tv Americas News HQ FOX News June 16, 2019 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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eric: we're back at four eastern, in the three hours, but before we go, we want to wish all the dads out there a happy father's day. >> and go, usa! the girls are up 3-0 right now. ♪ ♪ >> article ii, i would be allowed to fire robert mueller. there was not -- assuming, assuming i said i want to fire the him, number one, i didn't. he wasn't fired. i wasn't going to fire him, you know why? because i watched richard nixon go around firing everybody, and that didn't work out too well. >> president trump is sounding off on the mueller report and his decision not to fire the special counsel in an interview aired just a short while ago this morning on abc news. welcome to "america's news headquarters" here in washington, i'm gillian turner. leland: good to be with you at home. the president also saying he's
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going to do a lot more of these network tv interviews up til 2020, so stay tuned. i'm leland vittert. president trump also offered a re-election campaign sales pitch especially aimed at swing voters. garrett tenney on the north lawn of the white house. the president is in town this weekend but also at his golf club as we peek. hi, garrett. >> reporter: good afternoon. yeah, the president was asked a lot about the russia investigation, but he also brought it up himself unprompted on several occasions, so as you can see, it's still very much something that's on his mind, and it's an issue we will hear a lot about over the next 17 months on the campaign trail. that campaign officially kicks off on tuesday with a rally in florida. president trump gave are a preview of what his message for 2020 looks like. >> what's your pitch to the swing voter? >> safety, security, great economy. i think i've done more than any other first-term president ever. i have a phony witch hunt.
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mueller comes out, there's no collusion and essentially a ruling no obstruction, and they keep going with it. you know what? people are angry about it. >> reporter: the president also responded to reports this week about his campaign's internal polling back in march which showed former vice president joe biden with a significant lead over president trump in several key battleground states. asked why unfavorable polls bother him so much, he said they're wrong and again brought up the russia investigation. >> because it's untrue. i like the truth. you know, i'm actually a very honest guy. if i thought they were correct, i wouldn't be complaining at all. i understand that. it's like the witch hunt that goes on. no collusion with russia, there was no collusion. >> reporter: the trump campaign says its internal polls have shown huge swings in the president's favor since march, but in a new fox news poll today, the president trails all of the top five democratic candidates including the
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front-runner, joe biden, who topses trump by ten points. we are still a long ways away from election day though, and it's worth noting that at this point four years ago hillary clinton was leading donald trump by 17 points, and we all know how that one turned out, so stay tuned, leland. leland: indeed. about four years ago when then-candidate donald trump came down that golden escalator. garrett tenney, thanks so much for the perspective. gillian: the u.s. and iran facing off this weekend in the gulf of oman. secretary pompeo doubling down on his act vegases that iran is responsible -- accusations that iran is responsible for two tanker attacks and insisting the u.s. doesn't want a war but will take military action if needed. ellison barber joining us with the latest. >> reporter: yeah. secretary of state mike pompeo says this is an international challenge, and he says the u.s. will take action diplomatic or otherwise to insure ships are able to pass through the strait of hormuz. he says what you should assume
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is we aren't going to guarantee freedom of navigation throughout the strait. that was on "fox news sunday" a little earlier this morning. secretary pompeo claims the u.s. has lots of data and evidence proving iran is behind the attack. he did not lay out that evidence but said eventually the public, the world would be with able to see a lot of it. the u.s. already released surveillance video a couple of days ago. the u.s. says it shows iranian sailor ares removing an unexplored mine from one of the tankers attacked in the gulf of oman. president trump pointed to that video on an interview on "fox & friends" saying iranian forces were trying to get rid of evidence was the unexploded -- because the unexploded mine likely had iran, quote, written all over it. the japanese tanker was hit by some sort of flying projectile. iran has denied any involvement, but on capitol hill democrats and republicans are pointing the finger at iran. >> well, iran for 40 years has
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engaged in this kind of attacks, going back to the 1980s. >> there's no question that iran is behind the attacks. i think the evidence is very strong and compelling. in fact, i think this was a class a screw-up by iran to insert a mine on the ship, it didn't detonate, they had to go back and retrieve it. >> reporter: where opinions diverge is on what to do next. senator tom cotton says these attacks warrant a retaliatory military strike. congressman adam schiff says that is the wrong approach on many levels, and the administration's current policies, in his opinion, have heightened the risk of conflict. gillian: interesting, ellison, that yesterday some sources were even starting to say the attempts from iran, it was almost as if they wanted to leave a trail behind and have a signature attached to it. thanks for that reporting. meanwhile, for more insight, let's bring in republican i'll congressman and member of the house foreign affairs committee,
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adam kinzinger. leland: thanks for being with us, we appreciate it. do you think given how much the administration was willing to sort of turn away from its threats against venezuela, that the iranians are taking us seriously when it comes to threats issued by the administration so far this week? >> well, i certainly think they should take it seriously. i do think, you know, venezuela was unfortunate. i think we had a real opportunity there, and it's not necessarily over. and when it comes to iran, i mean, look, this is a weak country that because of the reimplementation of sanctions and the pulling out of the iran nuclear deal is now lashing out. strong, confident countries don't attach mines to innocent ships, and that's what they're doing -- leland: yeah, but -- >> so i think they ought to -- leland: -- isn't the reason they're lashing out because they feel like they can test this administration in a way,
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perhaps, because it was president trump who tweeted out about cuban mercenaries inside venezuela better get out, or there was going to be an embargo. the i cuban mercenaries are still there, and there's no embargo. >> i don't think that's why, but i certainly think that's a risk. i think if you're going to talk tough, you have to be willing to back that up with action if that's the case, if that's what's called for. with iran, we've seen they take this right up to where they think there's going to be a military response, and i think that's why the secretary of state and the president being very clear that isn't off the table. but the key is if these kinds of attacks continue, there needs to be a military response. that means taking out their ability to be able to do attacks like this in the future and inflicting real harm on their, basically, ability to deny shipping. leland: so with in this, does in need to be taught a lesson now, or are the tough words enough? >> look, if i was, if i was making the decision, i think we've reached that line.
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i don't think that's wrong for the president to not do it yet, but i think it needs to be clear, and hopefully it is clear to iran, that basically this is it. this is about the extent of what we'll accept. this is the sixth tanker they've damaged, plus the fact that a quarter of american troops killed in iraq were killed by iran, and there's a point at which we've had enough. the key we have to push back against is folks that say any military response means it's going to be a full invasion of iran. that's the kind of stuff obama used to do when he didn't do anything. the reality is there's a lot of stuff in between that would inflict the kind of punishment we need to. leland: all right, you said it is time to teach them a lesson, what would be the proportional response? >> i think we need to be a little above proportional. iranians understand that the cost will certainly exceed any benefits they gain, that'll include taking out some of their navy infrastructure, their ability to mine this area and also maybe surface to air missile sites because we knew one was shot at our drone.
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leland: right. so you'd be willing to do that, you'd start kinetic action against the iranians now. >> yeah. i think we're at that point, but at the same time i don't think it's wrong to not do it at this point. but i think we're really close to that. leland: got it. you had come out with some pretty harsh words when the president said in that abc interview earlier this week that he wasn't sure if he was going to call the fbi if offered political dirt on a campaign opponent. this is what a fellow member of congress, alexandria ocasio-cortez, had to say about that and impeachment this morning. take a listen. >> every day that passes the pressure to impeach grows, and i think that it's justifiable. i think the evidence continues to come in, and i believe that with the president now saying that he is willing to break the law to win re-election, that goes, that transcends partisanship, it transsends party lines, and this is now about the rule of law in the united states of america. leland: when the president says things like he did to george
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stephanopoulos, whether he walked it back or not, does it make it harder for republicans in congress like yourself to defend him? >> no, i don't think so, because i don't think what he said was impeachable. he should have made it clear that he wouldn't take this information, and he has tried to walk that back. when it comes to these issues, we have to in a bipartisan way say we'll never take -- leland: right. but simply talking in that way to where now republicans such as yourself have to rebuke him or feel the need to rebuke him, doesn't that make it harder, doesn't that muddy the waters a little bit for congress? >> yeah, maybe for some people, not for me. i think impeachable offenses reach a very high threshold, not this. i just think it needs to be clear to president -- and i don't think he was inviting foreign interference in the election, but i think just making it clear that you wouldn't accept that is really important at this point. i very rarely agree with aoc. leland: all right. well, we'll have you back the next time you all disagree.
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it was good to have you, sir. we appreciate you making time on a sunday afternoon. we'll talk to you soon. >> take care. leland: all the best. gillian? gillian: well, president trump is facing severe criticism for his comments about whether he'd look at damaging information about a foreign opponent shared by foreign sources. >> foreigners, if russia, if china, if someone else offers you information, should they accept it or call the fbi? >> i think maybe you do both. i think you might want to listen. there's nothing wrong with listening. if somebody called from a cup -- norway -- we have information on your opponent, oh, i think i'd want to hear that. >> you want that kind of interference in our elections? >> it's not interference. they have information. i think i'd take it. gillian: well, the fallout and the debate is fierce here in washington. it's still unfolding over the course of this weekend. here to talk more about this is former federal prosecutor john sale. what do you make of what the president said?
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he said he would listen to it but also call the fbi. is that the right thing in. >> the long and the short of it is you do not take it. i don't want to be presumptuous to get -- gillian: sorry, john, to interrupt so soon, but you're saying that he shouldn't even listen to it, even if he calls the fbi also? >> >> no. i'm saying you don't take it. but calling the fbi, if i was a lawyer, i would advise him to call the fbi. but it's not required by law. if it were, senator warner's bill with wouldn't be necessary. senator warner's bill makes it an affirmative duty to call the fbi. i think it's the more prudent things to do, you shouldn't take it, and you should call the fbi. i like the president's suggestion though that he would throw the guy out of the office if anybody came to him with that. gillian: is this clear, is there any kind of clear legal guidance on this issue or it's all about feelings and a sense of propriety and it's all subjective of? >> no, what i was saying is,
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without putting myself in the president's head, i think he may have impetuously been trying to prevent his son, don jr., from being thrown under the bus. note in the mueller report they find that donald jr. accepted this information, yet they did not prosecute him. they analyzed the statute and said based upon specific intent and the thing of value aspect that they wouldn't criminally prosecute him. so maybe the law needs some clarification. but again, you shouldn't take it, and you should call the fbi, no doubt about it. gillian: well, secretary of state mike pompeo joined fox news sunday earlier today. he reacted somewhat angrily when chris wallace asked him about this. take a listen to this, i want to get your reaction on the other side. chris: is accepting oppo research from a foreign government right or wrong? >> you came really close right there. president trump, president trump has been very clear.
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he clarified his remarks later. he made it very clear even in his first comments, he said i'd do both. gillian: seems like the administration is doubling down on this strategy of saying if you do both things, you're in the clear, you're on the right side of the law. >> well, as i said, my opinion is you don't do either, but i think there's also a tendency to throw out i gotcha questions, and that's why secretary pompeo may have reacted angrily to chris. gillian: well, you can throw out i gotcha questions, but, you know, in this kind of an instance chris wallace is just asking him to explain the president's line of reasoning. as a lawyer, as a prosecutor, wouldn't the kind of -- the president's underlying thinking and the intentions weigh into any kind of a legal decision made about whether he's on the right side of the issue here? >> well, i'm not criticizing chris, but i think the answers are you don't take it, and if it's offered to you, you call the fbi. but i also think the law needs
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clarification. so i don't know what more there is to say, except the president should be given an opportunity to push back a little bit because anyone else would be given that opportunity. gillian: and if he is not on the right side of the law here, what are, i mean, what are the consequences that are on offer for this kind of an activity? taking the -- >> well, the consequence, the consequences, well, he didn't take it. he talked about whether or not he would. but the consequences are at the ballot box in 2020, the consequences are the congress, if they think it's part of their oversight duty, they can hold hearings. but i think, ultimately, the election in 2020, everything's fair game. that's what public life's all about. gillian: well, so speaking about, you know, the american voters weighing in here, we've got new fox news polls i want to highlight for you coming out today. we learn that 60% of americans say a politician cannot be a good leader if they have low ethical standards. can we bring those polls up? thanks.
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and 40% say electing a highly ethical leader is more important than electing one who shares their views on issues. so judgment and ethics, for all that the political pundits like to say, is still important to american voters. do you think that what president trump said in his interview with abc news is something that most voters would find ethical or unethical? >> well, i think ethics should always be important in the united states. but if you poll a question like that, are you for or against ethics, everybody's going to say, hey, i'm in favor of ethics, i'm against unethical conduct. i think this is all going to sort out as part of many issues that the american people are going to have to evaluate. gillian: all right. well, john sale, thanks for joining us with your legal analysis today. we appreciate your time. happy father's day. >> happy -- thank you. thanks for having me. leland: all right. we'll dig a little bit more into that fox news polling out today on the issue of immigration. 52% of voters oppose placing
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tariffs on mexico to handle immigration while nearly half are in favor of giving more aid to central american countries. one of those central american countries is guatemala where voters are headed to the polls today to either elect their new president. live from the guatemala/mexico border, william la jeunesse with us. hi, william. >> reporter: hey, leland. you know, polls also show americans don't believe that violence alone is the reason for asylum, that most asylum seekers should stay in mexico. that's important, because what i've heard here the last few days, it is about jobs. the u.s. is threatening to cut aid, also mexico, threatening to cut tariffs -- rather, oppose tariffs. guatemala, it is a superhighway of immigration. these rafts crossing each day, many at night. traffic's going to pick up, this is a superhighway of migrants. the mexican military, we see, is
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stopping some people who don't have a crossing card. guatemala has agreed to deploy about 80 border agents from the u.s. as advisers to disrupt the smuggling networks, also to strengthen their border, and guatemala is considering -- could be the first country in latin america -- to require that salvadorans and hondurans file for asylum here, not in the u.s. >> one country is not going to be able to solve the problem. this is a problem that has to be solved from mexico, guatemala, honduras, panama, ecuador, brazil. i mean, this is a regional effort. >> reporter: now, there is no magic wand here, no single thing that can stop this. it's a combination of push and pull factors. 91% say they're leaving for economics and a better life. the average age here is 21, and there's just no doubts for -- no jobs for these young people.
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5% are leaving for family reunification, 2% only cite violence. as for the poll factors, well, the u.s. policy of catch and release, promising people to leave, also a living wage. here you can make as little as $15 a day in the city. and the quality of education, here average educational attainment is just eighth grade. guatemala says more people are leaving in the rural areas than the cities. we went to a town where the police chief telling us 40% of the young people have left town. a former economics minister from el salvador told us that she is being told it's risk and reward, that migrants can make -- get a job in the u.s. within 12 hours of arriving. for them, it's an easy choice. >> i tell the people who immigrate to u.s., and they tell me that they only last 12 hours to get a job. because their relatives already offer the possibility to get a job, to have a house.
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>> the climate changing so much, it has affected the drought, now the floodings, and people don't have money to put their children in schools. >> reporter: as you said, leland, it's election day here. we don't expect any of the presidential candidates to get more than 50%, so there'll be a runoff this august. but in this area right here, it's as quiet as i've seen for quite a period of time. we are told that the mexican military's turning people back who don't have the crossing card, we're also told there's a caravan headed up here today from el salvador. back to you. leland: we'll count on you to watch that for us. william la jeunesse, great reporting on the guatemala/mexican border. we'll stay overseas, head to asia where there are massive protests in hong kong. right now, 1:20 in the morning, and they are still on the streets. why an apology and the suspension of a controversial law is not enough for these people to head home.
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mno kidding.rd. but moving your internet and tv? that's easy. easy?! easy? easy. because now xfinity lets you transfer your service online in just about a minute with a few simple steps. really? really. that was easy. yup. plus, with two-hour appointment windows, it's all on your schedule. awesome. now all you have to do is move...that thing. [ sigh ] introducing an easier way to move with xfinity. it's just another way we're working to make your life simple, easy, awesome. go to xfinity.com/moving to get started. leland: live pictures of crowds in hongg on the streets in protest right now. 1:20 in the morning, they're still out there. m you can see them blocking roads to airport in the show of
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strength against the communist regime in beijing. those protesters won a major victory with the suspension of legislation that would have allowed the extradition of suspects to mainland china for prosecution. hong kong's chief executive, carrie lamb, issuing a, quote, sincere and humble apology this morning, but that is not enough. protesters are demanding her resignation despite that apology. stay tuned. ♪ ♪ gillian: the white house weighing its options for a response after blaming iran for the twin oil tanker attacks in the gulf of oman thursday. this as hard-liners in both countries pushing to ratchet up pressure against the other side. for more insight on the prospects of a diplomatic solution, we bring in a middle east policy adviser to four american presidents, republicans and democrats, ambassador dennis roth. ambassador, thanks for being with us. >> absolutely. gillian: i want to get your
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response to secretary mike pompeo, he joined chris wallace this morning, and here is what he said about the latest tensions. >> we don't want war. we've done what we can to deter this. the iranians should understand very clearly that we will continue to take actions that deter iran from engaging in this kind of behavior. i've made a number of calls to my colleagues around the world yesterday. i am confident that we will have partners that understand this threat. gillian: is so he's essentially saying this is all about deterrence. do you buy that? >> well, i do buy that's what the administration wants. look, president trump has gone out of his way to say he doesn't want a war, he doesn't want to be more embroiled in the region. i think one of the problems we face is we did not have many allies stand up and say we believe you when you say the iranians are responsible. now, that's not an accident. in the sense if you speed a lot of time with allies and you pick up the phone and call them, they're not always going to answer immediately.
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not surprising, right? part of what has to happen is shine the spotlight on what the iranians have done, bring others in and get others to do the same. the more the iranians know it's going to be hard to say we didn't do it and have anybody believe them, the more that begins to raise the price to them, and it also begins to worry them about the legitimacy of the u.s. doing something more than only diplomatic or economic pressures on them. gillian: what's the head count right now? i think the u.k. is supporting what the trump administration's doing in the gulf of oman, i think germany is still -- >> germany is not. gillian: -- not anywhere to be found. >> the european union is not. in a sense, our traditional allies at this point are not signing up, and i think part of it is the idea that if they sign up too quickly, they're worried that it pushes those within the administration to want to do something more including militarily. and at the same time, they're still trying to convey to iranians, look, we're not simply going to make the americans' side, but don't you walk away from the iran nuclear deal, the
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jcpoa. gillian: in your opinion, why are some of the allies m if ia? is us -- mia? is it because the trump administration pulled out of the nuclear deal? >> it's a variety of things. they're not happy with the american posture. two the, they're not so prone to believe what the administration is saying because it hasn't built up a track record of credibility with them. three, there is the issue that when you constantly berate them, they're not prepared immediately to turn around and say, okay, we'll do whatever you want. and four, there is a concern that supporting the administration too quickly might end up making -- more likely you end up with a conflict. they want to deescalate the situation. i think what you heard from secretary pompeo was the emphasis is on diplomacy, and that's why he's calling his partners. he's right. if we get others to join with us, it reduces the prospect that the iranians will continue to do what they've been doing. right now part of the reason why they're doing what they've been doing, they want to show, okay, you put pressure on us, we have
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ways to put pressure on your interests. jim jill last question -- gillian: last question, the administration is really happy with its decision to go forward with hundreds of millions of dollars in the arms sales to the saudis which, os tense write -- ostensibly, they're going to use against iran. you know as well as i do despite the fact that members of congress, both sides of the aisle, are up in arms about this. they say this is the wrong move, they don't support it. what do you say about that? >> you know, this is a really tough one because the saudis the last couple of weeks, they were -- they had pumping stations, petroleum pumping stations hit by hue rockets provided -- houthi rockets provided by the iranians, they had an airport hit this week with 26 people injured in their country. there's a tendency with a lot of the countries angered at the saudis to lose sight of the fact that they're being hit with rockets provided by the iranians on their home soil. so somehow we've got to strike a
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balance between what our genuine needs that they may have and also expressing some opposition to steps that they have taken, obviously, the khashoggi affair is something that still roils people on the hill, and the saudis have yet to give a complete explanation on that. gillian: well, ambassador raz, thanks for joining us today -- ross, happy father's day. >> thank you. gillian: leland? leland: domestic politics, 2020 democratic presidential hopefuls on the road for the first big debate. jonathan serrie's in charleston, south carolina, following some of them. hi, jonathan. >> reporter: hi, leland. four presidential contenders talking about economics and marking a somber anniversary at a local church. i'll have details when we come back. t ♪ ♪ -i'm sorry? -what teach here isn't telling you is that snapshot rewards safe drivers with discounts on car insurance. -what? ♪
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early inroads with voters the first democratic presidential debate looms ever larger on the horizon. jonathan serrie dresses from one of the best cities in charleston south carolina, what can you tell us? >> an absolutely beautiful city here, it is however, marking the evil of the very somber anniversary. the fourth anniversary tomorrow will be, will mark the occasion four years ago when a man walked into a historically african american church, kelly nonmembers. this morning to do senator cory booker attended sunday services. mother emmanuel which he called an incredible church and an incredible community. massachusetts senator elizabeth warren raised the congregation and the people of charleston for responding to a turbocharger by bringing the community together and standing for racial, social and economic justice. warren was speaking at presidential candidates forum hosted by the black economic
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alliance. plans for increasing opportunities for minorities. take a listen. christ we need to look wholesale and how things like access to credit and scoring the credit work and to break down racial bias. good is the same tools that can perpetuate bias can also help us find it. >> signed into law the paycheck fairness act. what that would do is it would stop discrimination in the workplace by allowing employees to be able to share salary and income and wage information without being punished for doing it. >> according to a new fox news poll, former vice president joe biden tops list of democratic contenders with 32 percent support among democratic primary voters. bernie sanders trails a 13 percent followed by elizabeth warren at nine percent and pete buttigieg and kamala harris but that eight percent. next is beto o'rourke at four percent and cory booker --
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>> polls go up and go down. i am beating a present drop which is consistent with all of the polling i've seen. i think frankly, i am the candidate to defeat donald trump and we can win in pasadena, wisconsin and michigan and other battleground states. that's why look forward to. >> candidates and strategists alike are reminding everyone that it is very early in the campaign season and a lot can happen between now and election day 2020. gillian: lots of small movement but according to the latest poll joe biden still ahead. thank you.leland: and i would bring in our talk radio panel. -- rj harris, good to see both of you.
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rj, do you think sanders is right that he can beat donald trump in pennsylvania and then he is the strongest candidate to do it on the democratic side? >> actually not there was no way he will beat donald trump. i will tell you why. let's have the vote, let's get a feel in this country for where americans are and most of these candidates are spewing. >> you say that though, i will wring this in one second but in all of this holdings, every single one of the top two democrats beats president trump sometimes by 10 points. in the head-to-head. you went to the election today doesn't work out very well. >> actually, if you believe that poll the next year and have every media organization under the sun will have a poll every time one of the candidates passes gas it will be a big to do about it.
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this will be a long time to come. leland: if your bernie sanders advisors and joe biden said advisors do put a lot of weight in these polls that have him 10 points up? >> no. these are the same polls i have hillary clinton getting her ready for her election right now. >> in fairness to the posters real quick politics average two days before the election had hillary clinton winning the popular vote by a couple of points. she won the popular vote by a couple of points. >> and they have way more yards in the pages of the super bowl but unfortunately the electoral college votes we go by touchdowns in football. there is an advantage since 1900s among elected presidents only formica failed to win, two because of parties and two because it felt income is also think that he'll be somehow a week candidate. both bernie, joe biden and warren have to make the case, they are the best to end the battleground states.
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>> make a very interesting point about elizabeth warren that is gaining in the polls. some say taking a lot of bernie sanders support traditional political. the trauma team including the president himself had been focused almost exclusively on joe biden at this point but warren's rise now has them thinking she could pose a serious threat and a general election. robert, true do you think? >> absolutely true. i wanted people to say bernie sanders is the nominee i will leave the democratic party. it is not true for warren because she actually puts policy beside her proposals. everything that she says she has a 100 page policy doctorate which is why they will be paid for what votes are and how to get it passed. we will have a very formal candidate in that sense. >> more and more formidable in say pennsylvania to burn even if she's not as well-known? >> i think more formidable boom than bernie but look, i think we are talking about attention span as well.
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that is what it comes down to. i do think we will see changes over time. and some pretty dramatic changes. i do believe they have it right in terms of the lineup. if it's the first in the shoot and the a-team is as they're looking at really is the next. >> all right we will be watching. delmon, thank you both. rj, entertaining and thought-provoking as always. good to see both of you gentlemen. >> thank you leland. >> all the best. gillian: tiger woods hitting and even par peered falling behind. we will take you there coming up. hey, who are you? oh, hey jeff, i'm a car thief... what?! i'm here to steal your car because, well, that's my job. what? what?? what?! (laughing) what?? what?! what?! [crash] what?! haha, it happens. and if you've got cut-rate car insurance, paying for this could feel like getting robbed twice. so get allstate...
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let's see, aleve is than tylenol extra strength. and last longer with fewer pills. so why am i still thinking about this? i'll take aleve. aleve. proven better on pain. ask quite literally would be father's day without the u.s. open. the 1/19 edition of the years third major the standings gary woodland at the very top of the leaderboard, unusual place for
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him. justin rose, brooks koepka now four strokes back for the third u.s. open row. the final pairing teaser today 5:30 p.m. eastern on big fox, the one only jim gray joining us now, good to see you, sir. for any of us who play golf who watch gary yes say you left out some of the breaks that he had. >> is just incredible comment look that he could have been heading certainly for bogey, possibly double bogey and he chipped the ball and it was just incredible. gary woodland denies the first 54 lead in a major. if you look back at all of the majors that were played here, the five plus five have come from the group. if you go by percentages woodland looks become the fifth straight american to enact the national championship while justin rose would become the
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first englishman to have two having one in 2013 back in marion. >> will put the tee times up, tibor was pretty far behind and certainly a fan favorite as you pointed out. yesterday, as you look at gary woodlands, the first 54 holes lead and now in the u.s. open, what does the morning routine look like? have you been able to find out from his team at all how he's dealing with the mental stress? >> well he said yesterday after the round that he wanted to keep everything the same that he has done. he feels he knows how to win. he has won three majors on the tour. his best major championship finish was the type for six last year the pga. he is 0 for 20 knots of this the 30th attempt but look, they are also chasing him, everyone has to come to him. justin rose is just one stroke behind but if you look at the history of this and go back if you're more than four strokes behind it's almost impossible.
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no one has done in the past 20 years for more than four strokes behind in the final round. he said yesterday he feels he has to play the same game he has played that he knows how to win and if he keeps a consistency that he has he doesn't have to change anything that everybody chases him. >> was like he had another yesterday as well. certainly a great story, enjoy this as the sun is out now in pebble beach. we will check back with you over the coming days. >> and the sun will stay out. for the first time will have sunshine in carmel and at pebble beach and the wind will kick up 15 to 20 miles an hour, it could be a different golf course by the end of the day. >> he could make it pretty interesting. a story to cover, thank you so much. gillian: next, honoring those dads that keep our country safe. we will speak to one next.
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yes it is. you know, maybe you'd worry less if you got geico to help with your homeowners insurance. i didn't know geico could helps with homeowners insurance. yep, they've been doing it for years. what are you doing? big steve? thanks, man. there he is. get to know geico and see how much you could save on homeowners and renters insurance. since my dvt blood clot i was thinking... could there be another around the corner? or could it turn out differently? i wanted to help protect myself. my doctor recommended eliquis. eliquis is proven to treat and help prevent another dvt or pe blood clot... almost 98 percent of patients on eliquis didn't experience another. ...and eliquis has significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis is fda approved and has both. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve
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monitor their blood glucose every day. which means they have to stop. and stick their fingers. repeatedly. today, life-changing technology from abbott makes it possible to track glucose levels. without drawing a drop of blood, again and again. the most personal technology, is technology with the power to change your life. life. to the fullest. leland: happy father's day to all of you out there. we will take a moment to thank our fathers in a little bit but in the meantime i want to take
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a minute to honor military dads this father's day. not only what they do for the country but the balance of what many call two of the worlds toughest jobs. gillian: now joining us one of those very important military dads, every special man and his daughter. we appreciate you being here. >> thank you for having us. gillian: you guys look great! >> thank you. gillian: tells a little bit, we'll go to first, captain. tell us about your family, extended family, we understand you have five kids living at home with you right now but your family is actually a lot bigger than that. press yes. so me and my wife, we are foster parents so we have three of our own children through birth and then we have adopted our youngest son through foster care and them we regularly have placements and right now we currently have a child in our home and through the years we've had about over a dozen
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children and infants past our home. gillian: over a dozen, wow! leland: your wife is a part-time saint! >> she does love for all of us. gillian: do some of your foster children predate lila? >> we start out after all girl birth children were born. he started back about six years ago. my wife stays at home. gillian: you lived through getting to know all of them. what is it been like for you, lila? >> is been really special no like having relationships with them but it's kind of hard like seeing them go. gillian: saying goodbye when it is time to move on to another family? >> yes. leland: will have a couple of seconds left but what is the balance? it's one thing to be a dad and trying to raise kids is a hard enough job to begin with. but the issue -- i have heard.
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but raising me was a challenge. i guess the question is, what is it like, how does the deployment aspect of this that you are gone for summer months at a time add to the problems, how do you deal with it? >> i mean anytime you are away from the house, it is hard. my wife has to pick up a lot of extra slack when i'm not there. so we just regularly communicate as much as we can. even during deployments. and try to stay in touch but thankfully we have a lot of support both on the military side and with family to help us get through. leland: one can only imagine, face time has changed a lot. especially since the times of world war ii and letters going backand forth. captain , thank you for your service. lila, thank you for letting your dad out of the house to protect us all. gillian: happy father's day to both of you. >> thank you! gillian: a victory now for team usa with the women's world cup taking a 3- win.
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next is sweden on thursday. today we are wishing all of the work dads and leland out there very happy. [laughter] happy father's day. leland: do you know something i don't? gillian: an extra special message for you.take a look at some of our dads. leland: that's gillian and her dad. and that is grandpa, right? speaker that is my 102-year-old grandfather. i want to wish both of them a wonderful father day even though i will not see either of them. leland: this is dad on the links. gillian was part of the pants are. thank you have better fashion sense than dad. we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company,
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and everything i love. neither should you. tell your doctor to lower your ldl and reduce your risk with repatha®. pay no more than $5 per month with the repatha® copay card. i'm chris rising tensions between iran and the sq present. how real is the threat of war? >> the international community condemns aransas although the freedom of navigation and the targeting of innocent civilians. chris: the trump administration calls iran a nation of terror. placing the blame for those tanker attacks squarely onto ron. and the president calls out u.s. intelligence agencies after every port kim jong-un's murdered half-brother was a source for the cia. we have secretary state mike pompeo about all of this when he joins us
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