tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News June 11, 2019 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
7:00 pm
conservatives to impose their faith on americans is unconstitutional. >> sean: i'll let that speak for itself. that's all we have time for. we will never be the rage destroy trump media mob but let not your heart be troubled. laura ingraham is next. >> laura: i hope she's not getting her acceptance speech for the dnc. i don't think that will be happening. >> sean: i'm on team laura ingraham team on that one. >> laura: thanks. good show. >> sean: thank you. >> laura: i'm laura ingraham. what a show we have for you. what is behind joe biden's sudden reemergence after weeks of hiding? my angle reveals all. and would biden be vulnerable with african americans versus trump? round two between candice owens
7:01 pm
and cornell west ahead. and plus, dirsch and sol wisenberg are here. and we are the only one to bring you details of african migrants being dumped in san antonio texas. tonight a exclusive follow up where they could be send next. first, age and rage in 2020. that is the focus of tonight's angle. let's face it. joe biden is a primary candidate on the ropes. since may, his real clear politics lead among democrats has dropped by nearly ten points. he's also nursing a dwindling lead in the all-important state of iowa. a des moines register cnn poll has him down eight points since december. so it's not surprise that
7:02 pm
biden's camp is scrambling to triage his reputation as his political star dims. and biden has flip-flopped on the federal funding of abortion and he's embraced the green new deal. today in a series of carefully controlled, smallest iowa events, biden attempted to take trump on directly. going to be a tough guy. but long before he delivered his remarks, biden leaked his comment to the media which provoked this reaction from the president. >> joe biden is a dummy. i think he's the weakest mentally. i like running against people that are weak mentally. when a man has to mention my name 76 times in a speech, that means he's in trouble. i have to tell you, he's a different guy. he looks different than he used to, acts different than he used to. he's even slower than he used to
7:03 pm
be. >> laura: well, the well-being the health of biden has been a focus recently of many people in the public eye that watch these things owing most likely to moments like these. >> the country wasn't built by wall street bankers, ceo and hedge fund managers. today, the same is happening to big -- i think we have to rethink how we define what constitutes a successful economy. >> laura: in his column, today, cnn raps the president and this network for daring to question the former vp's health. here's the quote. "even partisan ship should have its limits. one of them should be raising unentirely unfounded questions about a presidential candidate's health." entirely unfounded? this is rich coming from cnn. now, cnn was a network where for more than two years whenever the
7:04 pm
president comes up nearly every anchor seems to be auditioning for dr. gupta's job. >> who is donald trump to question anybody else's mental fitness? projecting much? he's unhinged. it's embarrassing. >> i question his ability to -- his fitness to be in this office. >> his actions have been described as unpresidential, unhinged and sometimes crazy. >> this brings me back to the questions that are tough to ask out loud on national television. is the president of the united states suffering from some sort of illness. >> laura: now, i have always found these questions about trump's mental acuity to be kind of self-defeating for democrats. here's my thinking. if trump is supposedly not operating with both oars in the water, what does that say about the democrats? they couldn't beat him in 2016
7:05 pm
despite spending double the money? having almost the entire media, the entire entertainment establishment and wall street against trump. and with hillary. so what does that say about their abilities? of at the daily beast, a really moderate, objective group, therapy hypocrisy was on full display. with biden in the race, they ran this peace. "in the news business, it's irresponsible to spread baseless damaging rumors about public figures." really? is rod sterling standing in the wings somewhere? this is the daily beast from march of 2018. "how close is donald trump to a psychiatric breakdown?" or how about this from october 2017.
7:06 pm
"these 27 top shrinks think trump is nuts." maybe the rules of the news business have changed since then. the fact is, if it's vibrancy, stamina and vitality, if that is part of this presidential contest, wow. who will win that one? when you have a 76-year-old running against a 73-year-old, how could there not be considerations of stamina and how vigorous you are, you have a campaign to run and a country to run. these are legitimate questions. in october, biden understood this. >> is age a legitimate issue? sure it is is. if i were to run, they would judge me on my vitality. can i run up the stairs of air force two. am i in good shape. do i have my faculties, am i energetic. it's totally legitimate for people to ask those questions. >> laura: well, i agree with him. if this is a measure, a lot of
7:07 pm
folks out there, people not connected to politics, just regular people say biden is in trouble. why he cautiously avoids the media and sticks to a very limited schedule, trump on the other hand seems to have energy to burn. according to "the washington examiner," biden has only held ten public events in five states since jumping in the race. that's less than half of the events of hi rivals. he missed two big democratic events in california and iowa over the weekend. in fact, biden's big outing before today's iowa swing was attending his granddaughter's graduation in d.c. i'm sure that was nice and fun event. but you're running for president. meanwhile, on the last week, donald trump attended a state dinner with the queen of england, held working meetings and held a conference with theresa may, he hosted a dinner for prince charles, attended a
7:08 pm
d-day commemoration, flew to ireland, flu to normandy for the d-day remembrance and had a bilateral meeting with french president macron. and then he returned to the united states and attended an intel briefing and then had the indy 500 champ. today he was off again to iowa. i'm tired just reading that. all of this demonstrates that trump is going to be formidable in 2020. i think biden knows it. >> i see all of these polls. they don't mean a thing right now. this is a marathon. this is a marathon. marathon is just beginning. the end of the day, if you can't cross the line in iowa, you don't win the marathon. it's an important deal. >> laura: it's a deal biden may
7:09 pm
or may not be able to close. that's the angle. joining me now with reaction is bruce lavell, who is a member of trump's 2020 advisoriry board and louise miranda. all right. clearly not a comparison between biden and trump on stamina. i don't see it. i was getting sleepy listening to biden. it's the way he talks. >> i've worked with him. >> laura: i'm sorry. i like him as a person. i do. but for people to say that trump is like lost a step? what? the man has a schedule that most people 30 years younger than he can cannot keep up -- his staff can't keep up. >> people half his cable can't watch three hours of cable television. i agree with you. i worked with joe biden. he's someone who has more energy than most of his staff on any given day. he's impressive and someone that
7:10 pm
doesn't delegate everything out. i've seen him make sure that things that will be pushed out are his words or his work or actually the type -- >> laura: when is the last time you worked with him. >> during the white house. i was there the first four years. i have a lot of -- >> laura: that's awhile ago. that was 2008-12. >> he has the energy and the stamina for it. what is interesting though, to focus in on maybe a little bit of a stutter when this is something that he's championed throughout his career where he's talked about as a young boy, he struggled with stuttering. his worked to overcome it. public speaking -- >> laura: i don't think that was a stutter. a stutter -- some of the most brilliant people in the world have had speech impediments. so i don't -- that's not what we're talking about. we're talking about joe biden of five years ago. everyone changes. we all age. you change. it's a fact. i don't think we know, but what i'm saying is the idea that
7:11 pm
people are complaining that the question is being raised, bruce, when cnn and msnbc, they spend hours examining president trump's psychological profile from the office they sit in. >> uncle joe is moving slow at the junction. i don't see it happening. it's interesting, laura. i remember when you said you almost fell asleep. during the campaign, i watched corey lewandowski, the president run off the plane, sprint to the podium. corey running a younger guy, 25 years his junior, trying to chase him. i've seen this repeatedly. this man has an unbelievable stamina. i'm serious. >> a lot of unhinged behavior, also -- >> the only unhinged behavior that i see is biden coming in
7:12 pm
and locking up black folks. >> laura: we want to keep this focused tonight. i think the voters are going to look at age. i think a lot of young people out there voting the first time. we're looking -- >> there's no comparison. >> laura: the voters in iowa saying it's legitimate. it's not just trump and biden and their age. we have bernie sanders. let's not forget. he's 77. elizabeth warren is going to be 70 soon. sounds like just the two of them we're talking about. let's play biden and trump back to back. there's a difference in style. interesting to see how the iowa voters perceive both. let's watch. >> as we used to say in the business, my friend, donald trump, president trump, is in iowa today. >> biden, sleepy joe, group. sleepy joe. he was someplace in iowa today. he said my name so many times
7:13 pm
that people couldn't stand it anymore. no, don't keep saying it. >> laura: those are two moments. biden trying to make a joke. in the senate, you say my dear friend from. that's a kiss of death amount funny line. but trump has this ability to be off the cuff. i'm sorry, hilarious. he's hilarious. that's why people remember sleepy joe, little marco. people remember it. can joe biden do that kind of thing as well as he used to do it great? has he changed luis? honestly, has he changed? >> i do think trump is a better shock jock. >> laura: former radio host -- >> it's hilarious for naming joe biden when he tweets about him and keep him but mention him because he's worried about the fact that joe biden represents a threat. i'm not here representing a specific candidate. the reason that joe biden has come in is because people see and recognize that he can defeat -- >> laura: but he's going down in
7:14 pm
the polling. trump was down 30 points in a head-to-head -- >> laura: le needs a monster drink bad. >> and now biden is trying to cap michael avenatti's catch phrase. >> a guy name langston, the poet, said let america with america again. and then a guy who was a foreign policy writer said let america be america again. well, you know what? we talk about the fact that let's make america great again, i'd settle for let america be america again. >> laura: if you're watching that and think biden is snappy -- everybody has off nights. i have off nights. we all have them. but this is a big event for him. he's -- the pacing -- you have to pick it up. >> when you look at his whole speech and i watched it before
7:15 pm
coming on the air tonight, one of the things you see, he does have a folksy style. >> laura: i like it. >> and when you get outside the beltway, people appreciate it. he can tell them stories. >> laura: you have to keep them awake. >> he's not talking a above them. he's talking with them -- >> you know why he's all over the radar? he doesn't know which direction to go. he's been there 50 years. >> laura: he's flip-flopping. we have to go. panel, thank you tonight. great conversation as always. both gentlemen. as we mentioned in the angle, this criticism of biden's sta stamina has received backlash for being over the line. despite if fact that the president's mental fitness as i pointed out has been routinely questioned, but are these fair or even legitimate questions? we'll even ask that question. joining me now is dr. daniel, a
7:16 pm
psychiatrist who has quite extensive experience treating geriatric patients. we're not asking you to diagnose anyone. are voters right to be concerned about age or speech when examining presidential candidates? >> you know, laura, we've heard this before with ronald reagan, with john mccain. to me, this is a nonpartisan issue. we should be questioning our president's mental fitness and the stamina and vitality of them. if we're going to put a commander-in-chief in office, it's something to think about. we do this with police officers. they get psychological testing and check their stamina. if we can do it with officers of the law, we can do it with the commander-in-chief. >> laura: there was one moment today and i have to stress, you can pick out moments from anybody's speeches where they seem slower. to me, i'm watching biden now for 30 years. you change. trump changed. not everybody is the same. so you have to be fair about
7:17 pm
that. but there was a moment today from joe biden that seemed, again, a little uncharacteristically off for him. let's watch. >> i promise you, if i'm elected president, you see the single most important thing that changes america. we're going to cure cancer. >> laura: we're going to cure cancer. he put himself in charge of the cancer project during the obama years. but i think -- there's he's trying to show vitality. >> i think richard nixon said the same thing. this is about political angling. if you're the old guy, then you have experience and you have wisdom. if you're the young guy, you have youth, vitality and new ideas. it's about your agenda and branding and the message. >> sean: again, people have off
7:18 pm
nights, people have off moments. people hit it out of the park one night and slow it down the next. joe biden is right about this. it's a long way to the democratic convention. it's a long way to election day. doctor, thanks so much. and we have such an amazing reactio reaction the last time we did this segment. i'm excited to have them back on. candice owens and cornell west are here. why biden might be in trouble. and kristin gillibrand's shocking comments about abortion and racism. stay there. isionworks, our sales are good on over 500 frames. why are you so weird? see great with 2 complete pairs for $59. really. visionworks. see the difference.
7:22 pm
>> laura: many are saying that joe biden has a past that should threaten his prospect with black voters. but for some run his support is soaring. a new poll revealing in a head-to-head matchup, biden leads trump 85% to 12% among black voters. since trump has been in office though, we have record low unemployment for african americans. he signed criminal reform bills and has done a host of other things to benefit the african american community. what about biden? well, he opposed bussing,
7:23 pm
botched the handling of anita hill's testimony about clarence thomas according to liberals, not me and supported a crime bill that many minorities feel was too harsh. that does and sound so good. joining me now is dr. cornell west, professor of philosophy at harvard and candice owens, conservative commentatcommentat. dr. west, should african americans maybe look twice about their support for joe biden given some of these past issues? >> well, i think one that brother biden is mo dummy. he has fine energy. his big problem is he is a dying in the wool, backward looking liberal with little vision and less courage. so in that sense, he represents a past. i know he has the obama halo, but that is going to decline.
7:24 pm
i don't see barack obama. i don't see brother barack break dancing in support of biden either. so i think we really have to take a look at my brother. take a look at bernie sanders. vision, courage, consistenccons. you'll see albert einstein, hell hen keller -- >> laura: throw in a few more. >> thomas edison. sally -- >> laura: okay. i get it. >> we go on and on. >> laura: cornell makes an interesting point here. we were just talking about vitality and age and people age in different ways and so forth. but bernie sander whose is 77 to me, putting aside looks and all that, to me seems a lot younger than joe biden. i mean, he's hard charging, he's like out there. you can't help but watch bernie sanders out there candice, it's
7:25 pm
an interesting point though. biden is way up over trump among black voters. does the trump team need to sell their achievements better? what can they do to make that up difference? let's say biden does get the nomination. >> i always think that you can communicate the points better. definitely this administration can talk about what they're doing better. but you're not going to find a disagreement right now with me and dr. west when it comes to joe biden. i think that his history and race has been abhorrent and trump should hit hard on that he championed the crime bill of 94. he pushed that through. we know that we see a lot of black americans talk about disparities in terms of sentencing when it comes the crack versus powder cocaine. that was championed by joe biden. we need to make sure the trump administration does get that information forward. we have to disagree. dr. west and i will disagree in terms of thinking that joe biden is a candidate that we should be
7:26 pm
going for. yes, he's a more enthusiastic character but he's talking about socialism. we know that -- >> laura: bernie. >> yeah, benny. that is destroyed and decimated the black community, social as well as policies. like in terms of the welfare. so a little bit of agreement here but mostly -- >> laura: cornel, you think bernie sanders is going to deliver a better economy than trump for african americans? i haven't heard that argument for bernie. i have heard a lot about give-aways. how is he going to raise the wage earning capacity of all americans, including african americans that have been hit by open borders and the lowers of wages because of a huge influx of indigent workers? >> my dear sister, you asked the workers at walmart who are of all colors. we're talking about humanity. you ask the workers at walmart whether they will be able to live a life with more decency
7:27 pm
under sanders administration as opposed to a trump administration. he was just there in arkansas standing with the workers, mcdonald's workers. he stands with poor people. that's his connection to fdr, martin luther king. so my dear sister candice, i would argue that welfare again now is not socialist. it was an attempt to intervene given the failure of capitalism -- >> it was socialist. >> it was not -- >> it is and you know that. you know our community -- doctor, come on. 100 years after slavery, the black community was doing better. then they socialized our community and the black community went down, down. you're support ago candidate that is advocating for making that on a larger scale. he's saying we're not going to do it just to the black community but every community. you know his policies don't
7:28 pm
work. you know socialism has led to more deaths than anything in the last 100 years. you stand behind this man and you should not. you should stand behind trump. he's standing behind poor people. >> the very fact that you've been able to aspire and achieve the level you have based on the struggle of those that came before from ida b. wales and frederic douglas, they were not concerned with isms but they were concerned with justice and fairness. you have to get your history right. >> we're talking about bernie sanders. we're talking about present, bernie sanders and what he's offering to the black community which is office. >> richard smalls, when fred districts douglas -- >> we're talking about bernie sanders, doctor. doctor, we're talking about bernie sanders. >> bernie sanders is part of the legacy. he's part of that legacy, sister
7:29 pm
candice. that's what i'm trying to get you to see. it has to do with jobs, workers controlling at the workplace -- >> doctor, this is basic economics. you know that and i know that. >> quit spreading the lies about socialism. >> laura: we're tight on time here. i still say, cornel and candice both have to go the oval office. you have to spend some time with trump. >> i'll take you. >> laura: i'll sit and have popco popcorn. you have to spend time with him. throw away your ideas. you should do it. >> i'm a jazz man. i believe in improvisation and engagement with dialogue with anybody. i want people to get the facts right and truths right and -- >> laura: i agree. all right. i have a time -- i have a commercialism problem here.
7:30 pm
okay? a commercialism problem. >> candice, jesus would be socialist. >> brother west -- >> laura: we have to go. great conversation. we can do an hour together. cornell, i didn't mean to say harvard that way. thanks. democrats on the hill are levelling big threats at the trump administration. mueller and the doj. are they accomplishing anything? dershowitz and wisenberg tell us what we need to know next. best battery can match the power of energizer. because energizer ultimate lithium is the longest lasting aa battery in the world. [confetti cannon popping] energizer. backed by science. matched by no one.
7:33 pm
7:34 pm
7:35 pm
and alan dershowitz. alan, the democrats are pushing for mueller's testimony. but is it possible that the gop's case could be strengthened by his appearance? >> it's possible. but there's no use to having him testify. the mueller report never should have been written. there's no room under our constitution for special counsel, special prosecutors, reports. prosecutors have the right to say one thing. we have concluded there's no evidence sufficient to charge the president with russian collusion or obstruction of justice, period. i'm taking no questions, make nothing public report. i'm giving my findings to the attorney general. no prosecutor should go beyond that. we agreed with that when comey went beyond that with hillary clinton. i don't understand the
7:36 pm
difference between the criticism of comey for saying that hillary clinton engaged in extreme carelessness. everybody criticized that. and then we want to know why mueller didn't charge the president. it's the same thing. the whole enterprise of special counsel, special prosecutors is inconsistent with the constitution. i hope we've seen the last of it. >> laura: now, sol, you were watching john dean's show yesterday where he testified on the hill. purporting to draw a connection between the watergate road map to impeachment and what mueller's report represents. your thoughts. >> first of all, they're completely different. the grand jury was very careful not to make any conclusions. they said here's -- on march 17, 1973, president nixon had a conversation with these two people. then they listed the tape
7:37 pm
recordings and the grand jury testimony that the house could look at. totally different than the mueller report, which made a number of legal and factual conclusions. number 1. number 2, more importantly for the people that still believe that firing james comey could ever be criminal obstruction of justice, the watergate road map which was all about obstruction of justice, that's what the grand jury indicted people for, never in any way mentions the firing of archie cox in obstruction of justice. i looked at about every book on watergate. i don't believe jaworski's people mentioned it. >> and nobody talked about it yesterday and that's george h.w. bush. pardoning casper wineberger, pardoning the five people on the eve of their trial.
7:38 pm
the special prosecutor said that was designed to stop the investigation and it did stop the investigation. nobody ever suggested obstruction of justice against president bush. >> laura: let's get back to current day. sheila jackson lee was speaking today on the civil contempt citations that are being floated around for barr, et cetera. let's watch. >> we will see what we'll do next if the compliance continues, then we'll take the negligence action off the table. everything remains on the table until we know they have fully complied with the information we need. >> laura: alan, is there any there there. >> there's no there there. >> laura: the cat and mouse game with the white house office. >> there's no there there. there's no legal obligation to provide the public or congress with any of the information. certainly not information that is protected by grand jury secrecy that involves ongoing
7:39 pm
investigations. it violates the separation of powers for congress to try to compel disclosure information that the executive branch has the right to maintain secrecy over. not forever. but while there's pending investigations and until a judge clears the grand jury. what they're asking barr to do is violate the law. no court will compel an attorney general to violate the law. >> laura: barr, i should have referred to doj, not white house counsel. i was referencing mcgahn. but that's the case, sol no, compliance has taken case. seems like they went overboard. they gave up too much information in this process. sol, close it out. >> not only that, but think of the case of david seamus, worked for president obama. he took the same position. he wouldn't allow him to come to congress. it's taken by every president for the last five administrations.
7:40 pm
>> laura: guys, thanks. last night we were the only show to bring you details of african migrants being dumped in san antonio, texas. tonight an exclusive follow up on where these congolese families could be going next. stay there. since you're heading off to school, i got you this brita. dad... i just got a zerowater. but we've always used brita. it's two stage-filter... doesn't compare to zerowater's 5-stage.
7:41 pm
7:44 pm
>> laura: last night, we were the only one to bring you the story of hundreds and hundreds of congolese immigrants being dropped off in san antonio after crossing the border. for many of them, that's not the final stop. dr. colleen bridger revealed this to a local cbs station. "the plan was 350 of them would travel from san antonio to portland maine. when we reached out to portland, maine, they said don't send us anymore. we're already stretched way beyond our capacity." why would portland be beyond their capacity? i want to go back to january of this year when janet mills gave her inaugural address. >> we welcome the voices of newcomers to the public conversation, the young, the immigrants, people of different cultures, all are important members of the maine family. from now on, yes, a sign will greet all of those arriving in
7:45 pm
our state and it will say simply welcome home. >> laura: isn't that nice? in portland alone, asylum seekers that are primarily from african countries make up 90% of the people living in a city run family and overflow shelters. back to today. when the san antonio manager's request to portland was turned down, the response was jarring. we're working with them to identify other cities throughout the united states where they can go and begin their asylum-seeking process. where are these migrants going to be dropped next? that's anyone's guest. the fact that two cities in two states, thousands of miles apart are both at capacity? should be alarming for all americans. we reached out to officials in portland, maine and received the following response from a city
7:46 pm
counselor. portland is proud to be a welcoming city and those seeking to become an american. no city of 67,000 people can possibly manage to entire nation's immigrant situation on its own. wow! we're going to continue to follow this story and others like it and bring you updates since apparently nobody else will. also tonight, the ingram angle is exposing poor leadership like in the state of new mexico. we don't talk about them much. their citizens deserve better. the state of new mexico and the city of albuquerque sued the trump administration over its asylum policies. the state wants to release asylum-seeking migrants into local communities and then claim reimbursement for humanitarian efforts to shelter them.
7:47 pm
joining me now is andrea moore, secretary of the republican party of new mexico. all right, andrea. what do you say about this situation in the state? >> i think it's deplorable to use a term that we on the right have been given. we are counties, cities and villages just at capacity and the limited resources that they have are being stretched thin because they're being forced to house the illegal immigrants crossing our border. >> laura: andrea, you and i ran into each other on a plan. we didn't know each other. you told me the story of new mexico, which has become a solidly democrat state. the trump administration thinks they have a chance to flip that state back to the republican party. given what has happened under democratic leadership on the issue of immigration, do you
7:48 pm
think this is possible? >> oh, absolutely with the continued failing policies of our governor, our state is primed to be flipped back to red and vote for trump as well as all of our wonderful conservative republicans. >> laura: thank you so much. we'll check back with you soon. up next, the second installment of our series where voters tricked? we'll expose the democrats that claim they were moderate in 2016 and 2018. in clinical trials to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life.
7:52 pm
>> laura: tonight we bring you the second installment of our series were voters tricked? the ingraham angle investigating with those democrats, you know the one who ran in 201 2018 ande midterm moderates. what they have been up to since being elected. tonight's expose, andy kim of new jersey's third congressional district. now, as a candidate, mr. kim stressed his bipartisan campaign staple. >> i will always remember the first time i step foot in the white house situation. politics was checked out the door. things were high but we listened and more together to save lives. that is exactly why i'm running for congress. to put the lives of new jersey
7:53 pm
families before politics. i will work with both parties. >> laura: now after a narrow victory, he said he would vote for nancy pelosi a speaker. at the time, he noted the country is looking for a new generation of leaders on both sides of the aisle. well, despite that pledge, his first vote in congress was to support pelosi speakership. well, his reward? his preferred committee assignment on armed services. pelosi's payoff? an avowed moderate voting with her over 95% of the time. now, following that, kim joined the left-wing congress. aycock is committed to passing for instance the green new deal. does that sound moderate to you? his other legislative priorities, saving the disastrous to obamacare and of
7:54 pm
course, pushing for government mandated universal health care. again, does that sound moderate to you? when ilhan omar made insensitive remarks about 9/11, mr. kim chose not to critique her even though the terrorist attack was devastating to the state in which he served. now, instead he lashed out at president trump are having a temerity to criticize congressman omar on twitter. on weed, mr. d classified a schedule drug and can support all marijuana legalization in the future. on abortion, the so-called moderate refused to sign on to the born alive abortion survivors protection act. of course, that would have required appropriate medical care and to any child who survived a botched abortion. so again, does any of what i described to you, the facts, does any of that sound moderate? and voters, it is great to be
7:55 pm
open to new ideas or across party lines to support certain candidates because of the issues and the policies he or she says they will support. but it is also important to note it is a fraud perpetrated on you and to ask yourself if you want to be moderately fooled again. up next, a truly, hilarious last bite.
7:59 pm
8:00 pm
beer that is all the time we have tonight. don't forget to check out my new podcast more on the expose at the border and the new classes of immigrants coming in and where they will be dropped off next and shannon bream and the "fox news @ night" take it from here, shannon. >> shannon: i will take a couple of dresses like that, i'm not going to live. i'm glad ua did it out, things, laura. we began tonight with a fox news alert, potential preview of next year's general election. president trump and democratic front runner joe biden hitting each other with multiple jabs tonight. both and the state of iowa with a grueling event. the president with the recent deal with mexico. the former vice president calls and xo's potential threat to america. and we have coverage. donald trump jr. is headed to capitol hill in a few hours from now. round 2 with lead senate intelligence committee. it is all about the russian
222 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on