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tv   Hannity  FOX News  June 25, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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beautiful tokyo and the "two rooms" bar and grill. we are traveling to kyoto tomorrow so we will join you from there. back tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. eastern time. the sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and >> sean: happy wednesday morning. i love this, tucker in japan. hope you're having a great time. great coverage, thank you for being with us, welcomed us to be 28 tonight, it appears one of the world's most powerful companies is clearly hell-bent on stopping donald trump from winning in 2020, or anyone like him for ever winning in the future. it's all on tape. we have a full report coming up later, right here exclusively on this show. you do not want to miss this tape. first, we do have breaking news on multiple fronts in our quest for equal justice, and of course, to hold those who abuse power involved in incredible corruption accountable. as we turn our attention tonight
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first would you judicial watch, they have filed a brand-new freedom of information request with the fbi and former disgraced fbi director andrew mccabe, related to his book, which is filled with a deep state revisionist history, in my opinion. according to judicial watch, the fbi has been stonewalling, so far refusing to hand over documents relating to an apparent prepublication review requirement by the fbi and any book by mccabe. what secrets he didn't they want mccabe revealing? comey, strzok, page, they are the driving force behind this attempt to overthrow the results of the 2016 election after many tried to get ahead ahead of time. ever since, by the way, mccabe has been trying to rewrite history. remember, he is at the center of this apparent attempt now by many to undermine a duly elected president. he served as jim comey's right-hand man for years, at the very center of the fbi's
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witch hunt into so-called, not provable, forgo separate investigations, trump-russia collusion. remember, march 2018, he was fired from the fbi, why? for lion, leaking multiple times, under oath. i thought people got put in jail for that. i guess only if you're a republican. read that 2018, doj inspector general, that horowitz report, mccabe is mentioned a whopping 800 times, and not in a favorable way. he "lacked candor" -- in other words, he lied. i remember, there is so much more evidence we are not even begun to see yet, so much more information. the forthcoming horowitz ig report on fisa abuse, now he is interviewing christopher steele. we talked about six separate buckets, exculpatory material that will be released. gang of 8 material here the question is not if, it's just a matter of when. there is no stopping this at this point. i am told tonight, the biggest
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shoe to drop may be coming tomorrow. what i know is more than i can say, but i will be able to give you a sneak preview with john solomon. we will have more in my opening monologue in just a minute. first, joining us now with this rig breaking news is judicial watch president tom fitton. tom, let's talk about this request. great questions. how long are they stonewalling? and this might get to the heart -- what are they trying to hide? >> sean: yeah, it's been stonewalling for months. the same thing happened with comey's book, we sued and were trying to get documents for the prepublication review process for comey. look, the fbi is very secretive when it comes to text messages. if they don't want us to see text messages. if they don't want us to see obama's 302, the interview report of his interview by the fbi in the senate seat. when it comes to allowing comey and mccabe to publish competence as they gained as a result of their work at the fbi, it's a rubber stamp process.
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so we want to figure out why the double standard? secrecy in terms of the government accountability, but they're willing to let these guys who have records of corruption, as you point out, go out and say whatever they want about meetings with the president and things like that, that typically we would have to sue for under the freedom of information act, and we probably wouldn't get. >> sean: yeah. what is really important is the freedom of veneration -- last night, the american center for law and justice, what they discovered, my little birdies are telling me that we might get a lot more information as it relates to unmasking, surveillance, all of these things -- all the things we talked about almost from the beginning, march of 2017 peered what do you see on the horizon for you? >> you know, the question is, is is the fbi going to continue to stonewall documents about what andrew mccabe was texting about, what strzok and paige were texting about. and the fbi also has been forced by a court to to turn over email
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communications between strzok and page, they haven't been able to withhold those, those are coming out almost monthly. this scandal is only deepening because of new information we are learning as a result of the freedom of information act transparency law. congress is frozen because the house democrats are trying to protect their involvement in this most significant government corruption scandal in american history, so it is up to independent groups on the outside, and reporters, to figure out what really went on. and this is the way to do it through foia, and other reporting that john solomon and sara carter are doing. >> sean: thanks so much, tom fenton, judicial watch bear thanks for being with us, we re. we are continuing to lift the curtain on what we say is act two -- remember, the mueller report is over, the attorney general determined, and of course the mueller report determined, no collusion. no obstruction. it's done. he's done. they've had their time. fourth separate investigation, but the deep state reckoning, it has only begun for the current
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has come up, as we just mentioned, the american center for law and justice, yesterday providing the most damning evidence yet of the rush by klapper, dni, too, in the last weeks of the obama administration, totally, completely overhaul, buried in the incoming administration with something they would never burden themselves with, the entire intel sharing apparatus, which goes from three agencies sharing information -- oh, to 17? why? to undermine the incoming president. this was happening just days before donald trump's inauguration. approval of the attorney general, loretta lynch, they want to draw intelligence into as many hands inside the deep state as possible. why? clearly to make it harder to seek out the leakers, harder to trace the information, harder to find out who did what, when, and where? and the obama deep state cabal did not do this for eight years bear they would never want to do that for themselves.
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and the level of intensity, urgency, and decision to do this -- remember, this was barack obama's executive order, 12 trouble three, and the final moments, drastically expanding the sharing of this raw intel, signal intel, from three agencies to 17, just days before president trump is inaugurated. they were literally scrambling to get it done before -- we've got to get it done before january 20th. the day donald trump became president. using an executive order, as i said, 12333 -- well, as its basis, with no input from the incoming administration. of course, this just the latest evidence, a big piece of the puzzle, what is the biggest abuse of power, corruption scandal, and yes, abuse of the intelligence weapons that only 1% -- the 99 percent do incredible work every day to keep us safe from enemies, foreign and domestic, but they cannot try most powerful tools on the american people. fisa abuse, the dirty dossier,
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oh, a rigged investigation, clear crimes committed, clear obstruction of justice bear the use of secret informants abroad, unmasking, raw intelligence, all of this, leaking law intelligence, there was a 350% increase by obama officials just in the year 2016. why is that? it all now connect, inch by inch, we are moving closer and closer to what is going to be real accountability. a big news coming, possibly, likely as soon as tomorrow. it may be the biggest missing piece of the puzzle yet. i am told this will be a nexus that has been missing that is huge. and just breaking moments ago, chairman nadler and shipped announced a special counsel mueller will testify pursuant to a subpoena on july 17, 2019. we will have more of this in my monologue in just a minute, but first, joining us now with reaction to all of this is it "the hill"'s john solomon. i think we have a lot of the same friends.
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just guessing, you probably know a lot about what is very possibly going to break tomorrow. one, they let you get without revealing sources, not ready, but it is very clear is coming. it goes back -- if i or member correctly, to this show, and you and sara carter in march of 2017. >> that's exactly right. if you remember, that is when we began reporting on the market increase in the 2016 election in unmaskings by the obama administration, and eventually we learned that samantha power, the u.n. ambassador, was the unmasking in chief, making hundreds of request to take the names of americans that are supposed to be redacted intelligence reports, and on unmasking the names. tonight, have these documents and i'm going to prove, sean, these are the official emails samantha power, and what i can report is that samantha power has the same sort of anti-trump bias in her government emails that we have saw with pete strauch and lisa page at the fbi.
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they were investigating trump, and they were railing against him in their official government emails and text messages. i can tell you that samantha power and her colleagues were doing the same thing on the official state email system, and when you see her tomorrow, what she was saying about trump at the same time the unmaskings were going on, i'm sure it's going to trouble the american public. >> sean: let's go back to the american center for law and justice yesterday, their report. and get your reaction, how big a piece to the puzzle is that? because executive order 12333, again, this program, we saw this as a big issue in 2017. now that we have discovered a rigged investigation, we also saw an effort to use a phony russian dossier -- not verified -- to influence and election, leaked by intel people to influence the election, russian disinformation, as "the new york times" suspects, and then it went further in terms of being used as the bulk of information just by, not just
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on carter page, but the trump campaign, the trump transition, and then the trump presidency. you put all of that together, and now it takes on a whole new level of significance because why would you go in the final weeks of your presidency, sign an order that shares intel with 17 agencies, instead of three, and an urgency to do it for the incoming administration, rules you would never live under. >> it's remarkable pure think about this, the u.n. ambassador, who doesn't really have an intelligence operation, was unmasking all the time under obama, and then in the final days of the administration, after two years of the intelligence community raising concerns about who should have access to this information come after the obama administration went to the fisa court i belatedly disclose hundreds of violations just before the election, they make the decision that they are going to disseminate sensitive intelligence to more people -- not less people -- expand the universe of people who can gain it and potentially beat it at
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the beginning of the trump administration. that is the concern, and i think the documents jay sekulow's group got yesterday are significant find, they put into perspective this rushed effort to spread intelligence to people whose jobs that did not require it. >> sean: all right, thanks john solomon, investigative reporter, also vice president -- managing vice president of "the hill" beard also developing tonight -- it never ends -- the president continues to make clear to ron will be held accountable for any further aggression than provocation. it's not going to be tolerated. the day before use the words "they will be obliterated." take a look. >> you have a back-and-forth with iran this morning via tweet. what message do you want to sent to him? >> there is no message. i will tell you what the message is: when they are ready, they will have to let us know. when they are ready, they will let us know. very simple. >> negotiate? >> ready to do whatever. doesn't make any difference. whenever they are ready, i'm ready. it too bad this is happening, they are living badly right now.
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our country is not doing well economically at all. that can be changed very quickly, very easily. but have to get rid of the hostility from the leadership. >> sean: the president has been very clear, very consistent, as he said in the campaign, he does not believe in these foreign entanglements. he doesn't want boots on the ground, and he has shown a patience and perseverance -- remember, the military of iran got hit hard this weekend, and of course, all options as the president has set her on the table. but he understands it is important, imperative, that this country recalibrate how we fight wars. president clearly understands an american first foreign policy does mean avoiding unnecessary, endless boots on the ground conflicts. it does mean that america now must develop -- which is why he fought so hard to increase dramatically the defense department budget, this next generation of weaponry. sophisticated weaponry that will outpace any potential enemy,
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ever. it means continuing to be energy independent. think about this, the strait of hormuz has never been less important to the united states. we are energy independent because of the president's policies. for the first time in 75 years, we are now a net exporter of energy. wow, that's important. the straight of hormuz, strategically, prior to this, was the lifeblood of the world economy. not ours. also tonight, another big story we are following, because breaking tonight, we have some of the clearest evidence yet, efforts by the search giant to literally meddle in our election, to try and stop trump in 2020. an apparent whistle-blower inside of the company google has come forward, speaking to project veritas to expose just how dangerous this radical liberal silicon valley agenda really is. take a close look at all of this. shocking.
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>> donald trump won the election in 2016, the company did a complete 180. of what they thought was important. before they thought self self-expression was important, but now they are like, hey, there's a lot of hate, and because there is a lot of hate, misogyny, and racism, that is why donald trump was elected. so we need to fix that. we need to start policing our users because we don't want to have an outcome like that to happen again. >> sean: so think about this. we do have regulations about in-kind contributions. when you think of the massive amount of influence and power google has, and if they are going to use this power to favor one party over another -- it would be incalculable. in terms of the donation, the contribution to the dnc, this new crop of radical, extreme, socialist democrats. and it appears that google is literally training their algorithms to turn out more
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votes for democrats. little doubt they have the ability to mold voting behaviors in a major, massive way. google may be creating a far left filter to just try and steal an election. and just let that sink in for just a second, all of that power, because what is clear is just how powerful a tool google is. literally, over a trillion searches a year. project veritas' james o'keefe says more whistle-blowers are coming. he usually goes day one, day two, day three -- we kind of know how james o'keefe works. and we will continue to monitor the story. but first, joining us with reaction to other breaking news that we have, robert mueller has agreed to testify pursuant to a subpoena. fox news correspondent at large geraldo rivera, former secret service agent and fox news contributor dan bongino. a, i don't think we can go back to geraldo on tehran, because im so much that we may end up
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having a brawl the next time we see each other, which is not true. but in all seriousness, let's start with mueller. mueller was clear, the ag was clear, mueller's report on the issue of collusion, conspiracy -- that was the fourth time we heard no. now the democrats want a fifth bite at the apple. now they are harassing and abusing their power, they are harassing the office of the president. this isn't oversight, this is now try and harass the president time, and more importantly, the ag said that decision is determined by him, rod rosenstein, and even the office of legal counsel weighed in. no obstruction. so i guess the question here is, mueller has said -- i'm just going to tell you what is in the report again and again and again, so why? >> this may be a golden opportunity. number one, wyatt -- nadler is not really that bright, sean, he screwed this thing up from the start. from bringing in people from the nixon era who proceeded to
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humiliate themselves in front of congressional hearings, to asking hope hicks, calling her mrs. lewandowski. nadler has mediated himself, the democrats know it. but here's the key question, this is why it is going to blow up in their face. one republican, i'm sure, is going to ask mueller the key question: what exactly did you know the collusion fairy tale was a hoax? the answer, if mueller is honest, is the day i hired andrew weissmann, because andrew weissmann, sean, was briefed a year earlier, 2016, o- >> sean: 2016. his pitbull, number one guy one guy -- >> yes! >> sean: victory party. also licensed to lie, sidney powell's huge book, exposing all of his corruption, therefore the world to read, and i urge people to read it. geraldo, after the nine and a half minute -- well, robert mueller statement, that
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then attorney general barr any special counsel's office had to clean up badly, and i think frankly, the attorney general, three mueller a lifeline, because didn't remember what he said what he write it, or he doesn't know, which is even worse. why do i suspect -- this is not going to go well for him at all. >> it isn't. we are going back down memory lane. nadler and shift remind me of high school athletes, they graduated from high school, and now nobody recognizes them. they are offended that they are outside the mainstream of public consciousness now. nobody knows who they are or what they are doing. they have been forgotten, so they are desperate for attention, dragging back robert mueller. robert mueller has already told them, in no uncertain terms, that his testimony will stick exactly to the mother reported. it is there, all in writing, and people are truly interested in it, i'm interested in the conclusion to the conclusion said there is no collusion. that the president of the united states is not a traitor
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to the united states. the president of the united states is not a spy for vladimir putin. the president of the united states has been wrongly accused for two and a half years, had his administration just so bothered, so harassed by these political operatives -- >> sean: let me ask you this appeared to be gone yet he has managed to be successful. >> sean: let's imagine jim jordan, , and others have a chance to question mueller pair they want to know when he knew there was no collusion. you had a broad mandate, when did you have time for violations that are never invoked, and taxi medallions, and lone applications, and tax violations -- by the way, always pay your taxes, don't lie on loan applications, we've got it. but with the broad mandate, he didn't look at all into the russian dossier, with "the new york times" suspect was always russian disinformation?
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how does he answer, legitimately, that question? because i don't think there is any good answer to that questio question? >> nor is there a good answer -- i'm sorry, dan. go ahead. >> i just wanted to bring up this point. remember, mueller was hired in may 2017, sean. in july of 2017, horowitz turns over to mueller's team the peter strzok text. how does mueller continue his investigation at that point? notice what he does after that, mueller doesn't stop the investigation -- he doubled down. he raids paul manafort's house in the morning from he goes and picks up papadopoulos at the airport, houses fbi agents do it. mueller's investigation was a hoax from the beginning. the report is the same. >> sean: i got another question. geraldo, how does he possibly answer the question -- andrew weissmann, his pitbull, okay, he was at hillary's victory party. andrew weissmann is pitbull, licensed to live, talks about
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how he withheld exculpatory evidence, how tens of thousands of americans lost his job, lost 9-0 in the supreme court, sent executives that were innocent to jail, that was overturned by the fifth circuit, and also hired hillary's attorney at the clinton foundation, and they were all democrats appeared he couldn't find one republican? how is mueller going to answer that one? i don't think that is going to be very comfortable for robert mueller. >> how is he going to answer the question: how dare you ruin the lives of people like general michael flynn? how dare you -- >> sean: bingo. >> when there was no collusion with the russians, you stuck with this thing, you made these people work themselves into perjury traps, you slammed them with these procedural offenses, you wrecked their lives, you distracted the american people. i think that the price that this testimony will cost the democrats will be grievous to them. they will rue the day that nadler and schiff let their ambition get ahead of their
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common sense, their political science, and drag this man back into center stage of the american public. >> sean: now we know that flynn talks to the deputy fbi director, mccabe, because fbi guys -- he asked, do i need a lawyer? oh, no, you don't need a lawyer. okay. then comey is bragging, in his way, oh, i took full advantage of the chaos, something i would never do in the obama or bush administrations. i sent my guys in there, what, to screw a 33 year veteran who served in combat, this country? and then there is more to it -- >> and they did it in the white house! >> don't tell anybody what is going on. >> sean: they knew everything he said, and said you don't need a lawyer. and the fbi still didn't think he lied to him! but he got bankrupt, threatened his kid and his family, we will take your son down with you, and he fell on the sword like any
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good father would do. dan bongino, i know you would do it. geraldo would do it. i would do it. >> yeah, and sean, even worse, you look at peter strzok's taskses from the day lindsey graham asked about the unmasking of flynn, peter strzok and his texts to lisa page says hey, this unmasking thing is the incorrect narrative. sean, i ask you, what do you think he means by that? is it possible there was a fisa on flynn, too? i think that might be one of the next she was to drop, stay tuned for that one. >> sean: wait a minute, it was leaked intelligence on flynn, raw, leaked intelligence, and they told him no lawyer, bragged about setting him -- all right, i got to let you both go pure geraldo, thank you. dan bongino, thank you. now on the phone to react to this rigging news, there is a lot of it, good, mueller has agreed to testify in july 17. president's attorney,
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jay sekulow, and on with us last night. yea, i have a few questions for mueller that i think guys like jim jordan, mark meadows, and others would ask, why did he know there was no collusion? why did he have such a broad mandate to focus on violations, taxi medallions, lone applications, years and years and decades old tax issues? he knew about the dirty russian dossier, how does he answer the question about why he never, ever -- you know -- looked into that. i don't think there's a good answer for that. >> the first thing he needs to answer is his own conflicts of interest. he was interviewed for the fbi director's job, didn't get it, and becomes a special counsel the next day peered so that is one. as the president said, had a business dispute that was long-standing, so you have that one. and then you have -- it was interesting in the last panel, the discussion about
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peter strzok and lisa page. i've asked this question: what happened to the evidence that they gathered for over a year on this counterintelligence investigation? so the special counsel is going to have to answer that. what's interesting is bob mueller send my report is my testimony. and what is the report? the whole bases upon which this investigation began was concerns over collusion, conspiracy with the russians and the trump campaign. on what was the conclusion? there was no collusion, conspiracy with the trump campaign. that was the legal conclusion reached by bob mueller. as it relates to obstruction of justice, bill barr said so perfectly, correct, legally, no obstruction. so those are the two questions for the fact that bob mueller is going to testify, i don't think you are going to see anything different in his testimony then what is in his report. >> sean: but here's the problem, he multiple people --
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>> republicans have the right to ask questions -- hard questions -- about strzok and page. who gave conflicting testimony right now? who fired peter strzok? andrew mccabe said he did. bob mueller's office said he did. one of them did and one of them did not, so somebody is not telling the truth. we will find that out. that's number one. you put that in the context of everything, it will be an interesting hearing. i don't think the conclusion is going to change anything of what happens here, but people will hear from bob mueller. i don't think we will get anything different than the statement he made a couple weeks back, but he's going to answer some real questions, ones that have gone unanswered so far appeared to be when i nine and a half minutes press conferd god bless our media mob, considers a theorist, liars, holsters, because for a few hours they thought they had it all appeared wait a minute, mueller said the reason he couldn't consider
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indictment because of doj policy, and constitutional issues. and then a few hours later, there was a press release. it was from the attorney general barr, and it was from the special counsel's office, and basically said oh, never mind, we said just the opposite many, many times before. and i thought it was a great embarrassment to robert mueller -- and i will be honest, as i watched him, i got the feeling, watching back, he had neither read the statement, was stumbling over the statement, or did in the member what he said. >> here is why he was stumbling over that -- the whole report is incoherent. okay? legally incoherent, it lets be honest. a legal theory that was absurd, and obstruction was a theory out there, that was absurd. complicated by the fact -- we couldn't prove you innocent, therefore we are making allegations. that is not what the law is. everybody forgets the part where he did say, we are not saying
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the president committed a crime, because the president did not commit a crime, but we are not exonerating him, either. the job of the prosecutor is not due -- they did not, that is what is important here. my mother is going to have to testify that they did not. i can't imagine it's going to be any different than his report, but i'm going to say this again, a lot of questions that have to be asked here and have to be answered. let's just hope his testimony, will find out what that will be, but i don't expect it to be any different in this report peered at the end of the day, what the report finds: no conclusion collusion, conspiracy, however you want to phrase it. no obstruction. bill barr said with rod rosenstein that there is no obstruction of intent. a lot of the theories floated on by the media were, in my view, absurd, but at the end of the day, the case is closed, it's done, no testifying, he will have to answer questions -- and hard questions for him to answe. i've always wanted to know what
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happened to the evidence -- what happened to peter strzok's evidence that he gathered -- >> sean: by the way, jay, let me interrupt. remember, remember -- strzok and paige's phones to the manufacturer. >> how did peter strzok's phone, when it was turned into the special counsel's office, get wiped out, nobody kept a record of what was on it? how is that even possible? >> sean: mccabe is lying -- >> it's the same thing. this is absurd. in the real world, this is not supposed to happen peered how did bob mueller's office allow that to take place, that peter strzok come at that point was fired, put on a shelf, not catalog. and the whole issue was the message is going back and forth, so there is a lot that has to be answered, but there is another one. i can make a list of the hundred questions, and i'm sure the congressman can, as well, and will peered >> sean: i think you should write a column about
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how does he justify andrew weissmann and hillary's t turn out that way. only democrats -- >> you know about that, sean -- >> sean: atrocious history -- >> even with all of the staff he had -- listen, hang on a second gear the 2800 subpoenas, 500 witnesses, all of this, the basis on the investigation was what? collusion, conspiracy. and what did bob mueller conclude? there was none. even with those people. and i want to know the same thing -- when did you know this was not the case? it had to be early on, because even peter strzok said early on, there is no there there. that was peter strzok's words. of course, they can show that in his text messages anymore because they got the phone get wiped out when he left. >> sean: jay sekulow -- >> one of the phones to somebody else, because the federal government can't afford an iphone. >> sean: this is not going to work out the way they think, trust me. jay sekulow, counsel to the president, also big news
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yesterday. there is other news coming up tomorrow that i'm hearing about that is going to take when you were able to get from the freedom of information act request, the acl jay house, and take it even further. thank you for being with us. joining us now with more reaction, breaking news, mueller has agreed to testify in senate judiciary chairman lindsey graham here yesterday, by the way, you said the american people must be able to see it all. i agree, and you can make it happen, but it was your key question to the attorney general that i have played over and over again. i don't have time with all of the news. but i've played it probably between radio and tv, 60 times. and the question was crucial -- did robert mueller have the resources? did he have the time? then you said, do you care about possibly rigged investigation, fisa abuse? i will let you take it from
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there. >> bottom line, after all of the looking at all the time and money you spent, did trump collude with the russians? no. do you stand by report? did you turn it over to the attorney general about obstruction and the attorney general's that i did, and i'm no revisit it. so it is case closed for me. they can do anything they want to in the house, and i think it will blow up in their faces. >> sean: i think -- let's go back to some of the other questions peered how do you justify hiring hillary's attorney, only democrats? andrew weissmann? he couldn't find one republican? not one? >> it will blow up in their face. this will blow up in their face. the conclusion can't change, nobody could bring the obstruction case based on these facts. the president gave 1.4 million documents to mueller. his lawyer testified for 30 hours, he made everybody available to mueller that
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mueller wanted to talk to, and he submitted -- answered questions in writing. so this president did nothing to stop mueller from finding the truth. >> sean: if you go back, i mentioned to jay sekulow, the nine and a half minute press conference he did, and boy, the media was so quick, they thought conspiracy theory came back to life. it's serious and significant, though. i watched it, and number one, i knew he had said the opposite, waiting for people to catch up, and number two, when you think about -- i thought attorney general barr was being very gracious to the special counsel, threw him a lifeline. they released a joint statement basically saying i didn't mean what i said for nine and a half minutes. that ought to be very troublesome robert mueller. >> right. but i hope people understand what you're talking about, because when mueller came in to tell barr that he could decide, he could make the decision about
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obstruction, he was going to leave it to barr, and barr asked him point blank if it is because of the doj policy, you don't indict a sitting president? he said no, complicated facts and complicated law would not allow him to reach a conclusion. so after two years, x amount of dollars, fbi agents, if he couldn't decide on obstruction of justice, why do you think barr would reach a different conclusion, other than you can prosecute? >> sean: okay, so let me go -- i want to ask you specifically, because you were the one saying it last week. first of all, i'm very happy you pledged the american people, all of these issues, starting with the rigged investigation and hillary -- and by the way, i don't think the subpoenaed emails, clean the hard drive, i would say that is probably the best case of obstruction of justice i've ever seen, but it only matters if it is donald trump. but you are going to go back to the beginning. tell us what else, specifically, you are interested in that you will get to the bottom of.
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>> i want to see the horowitz report about, did the doj and fbi defraud the fisa court? did they lie to the fisa court to get a warrant against carter page? i want to find out why they open the counterintelligence investigation against trump, and i really do believe the only reason clinton wasn't charged with anything is because if you wanted her to win, how do you charge her with a crime in the middle of the campaign? >> sean: you know, these are really good questions, and i think the fisa abuse is the tip of the iceberg. but think about this, we already know what christopher steele is going to say, because he has already said it. so here's the big question. if so, in january of 2017, there is james comey in trump tower, saying we have this dossier, it is salacious, but it is unverified. january of '17, before he becomes president. october 2016, he signs the first fisa application that we now know, because of steele's testimony, i have no idea if any
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of it is true, under threat of perjury, that means it's an unverifiable document. at the top of a fisa warrant, i've been told, i've never seen one, it actually says "verified." have a question is, does that sound like a premeditated fraud on the fisa court judges? we know comey lied in october 2016, january 2017, but he had to my october 2016 because steele undercuts his story. >> what we know as mccabe said without the dossier, there would be no warrant against carter page. here is the question to ask anybody: is the dossier verified to this day? we now know, steele said i don't know if it's true or not. comey it tells the president in january of 2017, salacious, unverified, it's the same
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document they said was reliable and trustworthy in october. it doesn't add up. the dossier is a bunch of garbage. i can tell you without any doubt it's a bunch of garbage, and it was used to get a warrant against an american citizen, and somebody is going to be held accountable for that. >> sean: all right, senator graham, great to see you. by the way, trey gowdy said he is going to treat us. >> i will believe that when i see it. >> sean: only comes on the show when jason chaffetz is hosting. i'm a fan of trey gowdy, he's a great guy. >> i will believe it when i see it. [laughs] >> sean: i think we will all have to pay, because if hannity pays, there's going to be a controversy somewhere. i will be in trouble. all right, good to see you senator. joining us now, fox news contributor karl rove. i want to look at the magnitude of this through a political prism. we are going to watch this week, because we got a preview, speaking of south carolina, this weekend, of how radical, how
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extreme this a democratic -- a new democratic socialist party has become. but more importantly, they are all creating a circular firing squad. they are all trying to out- out--out socialist the next one and destroy their opponents. but you add to this, this all happened on biden-obama's watch. you add to this devin nunes warned about this in 2014, the russians would do this. they let it happen. if they did nothing to prevent it. >> well, that's not exactly right, because we have president obama saying that he was going to speak sharply to vladimir putin. i'm sure putin left that meeting with president obama shaking in his boots and asking himself why he ever even thought about trying to interfere in the u.s. elections? i'm obviously being a little sarcastic. president obama now says -- and his defenders -- now say the reason he did not issue a more public denunciation of the russian efforts was he didn't want to draw attention to it.
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but look, you are right, this happened on their watch. every indication is the government is going to take a firm steps to take prevent any foreign actors from interfering in the 2020 presidential election, and i'm sure every american thinks that is wise. >> sean: karl, you've been around politics a round or two, maybe longer. like me you see the democrats, so excited to have mueller, and i know jim jordan, mark meadows, i've read their closed-door questioning of many people involved in this, fairly -- to be honest -- brutal, and they have exposed a lot. i don't believe in the things we talked about, how does he justify hiring hillary's attorney? only democrats? how does he answer the question about the nine and a half minute press conference that he screwed up badly? how does he mention the question they have time for taxi medallions, loan applications,
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and taxes? a broad mandate that didn't include a dirty russian dossier paid for by the other candidate? >> well, and that is one way to look at it. i look at it from a different w? since the mueller report came out, two things have happened: the president's favorables and unfavorable to have stabilized, and the percentage of people who say they don't want to go through impeachment i don't think impeachment is justified has risen dramatically. so what has happened with the mueller report does the american people heard all about it, many went out and bought copies of it, many heard about it on cable tv and on the internet, for enormous amount of time, and what they did is they decided, essentially -- unless you are a hardcore democrat, unless you have already condemned donald trump not only to impeachment, but to prison, if you are a and ordinary american who doesn't have the strong partisan opinions, the mueller report lead you to say "it's over!" this is a problem for the democrats. the longer they talk about
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impeachment, the more they appear to be bent upon investigating the president and that alone, the more the american people are going to conclude, hey, those people don't have our best interests at heart. and think about this pair the number one message of the democrats today is investigate and impeach. number two message, growing up, getting close to it, is bernie sanders, elizabeth warren, democratic presidential candidate message of "free everything." free college, we're going to forgive your debts, guarantee basic income, thousand dollar check every month for every american, medicare for all, abolish or private insurance, have a government take it over -- i mean, free everything! guaranteed federal job from all of these lunatic proposals that we hear from the campaign trail. that is the second message. where is the winning message for the democrats in either one of those two things? mueller's appearance before the senate, before the house, excuse me. i'm sure republicans are going to ask him tough questions, and they deserve answers. the general impression is going
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to be, this is over. why do we keep talking about it? >> sean: by the way, he said all he is going to do is repeat that. >> absolutely. >> sean: do it accurately and not have the attorney general bail him out in a joint statement later. karl rove, good to see you, thanks for being with us. here with reaction to all of the breaking news -- yeah, robert mueller agreed to end testify. they change the special counsel law, ken starr is with us. you worked under a very different -- very different circumstances. you didn't have an option as it relates to testifying. in the issue, you are compelled to release this. interestingly, it was people like jerry nadler who didn't want your report to be public, although the law compelled it, and you took a lot of heat, if i recall correctly, for doing your job. >> that's exactly right, sean. for me, it was the longest day
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back in november of 1998. and i think bob mueller is going to now have a very similar experience, and it will be just as it were for me, from the democratic side of the aisle at the time, they are going to be -- as you have been saying -- and senator graham was saying -- they're going to be very hard questions for bob mueller. and that's right. it's the way it should be. i should have gone up to testify. and bob mueller should go up to testify. i greatly respect senator graham that it is over, but in light of the fact that some 70 democrats in the house of representatives are inclined for impeachment, this is a logical step. and i think it is going to be an important day for the american people. >> sean: well, i do think there are some very, very tough, difficult questions for bob mueller. i don't understand, for the life of me, without broad mandate, as i've been saying. decades-old -- by the way, everyone pay your taxes, don't
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lie on loan applications. got it. don't lie under oath. but how do you ignore a bought and paid for, russian dossier that was leaked to the american people by, we believe, the intelligence community, to impact the election. russian lies. whose own author says he doesn't know if any of it is true, which makes an unverifiable, but becomes the basis to spy on not only carter page, and there was other spying abroad, but the trump campaign, transition, and presidency. now that was all based on something that is unverifiable, based on the own author. how do they ignore that, sir? >> it's a very good question. and i think what bob mueller will say is look, this was handed to me, i didn't have occasion to go back and look at how it came to me. just hey, here is the job, now go do the job. supposed to
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as opposed to looking to the background of the job. these are fair questions you are raising, sean peered so many questions about about the why, the wherefore, you have raised some of them here tonight. i think it is going to be an important day. i keep going back to the concept of accountability, because when bob mueller held his press conference but didn't take questions, i think we should be concerned about that. why won't you respond to questions from the press? and now i think it is most appropriate that he goes over to the people's house, both sides of the aisle -- democrats, republicans -- wanted this. and i'm glad it is going to happen. >> sean: do you think he has a hard time answering the people he appointed? weissmann? how do you appoint hillary clinton's attorney? how do you only appoint democrats, no republicans?
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how does he answer that? >> yeah, and i've raised concerns about that, really, from the get-go. just very briefly, sean, when questions were raised back during my investigation that oh, you are a republican, i reached out specifically to the other side of the aisle because the appearance of fairness and evenhandedness in the administration, it's very, very important. so we brought in sam of water gained fame on the democratic side, brought in a deputy, registered democrat, voted for -- it's important to give the public assurances that what you are doing is fair. and it's evenhanded. that is, i think, a very important question for bob mueller to answer. >> sean: i was not impressed with the nine and a half minute disastrous press conference. this is not going to be with the democrats think, i can tell you that peered although
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bob mueller's people apparently come according to fox news, just breaking, the stuffy subpoena,y stick to the four corners of the report that he's not going to say i think. when we come back from our top story of the night. mueller will testify in front of congress, and much more. overed , prevagen has been shown in clinical trials to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. has been excellent.
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pam. i want to pick your legal brain. what are questions you would like to have answered? >> i've been a state prosecutor, and i've also been a special prosecutor assigned to cases. first of all, you don't basically kiss and tell. you don't do a report, and then come out and talk about it. his report is his report. and if he wanted to say, the president should have been charged, but for executive privilege, he should have said that. and i think bill barr would be a great person to come into say he told him otherwise. bill barr said mueller told him flat out that that was not why he was not charging the president, because of executive privilege. there was nothing there, no evidence of collusion. you know questions i would like to ask him? why did you keep all of these horrible investigators on the case after you found out that they were totally biased against
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the president of the united states? i would love to cross examine mueller. >> sean: i would like to know why he sent strzok and page's phones back to the manufacturer to get clean. by the way, did he fire them or did mccabe? because mccabe says it wasn't mueller. >> he needs to tread very carefully in this hearing, or he is going to be the subject of an investigation. >> sean: let me tell you something, i don't think bob barr can bail him out anymore than he already had, that was my read on it. >> sean, i've got a pretty simple question for robert mueller: why did you know there was no collusion, and why did the investigation go past that point? i think a lot of people want to know the answer. i would also call into question his political motivation. what motivated him to go out and give that press conference if it wasn't just to give more fuel to democrats for impeachment? his report had already been out in the public domain almost in full. the attorney general and then
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deputy attorney general rod rosenstein already came to the conclusion that there wasn't enough evidence for obstruction of justice, so what motivation did he have going out there, giving a press conference, when all of this information was already out there, if it wasn't politically motivated to help out the democrats? >> sean: that such a great point. lisa, thank you. great job, by the way, on "the five" peered >> thanks, sean. >> sean: pam is going to stay with us. breaking news from capitol hill. chad program, he's one of these geniuses. i've never been on the fox computers, because, well, i don't want to be on it. thankfully, i have people that help me with that. but he sends out the most detailed, fascinating, play-by-play, everything that goes on on capitol hill -- this guy is so checked into everything. i'm amazed at how well you do. there are a lot of lazy newspeople, they don't do anything.
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they don't even pick up the phone. they missed the biggest story in our lifetime, in my view. but you did a great job, i wanted to let our audience know that peered what do you got? >> thank you. right now, they're trying to process what this subpoena means that i'm told in the past couple of minutes from senior sources that this is a friendly subpoena -- in other words, this was before they went in. i'm told bob mueller would only appear if he was subpoenaed, and will stick to the four corners of his report. that is what he said in a statement several weeks ago when they released the report. of course, you can imagine democrats wanting to get at him and see if there was distance between him and william barr, the attorney general. the other question is what republicans are going to ask, they want to know the genesis of the steele dossier, the page and strzok text messages, one source said to me tonight, a republican source, how many informants were on the campaign, and what were they looking at? those are going to be key questions, and if bob mueller sticks to the four corners of that, republicans are going to say he doesn't look very credible.
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if this is from jerry nadler and adam schiff, they put this together, they said "americans have demanded to hear directly from the special counsel so they can understand what he and his team examined, and that is why they want him to appear. that's very key. and i will tell you, sean, we've had some explosive hearings on capitol hill before, you thing james comey testifying, jeff sessions, in the senate a couple of years ago. you think about michael cohen in february -- this will dwarf that peered the magnitude of this will be off the richter scale, sean. >> sean: you know, it's amazing. it's funny, i talk a lot, and i've actually played on radio and tv, pam, i've got a recording of real russia collusion. cowardly schiff talking to somebody he thinks is a russian to get dirt, to influence our elections. now, i understand the media mob wants to protect the cowardly schiff, but he has lied to the american people. he has repeatedly, he has pushed conspiracy theories and of the hoax.
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i've offered three hours of radio, one hour of tv, and he won't come on. i hear that, and i also see that hillary's russian dossier and robert mueller didn't bring up any of that. why? >> i think you answer the question. he had no intention of bringing that up because he and the people on his team were going after president trump, and they had nothing there. i think another major question that mueller is going to have to answer -- i think it is a huge mistake for him to come in and testify, by the way. he is going to have to answer, the second you knew that information about how the fisa warrant was obtained by false information -- and he knew it -- why did you not go back to that court? you have an obligation, as the chief prosecutor on this case, and ethical and moral obligation to take it back to the fisa court, and he did not do that, as far as we know. >> sean: how does he justify that, but he -- violations?
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that's a broad mandate. that's a pretty far stretch. the taxi medallions? okay, whatever. that was a broad mandate. but you are not going to deal with the russian dossier that is unverifiable, that was used to spy on, let's see, the opposition party, and then the transition, and then the president of the united states of america? how did he miss that little detail? >> oh, he didn't miss the detail, in my opinion, he just chose not to bring it out, because it hurt the case. and he is going to have to answer to all of that, and he is going to have some really, really tough questions -- >> sean: did you think when you wash them for the nine and a half minutes, i almost felt he had not read -- i felt he was reading it for the first time. he was stumbling all over the place. i didn't know what some of the author wrote, i didn't know what to think. what did you think? on their five seconds, ten seconds. >> i think he thought he was a smart man who is going to get away with it.
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i used to think he was an ethical man. after all of this, it's very, very sad, and it is sad how his career is perhaps going to end. >> sean: pam bondi, thank you. i had my suspicions from the get-go. we will never be the media mob. let not your heart be troubled, the news continues. laura ingraham, big news for you tonight, as >> laura: hannity, n his nine minute press conference where he was pretty defiant and he was not going to be saying anything else. that was its purity was going to retreat to private life. i guess, the subpoena flies and he has shown up. so this is going to be interesting. >> sean: to correct a few hours later, i mean a big correction. >> laura: yeah, well, he made the point at that press conference, i think for a reason. the question is, why the roll back in the initial viewpoint that the report stood on its own and you get