where bureaucrats make big decisions that affect our lives or are we going to be independent nation states, albeit trading together and cooperating together and what is clear is that donald trump's
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election was very much along the same kind of lines as the brexit vote itself. it is clear that this president wants brexit to happen. it is also clear that much of the american administration have watched the british government's failure to deliver brexit with something approaching despair. >> you talk about the failure of trying to reach brexit negotiations. that's exactly why theresa may is now the outgoing prime minister. what do you think the next prime minister will need to do to fix what feels like a completely unfixable situation? >> well, for those who don't know, watching this, last sunday we had the results of a national set of elections for the european parliament. and i was so upset and i us frot happened that i formed a new
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party. we won those elections. there is now a direct electoral threat. i would say this to you. the next date we could leave is the 31st of october. it got pushed on from march 29th. unless the next conservative leader who succeeds theresa may, unless he or she deliver brexit on the 3 31st of october, we may see a conservative party that dominated british politics for 200 years literally disappear from view. the stakes here are incredibly high. >> by october 31st, nigel, do we have a brexit and if so, is it hard or is it soft? >> these are terms invented after the referendum. either we're an independent country with our own courts, our own ability to make our own laws or we stay part effectively of the european rule making club.
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is it going to happen by octobe? well, i tell you what. for it to happen, we're going to need much better leadership than we've had under mrs. may. i think the really big question is -- we all know that borris johnson is entertaining, affable, fun, and the president clearly likes him too. but is borris, is he tough enough to actually take on a political class that are full of globalists and remainers and what that really is the open question. >> well, the president is certainly singing your praises. there has been talk about you two meeting this week. is that going to happen? and if so, when? >> i don't know. i mean, today he's rather busy of course because he's at buckingham palace. he's got tea with prince charles and a state dinner. it won't happen today. maybe tomorrow. there is a little bit of down time. i think the president's got tomorrow. i would be happy to meet him. i last saw him when i was at cpac a couple months ago. i would be very happy to see him
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if he's got the time. >> what will you tell the president if you have a chance to have a meeting with him. >> >> i will explain to him how precarious british politics is and i will explain that unless borris or someone like borris delivers brexit on october 31st, then a massive change is coming and i can tell you this. in yesterday's newspapers for the first time the brexit party, which i lead, was top of the opinion polls. so either the established parties deliver brexit or we are going to sweep them away. >> 409 here on the east coast, we're awaiting president trump and first lady melania making their way out of the door of air force one, down the steps there into the lovely city of london for a very jam-packed couple of days. nigel, what do you want to see the president do and accomplish while he is in london? >> the one thing he will
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accomplish is he will change the government's decision on where we're going with the 5g network. for some ineexplicable reason, theresa may's government chose to go with a chinese technology company, one that is clearly influenced if not controlled by the chinese government. >> we have seeing the president and the first lady making their way down the steps. please continue, nigel. >> yeah. so this matters. when it comes to sharing intelligence particularly in a world of terrorism, the relationship between the united states, the u.k., canada, new zealand, australia, we are the closest allies that exist on the planet and i know that many of the american leaders, john bolton, the president himself, have expressed grave concerns about this decision by the british government to award 5g to a chinese company and already we're seeing the leading candidates including jeremy hunt, our foreign secretary, who is due to meet the president any
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minute now, already people are saying they're going to drop this contract. so trump's influence actually on the debate in this country has been significant before he steps on the tarmac. >> along those lines, do you see any ability for the president to really work on laying a foundation for a u.s.-u.k. trade deal or is there too much brexit uncertainty at this point to really come up with anything concrete for the future? >> well, i think the point about a future u.s.-u.k. trade deal and this is important, because there are areas like financial services where there is quite big barriers to trade between our countries that could very easily be removed for the mutual benefit of both. i would like to see -- if i get the chance to meet him tomorrow, one thing i will say is why don't we get a team on both sides and let's sit down and start drafting something now. you know, many of our establishment elite paint leaving the european union as
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some kind of disaster. there's a great big world out there. the fact that america wants to do this with us i think will be seen by most people as a positive. >> nigel, this is going to be brexit 101 question. but i kind of want to reset this conversation for viewers who haven't been following the brexit negotiation as closely here in the united states as people you're more used to talking to in the u.k. why is brexit so important to you? why do you believe in it so strongly? >> well, i campaigned for this for a quarter of a century. why? because i believe the united kingdom should be an independent country. i believe we should be a democracy. i believe we should be self-governing. i believe we should have our own courts. i do not want to be run by mr. junker and bureaucrats based in brussels. i believe in liberty, freedom, democracy. on thursday of this week we commemorate 75 years to the day that american, british and canadian soldiers landed on
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those beaches in normandy at huge human cost so that we and the rest of europe could live in freedom and democracy and that's something i want to continue with. >> that's right. >> globalists critics of you would say we live in a global society, an interconnected society, an interconnected economic society in which the strength of the european union provides your country and the rest of the european union strength when it goes out there and tries to negotiate with the rest of the world. how do you respond to that? >> what member ship of the european union does is it cuts us off from the rest of the world which is why we don't have at the moment a trade deal with the united states of america. which when you think about it is crazy. we're the biggest investor in your country. you're the big investor in our country. between us we keep nato going. between us we share intelligence at a level where no other nation would cooperate that closely.
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i want us to be independent, self-governing, reaching out to the rest of the world and the idea that we should live in this over-regulated, stateist model which suits big multinationals but destroys enterprise, small business and with it fleam and democrat -- freedom and democracy, the sooner we're out, the better. once we're out, i'm quite confident the rest of europe will follow too. >> you just saw the president board marine one with first lady melania trump. it will then take the first lady and the president to winfield house, home of u.s. ambassador to the u.k., woody johnson, where the president will be staying. the president is going to be greeted with a very warm welcome from the royal family. however, there are going to be a lot of protests taking place in london, both protests protesting the president and counter-protests in support of him. the mayor of london recently wrote a pretty scathing article
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about the president and said that he thinks that people will view the state visit and the u.k. being on the wrong side of history for hosting it. what is your response to that? >> the sheer hi hypocrisy of him and others -- we have state visits from the president of china. we have state visits from many of the arab states in the world, places in which all sorts of bar barrick practices take place, where homosexuals live in fear of their lives and when tyrants come here for state visits, he doesn't say a world. when the leader of the free world comes to this country, he basically encourages people to go out onto the streets and protest. i think it reflects badly on our country. i do accept that a free society, people are free, of course, to say they disagree with something. but i just hope, i very much hope that when the president on
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wednesday gets down to portsmouth where he's going to be meeting 300 people in their middle, late 90s who took part in those d-day landings, i hope the protests don't follow him there. because that i think would be an insult to the memory of many who died for freedom. >> i think you would agree that we are all going to have political differences. nobody fully agrees with one other person in this world on every single issue. for the mayor of london to attack their main ally, whether you like the president or not, the united states of america is britain's main ally and at a time where we are trying to foster greater strength when it comes to transatlantic security for the mayor of london to say that is damning. >> it is. but you must understand, that it's all to do with the brexit debate. the mayor of london is opposed to brexit. the mayor of london wants us to be part of a full political union with europe.
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and that is why we're seeing, frankly, this rampant anti-americanism. because that's what it is. this brexit battle is about our future place in the whole of the world and in many ways the arguments around trump summarize that. >> day two of the president's stay will include a meeting with british prime minister theresa may and i believe a press conference. what do you think we can expect there? they haven't necessarily seen eye to eye on the whole brexit negotiations, to say the least. >> i think that press conference could be slightly awkward. it's a very well-known fact that donald trump advised theresa may how to negotiate with the european union. she didn't do any of those things. she left us in a very disadvantageous position and i hope for the sake of everybody they can restrict the press conference to personal comments because he's always said he likes theresa may as a person. he just doesn't have much respect for her negotiating
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position. and i hope that theresa may who officially steps down as prime minister this friday, let's hope at a human level she's allowed to go in a anything an dignifie. >> that's well said. the president recommending to theresa may suing the european union and things along those lines. remains to be seen whether that would be a possibility. at the eastbound of the day, obviously the president trying to assist theresa may, not necessarily taking that advice but we hope that like you said it is a cordial and respectful meeting later on. nigel, again, like said earlier, this is like having a player in the game that's going on as you're watching it, talking to you during the play by play. it was amazing having you on here during such a historic visit. we appreciate it. with that, we will be right back. you're looking live at marine one, making its way down the tarmac as it gets ready to off to -- >> to winfield house. >> to winfield house. >> i'm the one with the
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schedule. that's what will be happening later today. the president in for a jam-packed day of ceremony. we will be covering it live all morning long. we will be right back. hey! i'm bill slowsky jr.,
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unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited... anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. welcome back. a fox news alert, moments ago president trump arriving in london to kick off a crucial three-day state visit to london. >> as the u.k. navigates brexit talks, what should be the president's message to the british people this week? joining us now is vice president for foreign policy at the heritage foundation, james karafano. thanks for being on this eventful early monday morning. you say the president's number one job is to deliver the message, don't worry, be happy. britain will thrive after
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brexit. how can the president accomplish that? >> you have to remember, when this visit was planned, none of the politics, none of that was in the cards. he's got a very small audience here. it's the future leadership of the conservative party. the message is pretty strong. you'll be fine with brexit. u.s., united kingdom free trade agreement, i will give that my all. i think those are the two most important messages that the leaders need to hear. they need to know the relationship between the united states and britain, the united states is all in for that. from america and britain's standpoint, and for the betterment of europe, everybody is better with an independent u.k. that's the president's message and he's there to just really kind of hammer that home. >> you break your thoughts into three parts. one, free trade agreement. two, transatlantic security. and three, iran. walk us through your thoughts on those. >> yeah, there's some big
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foreign policy issues i think where the united states really wants the u.k. to stand up and i think the president believes that conservative leadership will do that. certainly iran is one of them. we need better support from the europeans on life after this iran deal. this is dead deal walking. it's totally dead. the u.k. needs to stand up stronger with the u.s. and really push the europeans on that. china's another one. huawei being the backbone of 5g networks in any free western country it's just not going to work and the u.k. needs to stand up on that. on foreign policy, there's more that a strong conservative leadership in the u.k. could do and the president's going to hammer that as well, i think. >> the president has shown support for borris johnson as who he hopes would be the next british prime minister. what are your thoughts on him? do you think he would do a good job? >> borris johnson's a good friend to the heritage foundation. we've known him for many, many
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years. i think he has the potential to stand up and be the strong leader. there's a lot of good conservative leaders that have been waiting for their chance and they know this is a crucial moment. if they screw this up, if october rolls around and britain's not out of the e.u., then effectively that's the end of the conservative party and the politics of the u.k., we don't know what the next government might look like and it might be a disaster for them and for us. >> james, last question to you. it's a $64,000 one i asked nigel a few moments ago. what does this trip by the president mean for brexit? >> i think it means to tell conservative leaders that the united states is with them and to give them the confidence to move boldly forward in october and i think he will be laser-like. no british conservative leader is going to walk away thinking the united states won't have our back as we move forward. >> we will see. certainly an event lful next couple days. >> james, thank you for breaking it all down for us. ona fox news alert.
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president trump now in london for his first official state visit. but the city's mayor isn't giving him a warm welcome. we are live in london next. >> and back at home, mexican officials headed to the white house today to discuss the crisis at the border. retired acting i.c.e. director tom homan says the meeting is not enough. he tells us what action mexico's government needs to take now.
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a fox news alert. air force one landing in london moments ago. president trump kicking off a three-day state visit to the u.k. where he's going to meet with the queen and the prime minister. >> the president and first lady aboard marine one right now, making their way to the u.s. ambassador's residence. lauren blanchard is live in front of british parliament in london. >> can president trump expect a royal welcome, maybe protests, maybe a little bit of both? >> reporter: yeah, good morning, carley, todd. the president began his first state visit to the united kingdom firing off tweets, saying sadiq kahn who has done a terrible job as mayor of london has been nasty to the visiting president of the united states. he is a stone-cold loser who should focus on crime in london,
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not me. now this comes after the london mayor wrote an op ed in the guardian, saying they should not roll out the red carpet for the president and called him a growing global threat, saying, quote, in years to come i suspect this state visit will be one we look back on with profound regret and acknowledge that we were on the wrong side of history. now, as for the state visit, here's what's on the agenda today. a royal welcome at buckingham palace before lunch with the queen. the first couple will view photos from the royal collection and visit westminster abby and lay a wreath at the grave of the unknown warroir. there will be tea with prince charles and camilla. tomorrow will be more politics for a meeting with theresa may and other u.k. officials. and we are expecting more protests. on the last working visit the president made to london, he was greeted by a big trump baby balloon and thousands of demonstrators. while there will be protests
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outside of buckingham palace tonight, more or planned for tomorrow and ahead of the president's travels throughout town, we have noticed an uptick in security. there are helicopters overhead, roads blocked and there are police vans full of officers on nearly every corner. carlie, todd. >> you showed no hiding of the quotes around the word nasty, a call back to the meghan markle situation, which the president is not running away from. >> thank you very much. we appreciate it. on this side of the pond, president trump dep mannin de--g mexico take action at the southern border or face crippling economic tariffs. >> mexico is making hundreds of billions of dollars for many years and they have to do something about the border. everyone is coming through mexico, including drugs, including human trafficking. we're going to stop it. we'ror we're not going to do business. >> a delegation from mexico
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meeting with u.s. officials today to address the crisis. have we finally reached a turning point? retiring i.c.e. director, tom homan now joins us. tom, that's the question. have we reached a turning point? >> i don't think so. this is a great first step, the mexican delegation is here to talk about it. mexico has done things in the past, small operations, deported a few hundred here and there. i think they're a dog and pony show to try to show the united states they're actually doing something. we talk about hundreds of thousands of people transiting to mexico in broad daylight. trafficking in women and children in mexico is a crime. it's being done in broad daylight in thousands of numbers. i've not seen a sustained operation by the government of mexico to try slow this down. we'll see if they get there. >> mexico deported thousands of central americans over the last few months. it's not like they're not doing anything. the president just wants them to do more. so what do you think the mexican
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government can do to make the president happy? >> i think first, the biggest thing he can do is look at the cartels that are managing this operation. these cartels are operating with impunity. we've seen the numbers. 31% of women are being raped. children are dying. they're moving people from the southern border to the northern border in record days, in just a couple days. just the other day they got over 1,000 people sitting on top of the train called the beast. that's easy to stop. they could stop that train in one location, arrest thousands. so i think they need to secure their southern border. they need to shut down the bus lines and things like that. there's a lot more they can do to turn off the faucet. they could arrest a few thousand here and there. they've got to attack at the base. who is causing this to happen, who is making money at this and attack the cartels. if it wasn't for the criminal organizations, the groups would be a lot smaller and operating a
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lot slower from the -- to our southern border. the criminal cartels, they need to look at them and the usa is willing and able to help them. we have hsi special agents from i.c.e. that could help dismantle the organizations. they have to step it up. >> i want to switch gears. bernie sanders calling out the border facilities, calling them inhumane, calling out border patrol, i.c.e., all the organizations involved there at the border. but individuals like dan crenshaw firing back, saying, look, bernie, you've been a member of congress for decades at this point. this is on congress to solve this problem. what say you with regard to this? >> he's absolutely right. look how many congressmen and senators are running for president in the democratic party. you've even got joe biden there. when he was vice president, they created daca in 2012. if you look at the numbers, when
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did this start? daca was the catalyst of all of this. because when they started awarding children that came here through no fault of their own, all of a sudden more family groups from the hundreds of thousands came because they'll be the next daca. none of them -- they all failed the american people. this crisis has been going on for over a year and they have not made one move, democrats haven't offered up one fix, idea. they refuse to close the loopholes. they talk about sanctuary cities. they talk about abolishing i.c.e. they talk about free college tuition, free medical care. they wonder why people are flooding our southern border to come to our countries. they have to stop talking about enticements, talk about solutions. president trump has taken a number of executive actions. he sent resources down to the border in unprecedented numbers. he put an immigration plan on the table several weeks ago that democrats haven't even whispered
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one word about other than they don't like it. they haven't come with any ideas of their own. >> some democrats want there to be open borders. there's a wide vai variety of opinions on that front. thank you for being with us. we appreciate it. >> time now, 37 minutes after the hour. 2020 kirsten gillibrand takes aim at the nra. chris wallace had to call her out on it. >> you represented that upstate new york district, you boasted an "a" rating. now you boast an "f" rating. >> why do 2020 candidates think they can rewrite history to sway their newly progressive base? our political panel on deck to debate it next.
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when 2010 democrat kirsten gillibrand called out by chris wallace after a major flip-flop on the second amend machined and the nra. >> you represented that upstate new york district, you boasted an "a" rateing from the nra. now, you a boast "f" rating. it sounds like it's more politics than principle. >> realizing not every part of this country is like my rural upstate district. >> is she the latest dem trying to rewrite the political past and appeal to a more progressive base. here to debate is manny gunastara and kelly hyman. i had to look at my notes for your name there. we begin with kelly. kelly, won't democratic voters see this flip-flop on gillibrand and the other candidates? >> good morning many thank you
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for having me on the show. it's great to be here. i don't think they'll consider it a flip-flop. candidates change positions on issues when they get different information and different things come up. i think it's important when you make a decision to make a wise decision and take everything into consideration. >> but mandy, this is not just a little flip-flop. this is literally going from an "a" to an "f." >> i think chris wallace said it best that this is politics over principles which is what we're seeing the democratic contenders. >> that's not true. >> they're trying to outdo each other with an extreme push to the left. >> that's not true. >> they will say anything to win over votes instead of having defined principles which is president trump has been doing, trying to grow the economy and keep the country safe. >> kelly, you don't think it's a push to the left? >> i think our president is dividing our country and not uniting our country. we need a president that's going to represent all the american
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people and that's what we need in our president. to unite our country. our president is not uniting our country. he's dividing our country. >> kelly -- >> he needs to reach across party lines. >> with regard to the 2020 candidates on the democratic side, do you not feel that there is a push to the left? >> no, i don't. i don't think that's the case. i think biden is a moderate. his record shows that. a lot of the candidates are centralists. so i don't think that's the case. >> mandy? >> i completely disagree. biden used to be a moderate. now he's beholden to a party that's defined by aoc's democratic socialists that completely out of touch with the american voter. >> that is not true. that is not correct. >> they're the party of late term abortions, open border, tearing down walls. >> that is not true. >> pushing an extreme agenda a that is out of touch with what president trump is pushing.
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>> that's not true. >> we're going to pay a sound bite from john hickenlooper getting booed. >> let me be clear. if we want to beat donald trump and achieve big progressive goals, socialism is not the answer. >> b boo! >> i was reelect -- >> quick rea action from each of you? kelly, you go first. >> socialism is not the key to beating trump in the election. and socialist ideas and the issues, there's not the funding for because of republican tax cuts. if we didn't have the tax cuts for th rich, we would have no federal deficit, no federal dent. because of that, we don't have the funds to do that. >> mandy, final word to you. >> it shows that hickenlooper is
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trying to talk about talking points that are completely out of touch with the extreme democrat party that are all about pushing socialism which is completely counter to what american voters really want. >> that's not the case. >> this what is they're out there, what they're pushing. 57% of voters believe that socialism is out of touch with american values. >> ladies, thank you so very much. a spirited debate at 4:45 here on a monday morning. we appreciate it, mandy and kelly, thank you. >> thank you. >> the time is 45 minutes after the hour. here is a campaign promise you won't soon forget. senator cory booker promises to give every child $1,000 every year if you vote for him in 2020. what? here's something to put a little spring in your step as well. the big city that wants commuters to trade in their scooters foscooters for pogo st. oh, boy. we're the slowskys.
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we like drip coffee, layovers- -and waiting on hold. what we don't like is relying on fancy technology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago?
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the most inspiring minds, the most compelling stories, the best place to listen. to start your free 30-day trial, text listen5 to 500500 today. ♪ carley: good morning. welcome back. brand-new audio shedding new light on what caused a cruise ship to ram into a tourist boat, creating mass chaos in one of italy's most crowded tourist city. the ship's pilot alerting officials to a loss of control aboard the vessel before that crash that left five people injured. the captain saying he didn't understand what happened after the crew a activated a range of different safety procedures. italian officials say the crash simply underscores the need to ban ships from using the busy river. >> that was wild video. more than 300 boeing planes could have faulty parts that could fail or crack. that's not good. the faa revealing problems with
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wing parts which create lift during take-off and landing. the wing is an important part of the plane, i'm told. >> kind of critical. >> more than 60 of the planes are in the u.s., including the grounded max jets and next generation models currently in use. airlines have 10 days to make fixes. disturbing photos showing piles of trash and rats taking over the streets of downtown los angeles. carley: concerns of a public health crisis are growing as new restrictions are put on the homeless in an area known as skid row. we have details. >> reporter: typhoid is bad enough. there's fears that rats could bring back the bubonic plague. there's rotting trash and rats running amock in skid row, despite california being one of
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the wealthiest states in the country. this is what's being called typhus zone. according to local reports and the california department of public health there was 124 confirmed typhus cases in long s angeles county last year. one lapd cop has typhoid, according to the a.p. last week, the city won the right to destroy any infested or harmful property around skid row but it cannot limit how much property a homeless person has and not everybody is happy about that. a city councilman said the settlement, quote, establishes a different set of standards that will only perpetuate the public health crisis that already exists in skid row. governor gavin new s&p ha s&p na different view. he tweeted this, around the world we are a beacon of light and for an america divided, mark my words, california we are the light at the end of the tunnel.
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of course, his twitter page is blowing up with criticism over that. people posting pictures of the trash, saying here's your beacon of light. todd, carley. carley: thank you so much. hundreds of pogo sticks could soon be deployed in san francisco. a swedish start-up company called kangaroo is targeting electric scooters as a transportation option. their slogan is, quote, jump into the future. they believe the product will be popular with millennials because it combines transportation and exercise. how long will it take to get from home to work. we have a treat for you? we've got a pogo stick on set. todd pyro is going to give it a try. todd: tell me which part is exercise and which part is travel. carley: go for it. todd: i don't know how to do this. i didn't have a childhood. carley: come on.
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no, no, don't jump on it. todd: how do you do it? carley: step on it and then go. todd: could you hold me? carley: now go, go, go. todd: the good news, an fran, n francisco, i'll be there on saturday but i'll be flying and taking a car. carley: how long will it take you to get to work. todd: how long would it take via pogo stick? i can't move four feet. carley: this segment not sponsored by kangaroo. [ laughter ] they're laughing in the corner. todd: millennials, just walk. why make everything so complicated. why do you need avocado toast while your pogo-sticking. carley: we'll be right back. when we started our business
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todd: waking up $344 million richer today, one ticket sold in north carolina. the now millionaire has yet to come forward. if that winner wasn't you, good news, the mega millions jackpot, the other one jumping up to a whopping $475 million this weekend. that drawing coming up tomorrow night. 2020 hopeful cory booker doubling down on one of the biggest campaign promises, if you vote for him, you'll get your lottery of your own.
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he's going to give you free cash. >> it's about time we target the creation of wealth equally for all children in america. my idea to do that is something called baby bond. making sure that every child born in america gets an interest-bearing account with $1,000 in it. and that depending on the wealth of your family, you get up to $2,000 placed into that account every single year. todd: booker says the money could be used for things like college tuition or retirement savings. the new jersey senator first introduced the idea last october and made it a key part of his platform. we asked if you thought it was a good idea. trudi tweeting if it's his money, i say go for it. if it's my money, in parentheses, taxpayers, i say keep your hands off. joey posts, education is key to an individual's success, not handouts provided by the u.s. taxpayer. and j.k. writes, everybody needs to earn their way by
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baby-sitting, mowing lawns, et cetera. being responsible is a good learning experience. nothing in life is free. time for the good, bad and ugly. first, gronk, he shaved his head to help kids with cancer. >> can i go completely bald? >> you can do whatever you want. todd: gronk going bald for one mission buzz-off at gillette stadium. the charity raised $10 million to fight childhood cancer. florida police released a 911 call from a woman with anil gator in her kitchen. >> i have anil gay to an allis sitting in my kitchen, a huge one. >> it's in your kitchen? >> yes. i don't know how it got here but it's here. >> it was eventually captured in clearwater, florida. finally, the ugly, a new trend blowing up the runway, balloon
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dresses on full display at a fashion show in london. they were designed by a norwegian college student. he said he was inspired by childhood memories and how they get hays hazy over time. with that "fox & friends first" continues right now. it is monday, june 3rd. the president touching down in london overnight, kicking off a three-day state visit in the u.k. >> london's left-leaning mayor made sure his welcome was anything but a warm one. we have fox news team coverage all morning long. >> and back here at home, on this side of the world, mexican officials will attend meetings of their own after the white house threatens tariffs on goods crossing the southern border. >> we're live with the steps mexico says it's taking to help end the crisis and keep our partnership intact. >> also, shocking new images showing an ungodly mess in parts of the city of an jess. >> the new -- angels. >>

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