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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  June 27, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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had. fox has those numbers as do we the next few days, keep it right here on the fox news channel. rob: another wild debate tonight, joe biden, bernie sanders and kamala harris. jillian: "fox and friends" starts right now. have a great day. >> who here would abolish their private health insurance in favor of a government run plan? just a show of hands to start off with. >> healthcare is a basic human right and i will fight for basic human rights. >> there is three women up here that have fought pretty hard for a women's right to choose. >> for all citizens who feel they are falling behind the american dream isn't working for you the immigrants didn't do that to you. >> coming across the border not to criminalize violation to treat that as a civil violation. [speaking spanish] >> the united states isn't engaged.
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the taliban will grow. >> taliban was there long before we came in. they will be there long before we leave. >> what is the biggest threat to the united states give me one more answer before climate change. we have to confront this before this is tiewlt. >> climate change. >> climate change. >> secretary castro? >> china and climate change. >> brian: in that order. that was the final statement. hey by the way greatest threat, they only had one or two words to use. steve: congratulations. you are the big winner today in one minute and 8 seconds we were able to summarize two hours of the democratic debate over on msnb nbc last night. you had 12 -- this was the first of 12 debates. you had 10. the "new york post" headline is 1 10 left feet. do you, if you watched it, do you feel anybody stood
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out? this morning a lot of people are scratching their heads. brian: soflt candidates could have stood out but i don't speak spanish. i don't know what some of the translation really meant. it was kind of strange when beto o'rourke quickly pivoted to spanish and the lick on senator cory booker's face kind of said it all. lisa: a side eye, flight. brian: excuse me, what language are we going to be broadcasting in? steve: anyway, thank you for joining us. we have a lot of show to go. we start in miami. lisa: we have team confirm as you mentioned in miami. todd piro is talking to diners this morning to get their reaction. but we begin with griff jenkins who is live outside of the debate hall. griff? griff: good morning, lisa, brian, and steve 2020 has kicked off a year and a half to go. certainly not disappointing last night. a lot of these candidates introducing themselves to the country from tim ryan to john delaney, tulsi gabbard. elizabeth warren they know.
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she was front and center and stood out in a big way. what dominated the night was the issue of hurricane and wealth inequality. take a listen to what they had to say from the far left progressive standpoint take a listen. >> i'm with bernie for medicare for all. i spent a big chunk of my life studying why families go broke. the number one reason is the cost of healthcare. >> why are you defending private insurance? >> i think we should be the party that keeps what's working and fixes what's broken. >> moment that really stood out was the hand raising question in this case who is willing to abolish private insurance. warren and de blasio the only ones that raised their hands. it was a fight for time amongst all these candidates. pretty evenly broken up when you look at it. comes to talking about president trump and replacing him. it was about 19 minutes and 24 seconds by our account. president trump, by the way, on his way to japan, certainly watching.
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tweeting just this. saying boring. i think probably though the moment that stood out the most, brian, you alluded to it is on a question over taxes, beto o'rourke, for reasons unexplained broke into spanish. he was then later followed by cory booker and julian castro. take a listen. [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] >> by the way, julian castro the only hispanic on the stage admittedly says he is not terribly fliewngts in spanish. let me give you a quick look obviously tonight we have joe biden and bernie sanders. if you just look over my left shoulder you can see two biden supporters already here along the fence line getting ready no indication by the way whether biden, sanders, or any of the other 10 coming on the stage tonight will dust off their
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spanish. guys? steve: griff ended talking about joe biden. you know, as the frontrunner, the worry from the biden camp was that he would be attacked by his fellow democrats. his name did not come up once last night. but, as we saw in that graphic, donald trump came up a lot. lisa: i think it's a little bit early though to attack the front runner. a lot of these guys don't want to rock the boat too much. they weren't afraid to take shots at beto o'rourke. brian: especially julio castro. we both can't stand on this stage together. that's the first friction i saw when beto o'rourke was taken on by julian castro. beto o'rourke just shrunk. he had nothing to say and it was at the border. julian castro made it pretty clear on our town hall a couple weeks ago that he says we should decriminalize like we used to do in 1910 coming across the border illegally. beto o'rourke came out and
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said yeah we can do that but there are criminals coming across, shouldn't we have exceptions? he went out him on that beto o'rourke said this debate is really going awry. steve: julio castro said should change the law. lisa: we have sound bite on that. brian: you know everything. lisa: i'm informed. >> number one we end the ice policies and violating human rights. when people come to this country, they do not leave their human rights at the border. >> for all the american citizens out there who feel you are falling behind and feel the american dream is not working for you. the immigrants didn't do that to you. >> we would not build walls and put kids in cages. >> immigrants, they do not diminish america. they are america. >> what kind of country are we running here. we have got to tell the president that is not a sign of strength, mr. president. that is a sign of weakness. >> when somebody comes across the border, not to criminalize desperation. [applause]
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>> to treat that as a civil violation. steve: so they were talking about the humanitarian crisis on the border. but it's very clear, you know, if you were just turning in to see if anybody had a great idea how to fix it, you heard a lot of same things you heard in the past. and rather than kind of the hopeful vision for the future. it was focused more on the grim challenges that face the country, for instance. global warming, corporate power, things like that. lisa: and on the debate around immigration the thing that was lacking was the word illegal. when we are talking about these border crossings we are not talking about imgramght grants who came to the country lawfully. we are talking about illegal immigrants taking advantage of the system. you have julian castro straight out advocating for no borders. advocating for decriminalizing illegal immigration. to me what's the point of being a sovereign nation if we don't have borders. brian: writing big checks to central american countries. no borders.
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trace our ancestors back to that 1910 or 1810 or 1710. we know most of us have relatives born outside the country. so no one is anti-immigrant here. we get it. it's the way they are doing it. it's diminishing those actually waiting in line. actually diminishing people doing it the right way. diminishing those green cards hoping for the right to become citizens. steve: right. brian: basically, when you are sitting congress men and women and done nothing for except for call the problem at our border a hoax or a made-up crisis in an effort to get votes or donald trump trying to vilify illegals or hispanics and then have a crisis you can't deny. forgetting full-time job is to solve this. lisa: brian, as you mentioned, fundamentally unfair to immigrants who came here the right way, who waited in line. steve: that's right. lisa: who did it fair and square. fundamentally unfair to those people.
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steve: john paul who are ritz writes in this morning's "new york post" democrats spent far more time how they would help illegal immigrants, your point, how they would help the voters they need most to win over the white working class voters owho pulled the lever for trump in 2016. right now the economy is doing very well. if you are running against an economy that is doing really well, how do you do that? here is what they said last night. >> who is this economy really working for? when you have got an economy that does great for those with money and isn't doing great for everyone else, that is corruption pure and simple. we need to call it out. we need to attack it head on. and we need to make structural change. >> donald trump just sits in the white house and gloats. >> this is supposed to be the party of working people. yes, we are suppose you had to be for 70% tax rate on the wealthy. yes we are supposed to be for free college, free public college.
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>> this economy has got to work for everyone. and right now we know that it isn't. >> this is actually an economy that is hurting small businesses and not allowing them to compete. brian: small businesses have been slammed by obamacare. and healthcare which we didn't discuss yet. healthcare, medicare for all or obamacare, you know, joe biden tweeted out or his camp did, obamacare is the way to go. let's make it better. basically everyone on that stage says healthcare is not working. basically criticizing barack obama because famously john mccain's thumbs down says obamacare stays in play. also what you pointed out we just heard impossible to have an economy that helps 320 million people but have you got to help the greatest amount possible. even though the president is a billionaire, he represents blue collar america. that's how he got elected. and it's tough to say that he has ignored them because everything that he does is really for them. but can you imagine if we had 70% tax rate on the most successful in our country?
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what are they going to invest to grow jobs and build an economy to employ people? steve: it's a powerful message. brian: take 7 out of $10. steve: a let of people who think that's fair. lisa: whether you have a strong economy, it's a lot mormore difficult to. if the economy wasn't doing so strong easier to say we need a change in leadership. we need to change the trajectory is headed on. when the economy is strong, it's tough. i think we saw that in the arguments the democratic candidates made last night about the economy. i don't think they are very strong. brian: john delaney when he came out early on i talked to hospitals and i asked hospitals how would you feel about being fully funded by medicare if it's medicare for all. we would all shut our doors there is a businessman. is he not going to get the nomination or highly unlikely, way out on the left. probably not going to qualify for the next one.
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the only one who actually employs people on that stage. lives his great points. steve: he had one other great point to talk about. that was the first mention of russia came up about 100 minutes in. you know, you watch some of the channels you would think that's the biggest, most pressing issue in this country. it came up 100 minutes into the two hour debate. john delaney was asked about the president and his situation regarding impeachment. and john delaney, said you know what? i go out and about that's not anything that people are interested in so clearly that's what he thought. what did you think watching the debate last night over on the nbc properties? was there somebody who really caught your eye? was there a viral moment? was a big moment that stood out? for donald trump who was in route to tokyo he simply tweeted boring. what did you think? friends@foxnews.com also on facebook. brian: that's just one of 12. and keep in mind the qualifications get stricter and stricter. excellent changes we saw the
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last of a few of those people on the stage last night. lisa: do you know who is not boring? jillian mele. jillian: good morning. get you caught up on some of the stories we are following. we begin with a fox news alert. a flight bound for new jersey makes an emergency landing for a bomb threat. the air india plane diverted to london after taking off in mumbai. air force typhoon fighter jets. unclear if the investigators found anything suspicious on board. just moments ago london's airport tweeting it's back open. to another alert moments ago. president trump landing in japan for the g-20 economic summit. is he expected to make with chinese president jinping on saturday. the "wall street journal" reports president xi plans to present president trump with terms for settling the ongoing trade war and asked for the u.s. to lift punitive tariffs. president trump is reportedly ready to sign a trade truce end ago a tense economic standoff. we will keep you updated on
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that. for now overnight lawyers ask a federal judge for emergency action at border facilities. they want immediate inspections and access to doctors at shelters housing migrant children. senator elizabeth warren and actress milano were turned away from visiting one of those centers in olmsted, florida. send revised version of funding bill back to the senate ahead of summer recess. lara trump is slamming a waitress who spit on her husband at a bar in chicago. we told you about the story. she says it wouldn't have happened if eric trump was a drawing the. >> unprovoked, this woman came up to him, literally spit in his face and had some really nasty things to say to him. he played it so calm and so cool. he did not press charges against this woman, which i think a lot of people would have done. i can't imagine this ever happening to chelsea clinton to sasha and maliyah obama. this is disgusting.
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jillian: that waitress is on leave from her job. steve: she is on leave because the management said we didn't see her do it. brian: unbelievable didn't see her do it. lisa: a shame that politics has come to that these days. brian: spitting at family members? yeah, i would say. so. steve: on this thursday morning one of the most talked about moments from last night. [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] lisa: lee carter is next on why that moment could backfire big time for one of those candidates. stay with us. ♪ we're not going to take it ♪ no, we ain't going to take it ♪ we're not going to take it anymore ♪
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hey! i live on my own now! i've got xfinity, because i like to live life in the fast lane. unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited...
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anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. brian: making a pitch to voters in the first primary debate. lisa: here to break it all down partner and lee carter. one thing i thought was
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really interesting was on the issue of immigration. you really saw the diverging opinions and ideas on the issue between what president trump has presented and what democrats have presented. i want you to take a listen to this and then i want to hear your thoughts on what you heard last night on immigration. listen to this. >> i would sign an executive order that would get rid of trump's zero tolerance policy the remain in mexico policy and the metering policy, free dreamers forever for from any fear of deportation by making them u.s. citizens here in this country. >> on day one i will make sure that number one we end the ice policies and the customs and border policies that are violating the human rights. brian: right. we should stop throwing out criminals that have overstayed their visas as well as committed crimes. democrats like that? >> democrats absolutely like that. the thing we have to remember though, as much as they are talking about immigration. immigration is not one of the top five issues to democrats. the top issues there are healthcare, education, the
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environment, immigration is in the top of mind and you wouldn't know that based on the debate. the thing we have to keep in mind though is that most people want stronger border security. 75% of americans want stronger border security. so democrats have to be really careful how they frame that what they really should be focused on is more humane treatment of those immigrants that are coming. in because 80% of americans want to see that i think that's what you geraldo cory booker talk about and beto talk about and we will be hearing more and more about that. brian: president trump understands he has to get the hispanic vote. the more he gets the easier his win would be. democrats, without it they don't get the nomination let alone the victory. this is how they planned on attacking it, obviously. listen. [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish. >> [speaking spanish]
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brian: right. so let's speak spanish. is that pandering or effective? >> you know, i think what's important to remember here is that there is 20 democrats running for president right now. the hispanic vote is going to be incredibly important to whichever democrat wins here. you have to take a look at this and say who is going to be the most authentic candidate. lisa: does it appear authentic. >> that's exactly authenticity is the issue there. the one being least authentic is beto and most authentic is castro. is it going to work? i'm thought so sure. are we going to see it tonight? certainly mayor pete could go out there. he speaks six languages fluently. i'm not sure he is going to use that same strategy. brian: i don't think so. when beto o'rourke did it came out of left field. started speaking and doing instant simultaneous translation. lisa: also not getting
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transaction in the polls. >> i know. did you see the people of cory booker's face when beto sorted doing it. that was the collective reaction of people watching at home. brian: lee carter thanks so much. we will talk to you in a little while. more "fox & friends" in a moment. >> thank you. i wanted more from
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brian: american killed in shark attack. watching whewatching when when n three sharks tore her arm off. they tried to warn her but it was too late. dominican republic, whoever heard that before. khalid adkins was forced off his flight when he was coming home earlier this week he died later in dominican hospital. his cause of death is unclear. at least 13 americans have now died in the dominican republic since last summer. steve? steve: all right, brian,
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thanks. what is the biggest threat facing the united states right now? well, here is what 10 democratic hopefuls had to say last night? >> the biggest geopolitical challenge is china but the biggest geopolitical threat remains nuclear weapons. >> the biggest threat to the security of the united states is donald trump. >> the greatest threat we face is that we are at a greater threat of nuclear war china. major threat light now what's going on in the middle east with iran. >> china and climate change. >> nuclear proliferation and climate change. >> china without a question. our existential threat is climate change. >> many different answers but are their concerns really in line with the value of american voters. here to debate america first actions communication director kelly savage far left and capri cafaro. >> good morning. >> kelly, they were all over the place on that. >> yeah. i don't think any american in middle america can take
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seriously that climate change is the biggest threat geopolitical threat to us. donald trump, are you kidding me? when are these candidates going to get serious? there was some on china. now over in japan with the g-20. and possibly negotiate a deal with president xi because he recognizes as well that china is the biggest geopolitical threat in the world right now. steve: capri? >> i think what we are seeing here is the classic case of being in the middle of a primary. steve: at the beginning. >> at the beginning you see whether it's democrats or republicans people veering further to the left and further to the right. those keeping their eye on the prides understanding that ultimately you need to win a general elections did focus on china. and then, you know, there are people trying to score technical points with progressives focusing on things like climate change or name checking donald trump. steve: donald trump really kind of changed the metric when it comes to debates because in 2016 so many people tuned in because did
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you not know what he was going to say. >> right. steve: there were so many sound bites the next day after the debates, kelly, with donald trump whereas this it didn't seem like there were many viral or break out moments. >> donald trump is not a career politician most everyone on that stage is they are rehear hearsed. they are practiced. talking points they are going to stick. to say the president of the united states does his off the cuff. he says how it is. can you imagine any one of those guys on stage i-on-one with donald trump and the, you know, the wattage that he has on stage? i just don't see a matchup there at all. steve: that's a good point. >> one thing i would say is that politics is not supposed to be entertainment. yes while it is supposed to be engaming. steve: that last nift was a tv show. >> it was not particularly energizing. but i'm a policy person. what i like to see is detail. detail on open borders. details on climate change and medicare for all. so far left. so out of touch. >> we are dealing with the
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democratic primaries. the people that i paid attention to were people like john delaney. >> i don't think the moderators paid much attention to him last night. >> those people get solution oriented things. tim ryan. >> he will never win the nomination. >> we need to focus again. keep our eye on the prize and to beat donald trump you can't do it from the far left. >> that's right. steve: we are going to get up and go over by the big board and bring these score cards because we are going to actually grade last night's candidates regarding how they did. and as we take a look, ladies come right on over here. >> a, b, c. steve: start over there on the far left. we have mayor de blasio, what grade do you give him, ladies? he came out swinging? >> i will give him a b because he was unlikeable but wasn't as unlikeable as he normally is. steve: okay. capri? >> this is a tough one. i mean, i know too much
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about bill de blasio. i can't go higher than a c. steve give de blasio a d if you had one. >> no. to your point he did better than i had expected. and he did give some details but i'm not a fan. steve: meanwhile go a little faster this time. next to him tim ryan from ohio? >> he is my member of congress. you know, i think he knocked it out of the park when it came to bringing it to the democratic party but he struggled on some. >> he fact based a lot of the progressives there. steve: huljuly january castro. >> open borders, i'm sorry. >> he went to standard the same time as me but that's not going to give him a vote from me. steve: sound bites getting a lot of play mixing it one beto. >> is he getting a lot of attention but you know how i feel about beto. steve: when beto started speaking spanish last night,. >> he also spoke spanish.
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i'm not sure if they were running for the president of the united states or the president of mexico. >> technical points with progressives. not a huge fan but in his case he did what he needed to do. is it. steve: center square elizabeth warren. >> thats with supposed to be elizabeth warren's. >> she was supposed to be a fadeout she faded. steve: beto next to her. and you had said early you would give him an f. >> does he have any policy proposals or solutions or details on anything? >> yeah. >> and then we amy klobuchar? >> she was trying to be reasonable. >> b plus. steve: you guys are getting long on this. >> she was my favorite of the night outside of tim ryan. >> in the red jacket we have tulsi gabbard? >> tulsi? she came across as very likeable and practical. and even though her assad stuff is out of touch. >> yeah. a lot of people that i spoke to last night really liked tulsi gabbard. didn't necessarily know
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about came across. >> once her record is exposed she is not going to go very far. steve: guy who looks like he is pointing at me is governor jay instantly. >> i'm sorry you can't run a presidential campaign on climate change, climate change, climate change. >> he at least as a governor had some. i wahe was able to pass public option for healthcare. inhe actually did something that was good. steve: final candidate? >> john delaney. >> john delaney you almost forgot him so did the moderators last night. >> >> i like john delaney. >> he had specifics. he was reasonable. unfortunately he doesn't have a shot. i thought he did a very good job as somebody that nobody knows. steve: we talked about this earlier when asked about russia and all that stuff and impeachment. john delaney said you know when i'm out and about. >> that's all people are talking about. he is right about that. and he was focused on real solutions and not fix what's
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not broken. steve: it looks like you were watching the same show. >> quality control this morning on "fox & friends." steve: thank you very much. all right. meanwhile the democrats, we have been talking about them came out swinging against the trump economy last night. >> who is this economy really working for? >> we know that not everyone is sharing in this prosperity. steve: well, stuart varney says that is totally unfair. he is here to explain why next. plus, we're going to check in with todd piro. is he talking to voters in florida about what they saw on the stage of miami. ♪ i just want to bang on the drum all day ♪ the decision was made -- we were making a move. we had to. we knew that if we came in too high, it would cost us big time. we had to stay low.
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>> who is this economy really working for? >> we know not everyone is sharing in this prosperity. >> this economy has got to work for everyone. and right now we know that it isn't. >> this is actually an economy that is hurting small businesses and not allowing them to compete. lisa: welcome back. 10 democratic hopefuls taking the stage to use first debate to rail against the trump economy. brian: here to react is stuart varney host of varney and company fox business network see it 9 to noon. stuart, it's not unusual to attack a sitting president. but maybe it is unusual to attack his greatest strength. >> yes. how do you attack prosperity? how do you campaign against prosperity? this is tailor. we have got to change. this the answer is on the stage last night the democrat candidates attacked business. they attacked the rich. and they called trump's economy unfair, that people are being left out of it. can you see on the stage last night this gradual, actually quite a sharp drift
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to the socialist left. they want a give away, a free for all. they want to give education give healthcare because capitalism won't give it to you. lisa: stuart the argument democratic candidates were making. trump economy only benefited the rich. it hasn't benefited the average american. is that the case? >> absolute nonsense. we have wages rising best rate 10 years. steve: 3%. >> lowest unemployment rate in history. brian: 3.6. >> thank you very much for the side commentary. you are right. this economy has helped everyone, everyone. but if one person earns more than another, that's unfair. can't have that. brian: the line i thought about you with this segment when bill de blasio says we have plenty of money in this country in the wrong hands. >> just take it off people. brian: what does he mean?
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>> take it off of them that's what he means. capitalism. steve: so it's the rich. >> soak the rich. take it off of them. lisa: 70% tax rate. >> bill de blasio supported a 70% tax rate. lisa: what would that do to the economy? >> not good. steve: not only did they find it challenging to run against a prospering economy. then again, what are they going to do about healthcare? will they abolish private healthcare which a lot of americans love because you love the company that you are company has rather than something government operated. here is a little montage about what they had to say regarding medicare for all. >> who here would abolish their private health insurance in favor of a government run plan? just a show of hands to start off with. [applause] >> so, yes, i'm with bernie on medicare for all. let me tell you why. >> why are you defending private insurance? >> we have got to have access for everyone. >> wait a minute.
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can you imagine saying to 150 million americans you have got private health insurance, you are going to lose it. we are taking it off you. you are going to have to have your hurricane from the hea expensive bureaucratic system. that's a political nonstarter in my opinion. steve: quality. that's what people worry about. >> how about the cost? people are willing to pay for good quality healthcare but it's got to be good and can't be too expensive. >> and cost? where is the money coming from? medicare for all would cost about 1 trillion. 1.3 trillion per year. where do you get it? brian: john delaney had that great comment i talked to hospitals what would it be like being reimbursed by medicare only? >> he said we would have to shut our doors. they need a supplemental with medicare. >> the reimbursement for medicare patients to doctors and hospitals is below market. if everybody went to medicare for all, you are
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right, some hospitals would have to shut their doors. lisa: that's where the breakdown in polling comes when people find out increase wait times. decrease quality of care. people stop liking the idea so much. >> can you imagine the government come along you have private health insurance 150 million people you are losing it. we are taking it off you. we are going to provide that. lisa: they are trying to make that happen. brian: president de blasio would make that happen. >> stop using that word. steve: meanwhile go down to the versailles restaurant in miami where todd piro is talking to some of the people. todd, we have been talking about our points of view what was said last night on the stage in miami. what do the voters have to say? todd: steve, you said it better than i could. you did a perfect set up let's begin with anna, a business owner. no party affiliation. she really is looking for the candidate she is going to vote for in 20206789 what did you think of the debates? >> no surprises. everybody was predictable.
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>> now, you said cory booker was your winner. your loser was elizabeth warren. why do you say that? >> because i think he articulated his points a lot better. and for her i think she missed an opportunity to really shine. she is a frontrunner right now amongst that group anyway. so she had an opportunity and i think she missed it. todd: thank you so very much. i'm going to reach over here chief information officer, republican. you agree with the president when he called the debates? >> in a word boring. todd: all right. >> i barely managed to stay awake. todd: you also agreed cory booker was the winner. your loser was beto. what did you think of him speaking spanish. >> i think he was pandering the fact he was in miami pandering to the hispanic community. it didn't go well to me. todd: don't turn your back to the camera, first rule in stage and screen. chief medical officer at local health centers. you say you like the fact that they discussed climate
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change but as a doctor that talk of single payer worried you, why? >> i find single payer to be anticompetitive and eliminate a lot of the health plans which people enjoy. what's necessary to extend coverage for those who don't have insurance which is about 75 to 150 million americans. todd: that's it for now. send it back to new york. steve: a lot of points of view. thank you very much for that. brian: jillian mele prom missioned to do the news all morning long. and so far she has kept her promise. jillian: overnight police searching a home in connection with to the missing utah college student. detectives won't say if they found any evidence or if anyone is under arrest. mckenzie lueck took annual iewb attorney a park. the last person to have contact her is cooperating
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with police. a man jumps out of a car during a high speed chase. during this video see the driver in a stolen car running a red light and losing control and hitting a streetlight. he then sprints through a busy intersection in louisiana trying to run from police. two people are under arrest. an american flag mural that stood in phoenix for years defaced with graffiti. spraying anti-trump and anti-trump ice messages on the flag. unclear who did it but a lot of neighbors are upset and angry. volunteers offering to repaints the mural. o.j. simpson tweeting about the democratic debate even though as a felon in nevada he can't vote. >> waiting to watch this debate to hear a bunch of people who think they are capable of running our country. it should be interesting to be honest. i don't know most of these guys. >> simpson connecticuting concls
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video. brian: he has been in prison how would he know these guys? they don't have cable in prison do they? steve: sure they do. absolutely. lisa: was that a good transition? brian: janice, do they have cable or television in prison? janice: why are we going there? brian: because o.j. was there. janice: i might have been arrested? just kidding. you can read about that in mostly sunny. i'm kidding. hi, what's your name? >> haven. janice: where are you from? >> sure. >> do you want to do weather with me? current conditions right now. >> mostly sunny and 73. janice: that's amazing. congratulations it's her birthday today. there are the temperatures right on the money. 72 here i will say it's 73 on fox square. and look at the heat the summertime is here. 90's for many of these big cities for the next couple of day us. and with the heat indices feel warmer than that real quick the potential for strong storms across the northern plains and midwest where we could see hail, damaging winds and isolated
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tornadoes. keep you up to date. thank you for coming out 6:30 in the morning. wave to my friends inside. there is lisa and brian and steve. i don't think any of them have been in jail. that could be up for discussion. brian: hour of a holding tank. steve: thanks, j.d. meanwhile, are you a citizen of the united states? it's a simple question. should it be on the census in the supreme court expected to hand down that decision today. the judge with a preview. and here is a preview of the judge. ♪ anything can happen ♪ anything could happen ♪ anything could happen ♪
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jillian: good morning, welcome back. isis fighters in nicaragua possibly on their way to the u.s. police arrested the four men trying to illegally enter the country from costa rica. two from egypt and two from iraq. they have all been deported back to costa rica. isis recruiter who faced life in prison gets just 48 months behind bars. prosecutors say the new jersey woman secretly helped the terror group while she was supposed to be acting as an informant for the feds as part of an earlier plea deal. she called herself amnutella a tactic to appeal to children. brian: what does it take to get life in prison? steve: meanwhile, jillian, democratic hopefuls posed with a potential scenario about supreme court if they win the white house. listen to this. >> we talked about the supreme court. do you have a plan to deal with mitch mcconnell, if you don't beat him in the senate? >> short of the democratic majority in the senate, you
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better understand, the fight still goes on. it starts in the white house. and it means that everybody we energize in 2020 stays on the front lines come january 2021. brian: this is unbelievable because she never answered the question. judge napolitano is here. he watched the debates. he has cable. he is also host of liberty file on fox nation. judge, she is going to pack the supreme court. you know that. >> look, if she becomes president, i think highly, highly unlikely, she will have the right and the duty to fill a vacancy on the supreme court. and if she becomes president and the republicans control the senate, she will have a battle on her hands. she just says she is prepared to wage that battle like ronald reagan did. steve: she has a plan. >> going to the people and having them put pressure on the senators. brian: she had no answer by the way. >> it wasn't a precise answer but it was enough of an answer. >> i will fight? >> right. i guess to arouse her base. i can't second guess her. i don't want to get into the
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woman's head. i don't think she is going to be the president of the united states. but, if she is, she will choose the next -- fill the next vacancy. steve: judge, just remember how much donald trump's voters were emphasized by i will appoint supreme court justices that align with your values. >> when trump did that, it helped him enormously. steve: of course. >> it also showed an understanding of the place of the supreme court in the federal government and in our lives and it resonated well. and unlike senator warren, he was not afraid to say. these are not litmus tests but here is what i'm looking for. he used one word and resonated so well scalia. lisa: onscalia.his of the litmus test was roe v. wade. listen to. >> this it's not enough for us to expect the court to protect us. 47 years ago roe v. wade was decided and we have all looked to the courts all that time as state after state has undermined roe.
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put in exceptions, has come right up to the edge of taking away protection. we now have an america where most people support roe v. wade. we need to make that federal law. lisa: judge, we have seen states like alabama pass laws in order to try to push this issue at the supreme court. judge: right. lisa: what's the likelihood of that? >> the likelihood of roe v. wade being enacted into legislation if thee she becomes put and if the democrats control congress, she will probably attempt to do that. lisa: what's the likelihood of it being overturned? >> i think the likelihood of roe v. wade being overturned by the president supreme court? good. either overturned or narrowed a little bit. alabama and missouri legislations were intended to do that if they make their way to the supreme court. if, they will force the supreme court to address it one way or another. because right now, abortion is illegal in alabama and legal up to the moment of birth, sadly, right here.
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steve: speaking of the supreme court, they are waiting until last day for a bunch of decisions. >> oh boy. steve: including the big one including the census. >> i have been so wrong on this. i have been telling kilmeade each day the census opinion is coming today. guess what? it's coming today. brian: is it coming today? >> today is the last day. brian: significance is should we ask you citizenship question are you a citizen, should that be a box to check on the census? >> two significant aspects. county government ask? must you answer. i think the supreme court is going to deal with both of those around 10:00 this morning. i think it's going to be -- brian: why do we care? >> it's going to be very contentious. we care because if the question is on there and people answer it honestly and accurately it, will help government understand where people live and how to allocate resources. if the question is not on there, the government will not know where people live and how to allocate resources. lisa: "yes" or "no," would this be controversial if it wasn't president trump calling for this?
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>> i think it will be controversial either way. because this hasn't been on the census form. steve: for a while. >> census people come to my house how many toilets do you have? forget about it. brian: you tell the butler and tell those people to get out of here. i'm judge napolitano. >> i say go to massapequa. brian: i don't know why you say massapequa because i might live there or might not. give up my street address. >> one of those towns. [laughter] lisa: best laugh ever. steve: 6:56 in new york city. a big final two hours ahead as rerecap last night's debate. tom homan is going to be with us. judge napolitano is leaving. newt gingrich is here and senator marco rubio all here live. brian: yeah. i can't wait for the judge to leave ♪ ♪ i switched to liberty mutual,
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>> the biggest threat to the security of the united states is donald trump. >> do you have a plan to deal with mitch mcconnell? >> i do. >> if you want to beat mitch mcconnell, this better be a working class party. if you want to go in kentucky and take his rear end out. >> the democratic party would stop acting like the party of the elites and be the party of the working people again and go into states including red states. >> we must begin impeachment now so we have the facts and the truth and we follow them as far as they go and as high up as they reach and save this democracy. >> kitchen table, pocketbook issues are not what most americans care about. they never ask about the mueller report. they never ask about it. >> on january 20th, 2021, we will say adios to donald trump. ♪ ♪ steve: okay. and with that we saw 10
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candidates at the first of 12 democratic debates in the race to the white house is now officially on. half of the democratic field squaring off in miami last night trying to set themselves apart before round two tonight. brian: absolutely. far left talking points and attacking, you saw a lot of that and attacking president trump also part of it. that dominated the stage early and often. lisa: we have team coverage in miami. todd piro is talking to diners this morning to get their reaction. but we begin with griff jenkins live outside of debate hall. griff? griff: good morning, lisa, brian and steve. dom nateed by get to know you. you got john delaney, tim ryan, tulsi gabbard. so there was a chance for them to get to know them. the frontrunner was senator elizabeth warren. she stood out in a big way. what dominated in conversationwise was talk of a government run healthcare and economy that they all perceived to be favoring the
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rich and thousand pay for college. take a listen. >> i'm with bernie on medicare for all. >> why are you defending private insurance? >> it is not right the ceo of mcdonald's makes 2100 times than those slinging hash at mcdonalds. >> make community college free. >> the thing that stood out most on that was the obligatory hand raising question n case who is willing to abolish their private insurance. only elizabeth warren and bill de blasio raised their hands. let me tell you another moment that really stood out. it was over a tax question. beto o'rourke a former congressman for reasons unexplained just broke out to spanish. he was then followed by cory booker and julian castro. watch this. [speaking spanish] >> [speaking spanish]
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griff: it was a fight for time evenly split tulsi gabbard's sister believes elizabeth warren got most of the time. if you look over my left shoulder here can you see biden's supporters have already turned out here. they have been here since early this morning. i asked them what do you hope to hear from joe biden tonight on the stage when the second group of the candidates take over. they said they want to hear more how these candidates, in particular joe biden will reunite the country. they said they didn't hear enough of that last night. guys? steve: griff jenkins, thank you very much. lisa: thanks, griff. steve: he joe biden can't do what he has done a number of times. he will say well i'm for it and i will have further details later. lisa: we need the details. brian: is he always teasing the next segment. lisa: maybe it's smart. steve: maybe. brian: one thing is pretty clear. i have my fingers drossed there might be bu bye bicameral
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compromise. steve: let's bring in tom homan, former ice director, fox news contributor as well. good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: as you listen to democrats describe the immigration problem, what are your general observations? are you on the same page with them? [laughter] >> well, my general observation is no one on that stage, not one of them has a clue how to deal with this crisis on the border. they talk about three things, criminalizing, entering the united states illegally. rewarding citizenship to those in the country illegally and we don't detain anybody all three of those things will do nothing but increase our problem at the border. brian: i would have loved to have seen your face in the box watching them argue about -- by no longer having it be illegal to cross into
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our country illegally. let's listen and learn. >> we would not build walls. we would not put kids in cages. in fact we would spare no. >> criminalize. >> separated already. not prosecute any family. >> repeal section 25. >> finish. let him finish. >> yes, we would not detain any family fleeing violence. in fact fleeing the deadliest countries on the fails of the planet today. >> let's be very clear, the reason they are separating these little children from their families is that they are using section 1325 of that act, which criminalizes coming across the border to incarcerate the parents and then separate them. some of us on this stage have called to end that section, to terminate it. some, like congressman o'rourke have not. and i want to challenge all of the candidates to do that. i just think think it's a
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mistake. steve: 1325 makes it a federal offense. they would like to see it a civil offense. what do you make of that, tom? >> well, first of all, i want everybody on that stage to do a freedom of information act to the department of homeland security and get the records when those cages were built. they were built under the obama administration. i'm sick and tired of them talking about cages. and family detention we had 100 family detention beds when president obama came in office. i built, i built 3,000 more beds under president obama. so let's just set the facts straight. as far as decriminalizing illegal i entry. that's going to increase those people want to come across. they want to normalize it's okay to cross our border illegally. they want to normalize it's okay to attack our associate. it's not okay to normalize that look, despite all the rhetoric around the zero tolerance policy where parents were prosecuted. something no one talks about, it actually worked. the numbers on the border went down 26% in three weeks in rio grande valley it.
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worked. despite all the rhetoric around that, prosecuting people for committing crimes works. if there is no consequence or deterrence to illegal activity. what happens? it's going to continue and going to increase. lisa: tom, cory booker took a direct shot at ice last night. i want you to listen to this and then i want to hear your reaction. take a listen. >> the separation of children from families doesn't just go on at our border. it happens in our communities as ice are ripping away parents from their american children, spouses and the like and are creating fear in cities all across this country where parents are afraid to even drop their kids offer to school or go to work. we want to end those policies as well. >> and, tom, we have also seen this big fight in congress over ice detention beds. you had mentioned it previously. what's your reaction? how does it make you feel listening to senator cory booker? >> it's insulting. look, he comes from a state that's a sanctuary state. and all these people that say ice should concentrate
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only on criminal aliens. we are not going to let new our jail. we are a sanctuary state. we will not allow law enforcement to work with you. immigrant communities always feared communication. they feared me when i was wearing a border patrol uniform when i walked into a neighborhood. they always feared them. you know what? that's the way it is supposed to be. if you and i speed down a highway 100 miles per hour we are afraid we will get a ticket. if you lie on taxes you are afraid to get audited. if you enter this country illegally you should be afraid: false narrative, ice narrative tearing babies out of the arms of parents. if the message we want want to send to the rest of the world enter this country illegally have u.s. child. everyone is going to come and have a child. hide out long enough for the next daca or the next amnesty because this country has shown over and over again. hide out long enough, we will reward you. steve: we know there are so many families streaming
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across our southern border because of the loopholes in the amnesty laws on the books. that's what the president has been complaining about. he has also told -- this president has told central american countries to stop sending families and stop sending kids, which is ironic because where was the outrage, tom, when president obama had exactly the same message back in 2014. we are going to play a sound bite for you and then get your reaction. here's the president. >> our message absolutely is don't send your children unaccompanied on trains or through a bunch of smugglers. we don't even know how many of these kids don't make it and may have been way lay you had into sex trafficking, or killed because they fell off a train. we have no way of tracking that. so, that is our direct message to the families in central america. do not send your children to the borders. if they do make it, they will get sent back more importantly they may not make it. brian: that's so cruel?
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>> yeah, but you know what? no one resisted this president like president trump is resisted. president obama missed something. he did message because i was there that you shouldn't send your children. he also mentioned something else. i'm going to reward people here illegally, children brought to the country, i'm going to give them daca. guess what? when did the family members start climbing? it was with daca. these 200,000 family units coming across the border now that's the next daca population next children brought to the country no fault of their own. president trump is a great president. is he doing the right thing. he is the only one addressing the border crisis. he has declared executive actions and national emergency, unprecedented resources to the border. even wrote immigration reform plan no one has responded to. lisa: the house and senate just passed different funding bills to address some of the humanitarian concerns at the southern border but either of these bills do anything to address the drivers of illegal
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immigration? >> no, as a matter of fact the house bill -- yeah, they are going to give money to take care of the women and children. it's sort of extortion. yeah, we will give you the money to help women and children as long as you stop immigration enforcement. ice can't have beds and do their job. what a shame that is. the whole reason, look, people need to understand there is no border security with internal enforcement. as far as ice out there, ice said for months you guys heard me. ice needs to go out there and do national operation to arrest family members that have due process. if those judges orders don't mean anything, there is no integrity in the system. we have to arrest them and send them back. i did it in fy-15 and it worked. we need to do it. brian: 2008 barack obama was ripping george bush saying he didn't bolster border security and 5 million came here illegally. now here we are in 2019 saying not only not let everybody in but don't
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decriminalize those who come in illegally. how did we get to this place in this country? what changed and for a guy that's been there all through the -- all the wayly to the your career, it must flat out be maddening to hear this disingenuous arguments. >> because the democratic party, democratic leadership hate this president more than they take the responsibility to secure this border. they hate this president and want to see him fail. they hate this president more than they love their country. this is about politics, brian. this isn't about securing the border. this is president trump's biggest promise was to secure this border. they are doing everything they can to make sure that don't happen to make this a 2020 campaign. no one talks about fy-12 when under president obama i removed 409,000 people. this is billion president trump and trying to see him fail.
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brian: criminalizing ice criticizing: you criticize the border patrol you are criticizing enforcement. they are doing the best they can't playing a valuable role. people should realize if they are a candidate. they are alienating a whole lot of people in uniform. lisa: absolutely. steve: tom, thank you for joining us live. lisa: thank you, tom. steve: regarding the politics of it come 2020 2020 it's going to be binary choice there is no gray between the two points of view. lisa: 100 percent. jillian brings us the latest. what do we need to know? jillian: let's start with this fox news alert. president trump hitting the ground running at the g-20 summit in japan. moments ago he sat down for dinner with the australian prime minister along with advisor president trump and mike pompeo. "wall street journal" reports xi plans to present a trade truce president trump which he is expected to sign senators elizabeth
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warren and amy klobuchar as well as actress alyssa milano were turned away from visiting one of those shelters in florida. told house democrats will propose adding better care and safety for migrants in an emergency border funding bill before sending the measure back to the senate. the estranged husband of missing connecticut mom is breaking his silence. addressing his five children as he fights for custody her husband is facing charges in her disappearance. jennifer's body has not been found. attorney general william barr hitting all the right notes. watch this. [bagpipes]
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jillian: well, isn't that impressive. barr joining the new york police department bagpipe band before an event at the justice department. crowd of attorneys cheering barr on with a standing ovation. steve: listen, that's amazing. lisa: that's awesome. brian: i was forced to listen to bag types pipes as a child? steve: forced? i love them. brian: my dad thought children would love it. they didn't. now i'm starting to like it. how do you know you are not playing the back types well? it sounds like chaos. steve: are you kidding? they are beautiful. lisa: i love the attorney general was how is that for an ice breaker. brian: amazing he has this talent. you don't know how to squeeze the bag and when to blow. steve: they teach you how how do that. lisa: we have got to get going. elizabeth warren trying to sell her government run child care plan is it a good idea? steve: next guest the mother of four and made education
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>> who is this economy really working for? it's doing great for thinner and thinner slice at the top. i am in this fight because i believe that we can make our government, we can make our economy. we can make our country work not just for those at the top. we can make it work for everyone. steve: there have you got 2020 contender senator elizabeth warren knocking the economy while defending one of her newest plans, government run and regulated child care. so how would that work? jeanne allen is the founder and ceo of the center for education reform. she joins us now from our nation's capital. jeany, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: you know, there are a lot of families desperate for good child care so elizabeth warren has got a plan and it sounds pretty good. but, what do you think about it? >> look, i totally get it. it is one of the biggest
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challenges facing mothers. i was a working mother of 1, 2, 3, and 4, widowed for part of that. and i struggled to find child care. the answer, however, wasn't the government setting up programs and regulating who takes care of my kids. it was having, which i didn't really have more money in my pocket to make decisions about whether that was neighbors, whether maybe i could stay home a little while longer. look, we certainly don't want to give people day care who can afford it, which is in her plan and we certainly don't want the government raising our babies. what we should be doing is giving them their own savings accounts and giving moms and dads purchasing power that they can save when they don't spend it over time. wouldn't that be amazing? kind of like elizabeth warren when she actually advocated that kids actually are better attached to their parents and even having choices would help. steve: um-huh. a up couple of the points regarding her plan over on the big board, it would limit america's families expenses to 7% of their
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income for the child care and early learning act. and the federal government would cover most of the cost. the cost would be covered by a proposed 2% wealth tax. estimated price tag $70 billion. a year. you know what? those are staggering numbers, but if you need healthcare or child care, and you can't afford it, you are looking to the government to help you. >> sure you are looking to the government to help you. let's talk about two different issues. emotional and economic. right? so the emotional issue is all the psychiatrists, all the psychologists and even what we know about behavior today is that children need to be attached closer to a caring individual. and if they are in an institution or outside of the home or a family member, it should be a three to one ratio. we can't afford a three to one ratio. that's the emotional piece. that's why we should be figuring out ways to allow parents to be closer to their kids or allow them to pay for people who they
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think is closer. the economic piece is really, really simple. we can't put people in a government run institution and expect it to work. steve: let's see if she gets traction with it. jeanne, thank you for joining us. >> thanks, steve. steve: we will be back with a little more in two minutes. you ever wish you weren't a motaur? sure. sometimes i wish i had legs like you. yeah, like a regular person. no. still half bike/half man, just the opposite. oh, so the legs on the bottom and motorcycle on the top?
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yeah. yeah, i could see that. for those who were born to ride, there's progressive. yeah, i could see that. ♪ but in my mind i'm still 35. that's why i take osteo bi-flex, to keep me moving the way i was made to. it nourishes and strengthens my joints for the long term. osteo bi-flex - now in triple strength plus magnesium.
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including herbal supplements. vo: taking amiodarone with epclusa may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. vo: common side effects include headache and tiredness. vo: ask your doctor today, if epclusa is your kind of cure. ♪ steve: ladies and gentlemen, now time for news by the numbers. first number $101,000. that is the value of the meth, coke, and heroin found stuffed inside a child's car seat and stroller. border patrol agents in california say a child was in that seat when they pulled the car over. the mother has been arrested. next 40,000. that's how many fireworks are being recalled ahead of the fourth of july. it includes four different
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types of fireworks. the federal government says they are overloaded with pyrotechnics just too many. and finally 20 million. that's how many jobs could be replaced with robots by the year 2030. a global forecasting firm claims oregon is the most vulnerable state in the united states since its economy relies so heavily on manufacturing jobs. many of which would be taken over by some sort of a machine. all right. brian? brian: all right. meanwhile let's change gears and talk a little bit of politics. no robots last night. democratic hopeful tim ryan calling out his own party you know him from ohio, when it comes to working class americans. listen. >> we have a perception problem with the democratic party. we are not connecting to the working class people in the very states that i represent. we have got to change the center of gravity of the democratic party from being coastal and elitist and ivy league, which is the
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perception to somebody from the forgotten communities that have been left behind for the last 30 years. brian: tim ryan is almost giving the republican argument. is he right? here to weigh in maliyah fisher is here along with g.o.p. polster and host of the guy benson radio show. congratulations on that, guy. going solo. >> thank you. brian: was tim ryan helping out the democratic party there. >> well, yeah. because he is right. i think it would be very helpful to his party it. would behoove them to listen to some of that advice. he was talking about the center of gravity of the democratic party and it is moving in a very different direction. you can look at some of the economic populism that some of them are espousing and that might help with some of those voters. many working class, middle america people are at least socially moderate, if not socially conservative. and, based on the answers we are hearing from this party on virtually all of those issues, we aren't even talking about the same zip code here. they are way out there on the left and moving further
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left. >> candidates living in complete denial last night when they were talking about the economy in the opening segment and all saying how bad it was. i'm sitting here watching going are we living in the same america? when cory booker talked about how trump is terrible for small business owners? when you are that out of touch with where the electorate is, you are doomed. brian: maliyah, are they echoing where the democrats are when they say that? do most democrats believe that the economy is not working for everybody? >> absolutely. democratic voters are extremely concerned that the economy is doing well but it's only doing well for the people at the top. the top 1% corporations, ultra wealthy. so you saw elizabeth warren start out her segment right off the bat saying i want to make this economy work for everybody. brian: malia you know the stats don't play to that. wages are rising 3.8% over the last 8 months. >> rising but mostly rising at the top of the income.
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>> not true. >> you are talking about wealth dispro-partial nally going to the top. if you look at unemployment. anybody who wants a job in this economy can get a job it. wasn't under barack obama and joe biden's tenure. >> they can get a job and under employed. working multiple jobs and shouldering healthcare responsibilities and healthcarchildcare responsibili. brian: we can pivot if you want to healthcare because it dominated. no no one brought up the fact that obamacare is the law. changes come on the outside when it comes to the mandate. they are actually insulting barack obama's plan. >> one of the things that struck me about midway through this debate last night we were talking about healthcare and obamacare for a while and talking about the iran deal. arguably the two biggest accomplishments that president obama would claim domestic and international, none of the candidates on stage offered a full-throated defense of his signature policies.
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brian: none. brian: joe biden didn't. >> he will do it tonight for sure. of those 10 it was very telling of those pillars of the obama legacy they're speaking of the center of gravity they have moved past that on the healthcare point policy-wise the most significant event of the night was the most likely person to be nominated on stage elizabeth warren of any of the 10 she specifically endorsed taking 180 million people's healthcare away from them, private healthcare. brian: 70% of which like their private healthcare. >> democrats moved on from wanting to repeal and replace obamacare by repealing and replacing private insurance. brian: who wants medicare for all and she was one of then. >> to guy's point, she is one of the leading candidates not just last night but, period. i'm expecting that all of the rest of the candidates will end up following suited. they will feel the pressure to shift even further left ward and this is the problem when you emerge in a general election out of a primary
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like this, that you can't tap back to the center. you can't walk this back. brian: just from a democratic perspective tonight joe biden goes center stage. he was not brought up last night. we watched julian castro go after beto o'rourke he looked at him number one and scored big points. >> yeah. brian: do you think if you want to win you have to go after joe biden. >> yes, i do think you have to go after joe biden. there was not fun and mental shift that happened in the democratic primary power play last night because people didn't go after joe biden they didn't go after elizabeth warren. and didn't spend a lot of time going after donald trump. if you want to see some real movement in the way primary is. go after joe biden. brian: guy benson we have one lucky guy you will be in the middle seat on outnumbered today. do you know that? you are on the schedule. >> i know that. i'm excited. brian: once a month we go out there. all right, guy, you can wear
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the same outfit. >> thank you. brian: beto stands alone, only democrat on last night's stage call for immediate impeachment. is that something americans want. newt gingrich knows he promises to answer the question and a couple more. (burke) and even a hit and drone. (driver) relax, it's just a bug. that's not a bug, that's not a bug! (burke) and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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>> plenty of money in this country it's just in the wrong hands. >> think they own washington they don't own me. [speaking spanish] >> we have to have access. [talking at the same time] senator klobuchar. >> if you do d. your homework on this issue. >> we need real solutions not impossible promises. >> i will fight for you as hard as i fight for my own
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family. >> on january 20th, 2021 we will say adios to donald trump. [cheers and applause] steve: got a big ovation last night down in miami. bring in newt gingrich, former speaker of the house fox news corinther and author of the book "collusion." he joins us now. brian: i haven't heard that word enough. [laughter] steve: hey, newt, as somebody who has been on the presidential debate stage a time or two. what did you think about the tone and tenure of what we saw last night? >> first of all, if you are a democrat on this particular year, you are going to run to the left. you are going to be anti-trump and to some extent you are essentially arguing that america is a bad country and that only you can fix it. they are not running to govern the country as it exists but running to change the country pretty dramatically. on the other hand, on these kind of debates, which was all chaos, what you need is a good 30 to 45 seconds. i thought elizabeth warren was very effective in saying i will fight for you the way i would fight for my own family. she doesn't need much more than that at this stage.
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she probably strategically was the winner last night. because she went in as the strongest of that particular set of 10. and i think she came out with the best line and as a very strong person. and on the other hand, i think beto o'rourke probably was the big loser because everybody decided to beat him up because there is not much there anyway and they just drove it further down. brian: i really think he lost big time. he had nothing to say as soon as he was engaged. why do you think julian castro i have got to k.o. beto o'rourke to stay in this? where does that strategy come from? >> he may see this as a texas primary to become the texas candidate to be able to raise money in the second biggest state. and then when he wins the texas primary so he can raise the money, he can go on to play in the rest of the country. that may be his reasoning. it makes some sense. even a state the size you have texas has a hard time having two major candidates. you clearly see castro on the way up and you see o'rourke on the way down in
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terms of trajectory of the campaigns. lisa: democrats took aim at the economy last night. i want you to listen to this real quick and then i want to get your reaction. >> who is this economy really working for? when you have got an economy that does great for those with money and isn't doing great for everyone else that is corruption pure and simple. weed need to call it out. we need to attack it head on and we need to make structural change. >> donald trump just sits in the white house and gloats. >> this is supposed to be the party of working people. yes, we are supposed to be for 70% tax rate on the wealthy. yes we are supposed to be for free college, free public college. >> the economy has to work for everyone. and right now we know that it isn't. >> this is actually an economy that is hurting small businesses and not allowing them to compete. brian: i thought they were talking about this country? lisa: how big of a challenge is it to run against a strong economy right now? >> look, the democratic party is increasingly in a
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way an anti american party. they want to change everything. what booker just said about small business, just factually not true. you have more small businesses that are doing better. they are hiring more people. but imagine the challenge you have got as a democrat. you are going to go out and say you don't like the highest level of black employment in history? you don't like wages going up for blue collar working? you don't like adding manufacturing jobs? so they have this problem the trump economy is actually working. and, yet, they think they have somehow got to attack it. i think they are much -- that we are in much greater danger of republicans on the health issue than we are on the economy issue. i'm perfectly happy for them to try to talk down the economy because most americans, in fact, give trump much better marks on the economy than they gave obama and most americans realize that all these new jobs are a good thing. brian: got another night tonight. we will see what happens. if you are president trump, do you feel better or worse about your chances? >> if i'm president trump i don't pay attention at all to this stuff.
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steve: he tweeted last night. lisa: he tweeted it was boring. >> none of these people are going to challenge trump. the only person who challenges trump is trump. i think otherwise he just wins. steve: good way to put it. newt, thank you very much. brian: pick up "collusion" it's great. steve: meanwhile pick up todd piro he is down at the versailles restaurant in miami. after the big show last night on nbc he is talking to some voters about how what they thought, todd. todd: good morning. one of the complaints low energy. are we low energy today guys? >> no. >> we begin with madeline she is a real estate grandmother. i love the way you said that you said your debate winner was donald trump. your loser was the american people american people, why? >> because all the candidates were so socialist. so extreme socialist policies. and that doesn't work. we know by experience cuba didn't work. venezuela didn't work.
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nicaragua didn't work. why is it going to work here? they all get freebies that's how they are buying the votes. definitely no way. donald trump is our man. todd: thank you real estate grandmother. [laughter] [applause] todd: cpa as a cpa you didn't like the talk of a 70% tax. why? >> of course not. that's part of the democratic agenda. they are trying to bring in socialism and by doing that they would increase their control over the american people. they want to take over healthcare, free education and, of course, they are even talking about the green new deal that is supposed to cost between 50 and $90 trillion. who is going to pay for that? we are all going to pay for that but it's unsustainable. todd: thank you. etha i got it right. first time i got it right all morning long. cpa. julian castro was your winner of the night. you vehemently disagree with his take on the border and immigration. >> i disagree with
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decriminalization of illegal immigrants. i'm an immigrant myself. i came to this country 57 years ago but i came legally. i agree with president trump that immigration should be merit-based and people should be properly vetted. why are they thinking letting anybody into this country [inaudible] >> just like beto. speaking spanish. todd: thank you very much. domingo, you are a controller at a bank. warren was your winner. beto was your loser. why? >> warren was the winner because she has the most name recognition nobody else really stood out. beto was the loser because he was pandering to the hispanic vote trying to speak spanish. todd: thank you. finally deanna, also a grandmother, sources haven't yet told me whether you are in real estate or not. we will figure that out later. you said you wish the moderators challenged the candidates more, why? >> absolutely. i think they were very weak
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in their questions. they didn't follow up with tough questions. i just think they let them get away with, you know, saying things like free college tuition, free healthcare. well, who is going to pay for that? where is that money going to come from? i think, you know, the moderators really could have posed tougher questions to the candidates. and, you know. todd: we are going to pose more tough questions coming up nut 8:30 hour. for now, great job, everybody, here in a very famous place in cuba. [laughter] little havana he tries to say it is a key stop for so many people -- presidential candidates dog catch every you have got to be here. we are not in cuba. [laughter] lisa: is happens. brian: aren't they still using etsel's.
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steve: i have been in that restaurant great food. lisa: endorsed by steve doocy. steve: quarter till the hour. jillian has news. jillian: fire devastated the notre dame cathedral in paris. well now we are learning it may have been caused by a cigarette. prosecutors also looking into the possibility that a malfunctioning electrical system to blame. the church was undergoing renovations when it went up in flames in april. french president emmanuel macron is vowing to rebuild the cathedral within five years. investigators do knot think the fire was a criminal act. a city country sill votes to knicks the pledge of allegiance at meeting. the pledge could intimidate immigrants in minnesota. not everyone in the community agrees. >> i really think they should say that because this is america. >> if we go to other countries, they are not going to accommodate us. and so i just feel like, you know, we should hold to it. >> change takes aeffect next
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month. leave the fireworks up to the professionals this independence day. this is why. >> man cans lose their hands. last year five people killed by fireworks and more than 9,000 were hurt. a baby celebrates her first birthday with an adorable chick-fil-a themed photo shoot. look at this? her mom says she was inspired by the constant cravings she had while she was pregnant. it was her biggest pregnancy craving military base in virginia beach. you can see here this child absolutely loves the food, too. her shirt reads my mommy loves me more than chick-fil-a and that is a lot. a look at your headlines. steve: so she loves chick-fil-a second. lisa: who doesn't?
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brian: remember peter paul lineman fingers blown off. jillian: bye. brian: got his fingers blown off fireworks. that should have been a warning. especially to giant fans now tampa fans. soccer star meghan are a trash o potential white house visit. >> are you excited about going to the white house. >> i'm not going to the [bleep] white house. no. i'm not going to the white house. we're not going to be invited. >> you are not going to be invited? >> i doubt it. steve: guess what, she just got invited along with the team. retired u.s. marine corps bomb tech joey jones has a message for her. you are going to want to hear it. it's next. every day, visionaries are creating the future.
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>> i support all the gun reforms here. >> i'm going to choose common sense gun reform. i believe we are going to be able to get that done in 2021. >> i hear gunshots in my neighborhood. tired of hearing people all they have to offer is thoughts and prayers. >> we can do the things that are sensible. we can do the universal background checks. we can ban the weapons of war. but we can also double down on the research and find out what really works. brian: all right. 10 democratic hopefuls took the stage using their first debate to push for gun control. steve: here with reaction retired u.s. marine corps bomb tech joey jones. joey, good morning to you. >> good morning, guys. steve: what did you make of what they were talking about controlling guns? >> yeah, i think the most important thing to take away from this or one of the two
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anyway is the idea that a mandatory buy back is not somehow a mandatory confiscation. that's the big thing that i would like an answer on is how is the mandatory buy back mandate turning guns in not the same thing as mandatory confiscation. one thing with elizabeth warren i thought was really interesting, i think she understands or at least she is the only one on the stage that understands americans are not with them on this idea of banning half the guns and confiscating the rest. when she brings up a talking point like research really what she is saying is okay the rest of america, the majority of america, i do understand that you all believe this is beyond tool issue and this is a person issue? lisa: joey, so we hear gun reform as you mentioned. are any of these policy proposals or anything that you have seen from the left, would any of these things actually prevent mass shootings? >> yeah. there is one thing that would prevent mass shootings. if we spent the next 20 years banning every single weapon and confiscating what's here. that's about it.
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that would prevent mass shootings. by then the technology and 3-d printers and mills and lathes all across the country making guns i made pvc potato gun when i was 12 years old completely illegally. get rid of every gun in our borders and then build a wall so you couldn't bring illegal guns up from mexico. so, no. no. none of these policies are going to be a fix to some of the problems we have. what we can do is look at okay, when we do a background check, are we actually checking all the systems? are we actually checking all the databases? are we actually doing what we are supposed to do and what is already in law? the answer is no. brian: joey, you are one of the most patriotic people i know. and you served our country and you continue to give back and offer great analysis. the u.s. women's soccer team is getting increasing ratings on fox and having a great one. now in the quarterfinals play on friday megan rapinoe taken a knee before in
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honor-know lieu of collin kaepernick now asked to stand for the national anthem won't put her hand over her heart. now she was asked about going to the white house. listen to this response. >> going to the white house? >> i'm thought going to the [bleep] white house. no. i'm not going to the white house. we're not going to be invite you had. >> you are thought going to be invited? >> i doubt it. steve: then the president sent out a series of tweets, kind of along the ultimate part though he is inviting the team to the white house win or lose. what do you make of the comments? >> yeah. this is the ultimate i'm going to take my ball and go home. the immaturity there really is what bothers me so much. listen i fought two wars i can drop f bombs with the rest of them. i know when representing my country how to speak and act. that's number one. number two, i deployed in a troop surge 40,000 troops to afghanistan. before i got in the country, president obama told the world he was just going to turn around and pull us out a year later. if you don't talk about personally offended by a president.
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i lost my legs on that deployment. at the same time, when i got invited to go to the white house and have dinner with president obama in 2013, i went and i set right beside him and i had a conversation and you know what? he had to face me and hear what i had to say about it. i said it to him in a polite way. we walked away having a conversation. i walked away understanding the man better. if she doesn't have the understanding or maturity. she doesn't need a mic in front of her and representing our country. do what you need to do but at least represent all of us. brian: alli kreiger just weighed in in regards to the i know women how cannot control or grope anger you, but i stand with megan rapinoe and i will sit this one out. i don't support this administration or fight against lgbtq, citizens, immigrants or our most vulnerable. she is taking a stand backing up captain. in france, ripping up our country. the world is routeing it. add to this.
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remember 19999. it was a year after bill clinton was impeached. after we found out he was having annual affair with monica lewenski being sued by paula jones and being accused of rape by other people. bill clinton followed around the 1999 team the year after. i'm sure they were not thrilled with all these things, they put their country first and didn't make that part of the story. what's changed? >> selfishness, that's what changed. we pull up these little iphones and see the world from our own experience. that's all we care about. that's all they are caring about right now. under the guise of representing the oppressed really they are just being selfish. listen i understand full well what it understands to be angered and passionately angered toward the president. i had a little bit of understanding i was representing people who didn't have a chance to go sit down with president obama. let me tell you no one is more offended by a president than i was by a man who sent me to war and then told the war by the way do what you need to because i'm bringing them all home next year. steve: there you go.
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joey jones joining us from las vegas. thank you. >> absolutely, guys. steve: what's the biggest threat facing the u.s. right now. here is what some 2020 dems think. >> climate change. >> climate change. >> nuclear proliferation and climate change. >> donald trump. now, i know how happy i am. there was all the feeling good about myself that i missed. i wish that i had gone to aspen dental on day one . . started, we are too. call now at 1-800-aspendental.
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♪ >> the biggest threat to the security of the united states is donald trump. [cheering] >> do you have a plan to deal with mitch mcconnell? >> i do. >> if you want to beat mitch mcconnell, this better be a working class party. if you want to go into kentucky and take his rear end out. >> the democratic party would stop acting like party of elites and party of working people, go into states, including red states. >> we must begin impeachment now. we have the facts and truth follow them as we go high up as they reach and save this democracy. >> kitchen table pocketbook in shoes are two most americans care about. they never ask about the mueller
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report. they never ask about it. >> on january 2021 we'll say audios to donald trump. ♪ ♪ they're coming to america steve: i thought the mic was open there. lisa: i thought you were trying to sing. i thought it was karaoke moment. steve: speaking of mic or not open, nbc taking heat over technical problems where microphones were left on, live tv. it is challenging, scary, happens to everybody. brian: "new york post" called nbc out for that. here it is. lisa: so did the president, jinx. brian: here you to. they went to break. when there is a problem go to break. steve: we've done it. brian: absolutely. i don't think we made any
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mistakes. lisa: never, never. brian: just add to the soccer story from last hour, rooks like alex morgan won't go to the white house. abby woman wombach. another controversy with sport. lisa: we have the team in miami. todd piro. talking to diners to get their reaction. we have griff jenkins who is live outside of the debate hall. griff. reporter: lisa, brian, steve, good morning, first out of the gate and running. we have another year-and-a-half before the actual election. a chance for lesser-known candidates, john delaney, tim ryan, tulsi gabbard, get out to get exposure to the american people t was senator elizabeth warren stood out last night. what dominated the conversation, talk of health care, wealth inner a quality.
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what was stunning far left progressive answers they got to those questions. listen. >> i'm referring ton "medicare for all." i spent a big chunk of my life studying why families go broke. one of the number one reasons is the cost of health care. >> why are you -- >> i think we should be the party that keeps what's working and fixes what's broken. reporter: in the debates you look for moments. one moments stood out, hand raising moment, if they would abolish private insurance, only elizabeth warren and bill de blasio raised their hands. another moment stood out former hud secretary under obama, julian castro, one lesser known candidates striking out new ground on position decriminalizing illegal crossings at the border. moments ago he was up here in the press area. i asked hill why he had that position. what he would do about i.c.e.
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listen? >> i would break up i.c.e. and put its enforcement capacity into the department of justice. i wouldn't end enforcement but i would change how we do it. put away the failure of this administration and the cruelty of this administration on the issue of immigration. reporter: now we're going to get the next 10 tonight. that includes, joe biden, bernie sanders. we shall see what tonight brings. no indication any candidates will speak spanish like they did last night. steve: griff, real quick question for you be the conventional wisdom, sips joe biden so far ahead in the polls, all the other people on the stage tonight will see a target on his back, right? reporter: we'll see. that is a great question, steve. joe biden, who should have perhaps been a target last night really wasn't. donald trump, president trump, got 19 minutes of 24 second of
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time talked about. biden didn't get talked about. we'll see target on him, health care, raising your hand if you want to get rid of private insurance. that was originally bernie sanders issue. sanders trying to separate himself as well, maybe be a target, that will indeed be a bit of a red line in the sand whether you're far left or not. brian: they will definitely go at it. thanks, griff. at ease. let's be clear, team joe tweeted this out after the debate, let's be clear, health care debate, "medicare for all," we shouldn't tear the affordable care act down. give a public option like medicare to insure everyone has access to quality, affordable health care they deserve. he is splitting from what he saw. lisa: most effective way to challenge joe biden without confronting him direct on, point out the vast difference if you're someone like mayor pete.
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talk about the fact we need to look to the future, as opposed to the past. frame it in that discussion. that is more effective. steve: griff talked to julian castro outside of the convention hall a moment ago, he said, julian said, don't get rid of i.c.e., fix i.c.e. that is one point of view. that was not shared by all of the democrats last night. here's what they had to say regarding immigration, which as we know, is a big crisis on our southern border. listen to this. >> on day one, i will make sure that number one, we end the i.c.e. policies and customs and border policies violating human right. when people come to this country, do not leave their human right at the border. >> for all the american citizens out there who feel you're falling behind, feel the american dream is not working for you, the immigrants didn't do that to you. >> would not build walls. would not put kids in cages. >> immigrants they do not
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diminish america. they are america. >> what kind of country are we running here. we have to tell this president that is not a sign of strength, mr. president, that is a sign of weakness. >> when somebody comes across the border, not to criminalize desperation. treat that as a civil violation. lisa: but not a single democrat actually put forward any policy solution that would stop the drivers of illegal immigration. not a sing fell person addressed any way to try to solve the crisis that we're facing. brian: one thing they would say, pump a whole lot of money into central american countries which we tried doing. president said if you don't stop sending people here we would take away. they didn't and we did. keep your fingers crossed the senate passed a bipartisan bill yesterday to get aid to the border. maybe they will conference, come up with a plan the president can sign. steve: big question whether nancy pelosi will sign on because the bill that house passed, poison pill, didn't give president or republicans
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anything. brian: just real quick, here is the quote that gives me hope. hakim jeffries said the house will not leave until we resolve the situation at the border. we're looking forward to finding common ground with the senate. keep your fingers crossed. lisa: it is bigger than funding. address the drivers. there are different things they can do. flores decree, addressing 2018 antihuman trafficking law. credible fear for asylum. there are three things they can do. congress refuses to address it. putting money at the problem will not solve the issue. steve: president made it clear last week to call off the i.c.e. raids so congress works on asylum issue, the loopholes. none of that is being addressed in the legislation. meanwhile tom homan, watching that legislation. he is also watching democrats last night in miami. he see as double standard. he is also sick and tired about one talking point. watch this. >> i want everybody on that stage to do a freedom of information act to department of homeland security and get the
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records when those cages were built. they were built under obama administration. sick and tired talking about cages. family detention. we had 100 family detention beds when president obama came in office. i built, i built 3,000 more beds under president obama. let's set the facts straight. as far as decriminalizing illegal entry, that will increase those people that come across. they want to normalize, it is okay to cross the border illegally. they want to normalize, okay to attack sovereignty. it is not okay. brian: that was a big part of the debate, immigration, you saw the horrific view of that family face down who drowned trying to cross our border. they wanted to vilify president trump, i don't mow how you can do that. shows congress has not had action. add this as we pivot to the economy, one thing stuck out with me bill de blasio. when he cale out and basically you saw every candidate outside delaney vilify corporations and
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greed and then bill de blasio says we have money in this country. it is just in the wrong hands. one of the questions was about taxing the rich 70%? i realize we're in parallel universe people don't know how capitalism works. lisa: brian, that was the theme from democrats on the economy. the rich are doing well. at that the average american is not. and that was basically their talking point. take a listen. >> who is this economy really working for? when you have got an economy that does great for those with money, and isn't doing great for everyone else, that is corruption, pure and simple. we need to call it out. we need to attack it head on. and we need to make structural changes. >> donald trump just sits in the white house and gloats. >> this is supposed to be the party of working people. yes we're supposed to be for 70% tax rate on the wealthy. yes we're supposed to be for free college, free public college.
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>> this economy has got to work for everyone. and right now we know that it isn't. this is actually an economy that is hurting small businesses and not allowing them to compete. steve: really? the trump campaign came out and characterized the debate as best argument for president trump's re-election. they said arguing the democrats were proposing a radical government takeover of american society that would dough polish the american dream so many are gaining access to under the growing trump economy. stuart varney agrees with that. >> how do you campaign against prosperity. this is terrible. we can't stand this we have to change this. the answer is on the stage last night the democrat candidates attacked business, they attacked rich and they called trump's economy unfair. you could see on the stage last night this gradual, actually quite a sharp drift to the socialist left. absolute nonsense! we have wages rising the best
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rate in 10 years. we have the lowest unemployment rate in history. this economy has helped everyone, he one -- everyone, but if one person earns more than another, that is unfair. can't have that. lisa: he had thoughts. steve: just a couple. lisa: here is the challenge for a lot of these candidates, you guys, when you're running against a strong economy, it is a tough sell to make. what you're asking for americans, to ask them for a different trajectory. when the economy is boeing strong, that is a challenge. brian: what you have is vulnerability to the economy debt run up under president trump not exceeded where president obama is, that is his vulnerability. not in growth. the tax cut paid off and the corporate tax is just getting the corporate tax in line with the rest of the world and basically president obama wanted to do that as well only he wanted in exchange for raising rates on the top, at the top bracket. steve: the average american, does the average american feel
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the national debt and deficit? ultimately don't be surprised if donald trump, closer to re-election he just posits, are you better off today than you were four years ago. and if you are, elect me, reelect me. if you aren't, vote for the other person. lisa: the answer is probably yes. brian: that's what he thinks. lisa: for the average american, when the economy is strong. steve: meanwhile, time for some headlines with jillian. jillian: good morning we have a fox news alert. president trump guesting right to work at the g20 summit in japan sitting down with australian prime minister scott morrison. president trump is expected to meet with chinese president xi xinping on saturday. "the wall street journal" plans to present a trade truce with president trump which he is expected to sign. breaking overnight police search a home in connection to the missing utah college student. now at this point detectives won't say if they found any
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evidence or if anyone is under arrest. makenzie luke disappeared last week after taking a lyft to a park and met someone. there is no evidence of foul play. the last person who contacted lueke is cooperating with police. cory scott was granted immunity before testifying in the war crimes against against the navy seal. scott claimed he suffocated the teen after gallagher stabbed him. now he could face a court-martial for lying. gallagher has pleaded not guilty to murder charges. if convicted he faces life in prison. lara trump is slamming a waitress who spit on her husband in a bar in chicago. she says it wouldn't have happened if eric trump was democrat. >> unprovoked this woman came up to him, literally spit his face and had nasty things to say to
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him. played it calm, did not press charges against the woman. a lot of people would have done. i can't imagine this happening to chelsea clinton, so sasha and malia obama. this is disgusting. jillian: the waitress is on leave from her job. that is a look at the headlines. steve: have you seen this? the moment everybody is talking about from last night, when cory booker heard beto speaking in spanish. lisa: carley shimkus is here with the top tending moments with last night' debate. brian: we'll do the whole segment. ♪ we have to be able to
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my go-to toothpaste 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. ♪ [inaudible] [laughter] >> what's happening? >> we're hearing our colleague's audio. if the control room can turn off the mic. we are going to take a quick break. we're going to get this technical situation fixed. we will be right back. steve: chuck todd did the right
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thing, throwing to a break. it is a debate moment a lot of people talking about, a hot mic technical glitch brought the first 2020 democratic debate to a startling pause when people were looking for binders in the restroom. brian: here promising to react fox news headline reporter carley shimkus, fresh off the visit to washington, d.c. >> my reaction to this, this serves as good reminder to everyone in tv, not say anything bad or curse when you have a mic on ever. lisa: at least nothing was embarrassing. >> you never know. it may bleed on to live tv. so many people talking about this, the president being one of them. he said opportunity to slam the network saying nbc news, msnbc, should be ashamed of themselves for having such a horrible technical breakdown in the middle of the debate, truly unprofessional of a fake news organization which they are. presidential candidate andrew
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yang also reacted, oh, no, technical difficulties, it is russians. steve: that is funny. >> live tv a lot of moving parts. lisa: sometimes i don't know what the president was thinking i wish he would be a little bit more expressive. >> little more clear where he stands. brian: something else happened early on in this debate that stunned me. >> beto o'rourke getting a lot of people talking by not what he said but how he said it. watch. >> speaking spanish] >> okay. >> that part right there. >> cory booker shocked facial expression going viral of course. but then he also broke out into spanish later in the debate. i think what he is was thinking, you stole my thing. that was going to be my party
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trick. brian: so weird, he was asked a question, he starts answering it and -- okay. >> marianne williamson be on the debate stage, she responded on twitter as well, i need to learn spanish by tomorrow night at 9:00. lisa: the challenges for a lot of these guys, especially someone like beto, frequently criticized for not appearing authentic. >> this moment did not work in his favor. brian: only thing missing he was not standing on the counter. steve: he can do both apparently. >> a lot of people were talking about cory booker, google revealing most searched candidates. cory booker was number one most searched. tulsi gabbard. lisa: that is surprising. >> people want to know who she is. she doesn't have the solid name recognition. bill bill in fourth. brian: mentioned military experience, very cool and composed under fire yesterday. >> absolutely. steve: we'll see if anybody
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breaks out of the single digits. thank you, carley. >> thank you. brian: coming up next, senator marco rubio is all over the venezuela situation. backs the president when it comes to iran. what does he think about yesterday's debate? that is a pull out of his picture. 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, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today.
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♪ steve: some quick headlines for you. first up an american is killed on a shark attack on a snorkeling trip in the bahamas. officials say jordan lindsey's family was watching when three sharks tore her right arm off and by the other parts of the body. they tried to warn the college student, but sadly it was too late. a denver man died after getting sick on vacation in, the dominican republic. khalid atkins was forced off his flight home earlier this week, later died at a dominican
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hospital. his cause of death at this point is unclear. at 13 americans have died in the dr since last summer. lisa: democratic hopefuls using their spanish skills to stand out. brian: the hispanic vote matters a lot. will this help them get it? let's watch senator marco rubio. you saw the segue to spanish by three candidates. is that effective in the candidate community as you know it? >> [speaking spanish] brian: am i watching univision? >> sorry, wrong network. the problem is they didn't have anticipates to real problems. they didn't have an answer in english. they didn't have an answer in spanish. the border crisis, you've got children, tragic picture couple days ago of a father and a daughter who drowned. very sad what is happening, it is terrible, but the solution to their problems is not the
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dangerous journey. these guys tell you they want to decriminalize crossing border. fighting us on providing more money to take care of people already here. they don't want to do anything about laws luring people here but they don't have any answers how to fix it. don't have it in english or answer in spanish. by the way i find it in ironic, in miami having debate. not a single question was asked, not a single candidate tried to interject anything about latin america, not about cuba, crisis, terrible tragedy in venezuela, horrible things happening in nicaragua. they tell us honestly don't care or are not comfortable talking about those issues. i thought that was enlightening. steve: meantime we're looking to the congress to provide some support and some relief with an emergency spending bill. i know the house led by nancy pelosi a couple days ago, passed what is being referred to as a poison pill bill because there is nothing for republicans and the president in there. meanwhile there is a bipartisan
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bill passed the senate. what will happen next before you guys leave town? >> this is pretty elementary in order to make a bill pass, you have to pass identical in the house and senate. the president will sign it. only bill that meets that criteria is the bipartisan bill we passed out of the senate. understand we have people in the house, a few in the senate, a few on the stage last night, who are basically criticizing the administration for not treating the people and children who are being held appropriately but at the same time, they're saying oh, by the way, we will not give you anymore money to treat you better. it is a incredibly hypocritical position to take. it reached a point even "the new york times" writing editorials that is unsustainable position for democrats. my hope the leadership in the house will realize they can't keep caving to these radical left-wing members and finally pass the bill the senate sent over to them, so we can provide at least humanitarian funds. lisa: senator, obviously we need money for humanitarian effort but why isn't congress doing anything to address drivers of illegal immigration? >> i wish we could.
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it takes 60 votes in senate. majority in the house. they're not interested. we'll try and keep trying and we tried in the past, but in terms of, it is fundamental challenge that we face when we don't control the house and we don't have enough votes in the senate to pass this you're right about three things. what are the drivers, number one, conditions in the northern triangle countries that need to be addressed. easy to say throw more money at it. those countries have capacity problems what to do with the money. they're having riots in honduras over political instability. a election not being questioned by some in guatemala. in el salvador they elected a new president. he is a young guy hopefully that can turn things around. that is part of it. we have laws inviting people to do this. somebody makes journey, call back them, hey, i made it, that encourages more people to do it, bring their kids or send kids with a stranger. we have laws luring people into the dangerous journey.
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that has to be fixed, i'm ready to do that right now. brian: lindsey graham drew something up. there was word about dick durbin doing something bipartisan. has that gotten to marco rubio's desk. >> i support the changes. brian: are they in the works? >> the language is out there, present it in a bill. you have people on the stage last night not only are against that, they want to decriminalize the act of illegally entering country. they want to do that, to make it more appealing people to enter the country. this is not anti-immigrant thing. we admit million people permanently legally. this has to do with are we going to have laws or not have laws who can come in, how you come in, when you come in. if you're going to have laws, but you don't enforce them you don't have those laws. their argument, yes have laws but ignore the laws. that is a ridiculous position and it is contributed heavily to this crisis. steve: democrats now agree with
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republicans there is a crisis on the southern border but they would like to simply address the humanitarian issue. whereas the republicans would like to address border security, and what not and humanitarian. >> well they, they agree, they agree there is a crisis but for them the crisis is not that thousands and thousands of people are coming here with their children illegally. the crisis we're not allowing them to walk in sign a paper and stay. that is the crisis for them. what they don't understand, if we did what they wanted, the numbers of people coming potentially double. that is it what they are advocating. that is the radical position they have taken. it's a address position. way outside with the mainstream. inconsistent with the obama administration what they did a few years ago. brian: they want to decriminalize coming into our country illegal and they, they feel they have momentum behind. >> how does that play with legal immigrants? >> first of all it doesn't. everybody feels sad for what we're seeing. i understand somebody is in
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danger, they're frightened, their desperate, their loved one living here, they want to be reunited. we understand the human side, we do. policy making is in our national interest. what country in the world, what country in the world possibly has a law you can come here, anyone who wants to come can come here. all we ask, sign a paper. we may have a law that says you're not supposed to do it, we'll not do anything about that law. you will quadruple number of people making that the dangerous journey. how is that good for countries, by wait? how could the answer to their problem be undertake a dangerous journey in the hands of human traffickers where you may drown on the way in? how is that the answer to their problem? they have no answer. you saw last night, they're good at criticizing but not a single one of them in english or spanish had a solution what they would do on day one. steve: marco rubio knows so much about the topic, thank you for joining us. brian: thank you for speaking english. appreciate it.
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steve: last night 10 democratic hopefuls using their first debate to talk about controlling guns more. >> i'm going to choose common sense gun reform. >> tired of hearing people all they have to offer is thoughts and prayers. >> we can do the things sensible. we can ban weapons of war. steve: dana loesch will react live. you will want to hear her comments next. brian: todd piro having brake fast with friends in miami. what do voters think of last night's debate. he is about to find out. todd: brian, you know how everybody makes fun with me. it started in miami. you're not in cuba. [laughter]. so we'll make fun of todd a little more. we'll have debate reaction when "fox & friends" returns live from miami in florida, in the united states of america! [cheering] ♪
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>> plenty of money in this country. it is just in the wrong hands. >> they think they own washington. they don't. >> speaking spanish] >> we have to have access for everyone. [all talking at once] >> if you did the homework on this issue -- >> we need real solutions not impossible promises. >> i will fight for you as hard as i fight for my own family. >> on january 20th, 2021 we'll say adios to donald trump. steve: some of the sound bites from last night. democrats squared off in miami. we thought we had sented to pyro to the versailles restaurant in miami to talk to voters but in the last appearance, turns out he is in cuba. lisa: it was a mistake. it happens, todd. happens to all of us. reporter: fortunately a friendly
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place here. they didn't kill me too much. we had a little fun. we're not perfect. humans are not perfect as we saw last night at the democratic debate. somebody who is perfect my buddy lordes. dental hygienist. the ideas you heard last night are reason you fled to this country. why? >> same rhetoric. no incentives, unsustainable. they didn't give you any indication of how this is going to come about. it is just trying to gain votes and buy people. todd: thank you. you're a loser with beto, winner with donald trump. why? >> trump has a booming economy. 70% tax they imposed yesterday. that will kill the economy and create disincentive to do better. why would you want to do better
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being taxed at 70% rate. todd: michael thank you. mary is grandmother. we love the grandmothers you say there is no way to get the things candidate propose? >> everything is free. free medical, free schools, but how we, who is going to pay for all of that? todd: thank you very much, mary. mariery, jumping on let's make fun of todd train. winner with delaney, loser was ryan. his middle of the road message was lost in the shuffle. why? >> he has been representing the heartland of america, the farmers, he really wasn't able to put forward his thoughts. so he came out as a leadser. we the american people came out as a loser because we, my family fled europe. went to cuba. fled cuba. came to the united states of america, seeking freedom, land of milk and honey. what do we get? more socialists.
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we're all losers. that is what i have to say. todd: finally michelle, small business owner winner was sort of booker. i thought his name was cory. your winner was sort of. the loser was all. why? >> why? because nothing was accomplished last night. there was no reason to have the debate. it was a waste of time. let's hope tonight is a better one. todd: we'll see. we'll be back with you gist live tomorrow morning from miami in florida in the usa. [cheering] steve: todd piro a good spot e spot. the versailles restaurant in miami. world's most famous cuban restaurant. lisa: it is delicious. steve: 10 democratic hopefuls use the stage to talk about gun control. >> i support all the guns reforms here. >> i'm going to choose common sense gun reforms. i believe we'll be able to get that done in 2021.
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>> i hear gunshots in my neighborhood. tired of hearing people all they have to offer is thoughts an prayers. >> dot things that are sensible. do the universal background check. we can ban the weapons of war. we can double down on research, and find out what really works. steve: hmmm. brian: radio talk show host dana loesch to react to the plethora of opinion and information. when it comes to guns, dana, i was surprised, they weren't saying ban all guns which i was expecting but there is a huge pushback. >> brian, good to talk with you. whenever they talk about confiscation, whenever they mention it, mandatory buybacks. word olympic salad, people like cory booker, swalwell, 1% now i guess, that is the language that they use whenever they talk about confiscation. confiscation is a nasty word. what is even nastier how out of
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touch all of these an dates are with their own voters. there was a "gallup poll" just last week, i'm sure you all saw it, showcased the number one priority for americans right now is illegal immigration. they think of that as a huge security issue. at the very bottom of that list, registering at .5% of respondents was concerns for gun control. in fact, gallup even rounded it up so it would be 1%. let me put this even more perspective for everyone. there are more people who think that 9/11 was an inside job, actually according to the latest polling want gun control. "washington post" had a piece that showed more people believe the moon landing was fake that actually want gun control. these people are fringe. these candidates. lisa: dana, i was surprised by senator elizabeth warren calling for research last night. did that surprise you? >> it did because we've done a lot of research. i know the popular talking point amongst a lot of these democrats are very much against firearm
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ownership, somehow the cdc isn't capable of doing any research which is completely false. the dickey amendment only specified taxpayer dollars could not be used to advocate for particular position, gun control or gun ownership. i'm completely fine with our taxpayer dollars not used to advocate for such things. the cdc did research in 2013. other entities have done it. what we know, we have high recidivism rate. crime with repeat offenders, mental health problem in america, a good guy with a gun stop as bad guy with a gun. we know what works. they have to do it. steve: dana loesch stayed up late to watch the debate. >> good to he you all. brian: stay up tonight. 10 more people. lisa: a late night. steve: you know what? if you don't want to stay up to watch it, see us tomorrow with the post game show. lisa: a good advertise. steve: indeed. quarter before the top. hour, news time, jillian.
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jillian: good morning we do have news to get you caught up on. start with this, an american flag mural stood in phoenix for years is defaced with graffiti. they put anti-trump and anti-i.c.e. messages on the flag. unclear who did it. people are outraged. volunteers are offering to repaint the mural. instagram wants you to worry about being likeable. it is considering hiding total number of likes on photos and videos. the move is to combat bullying and relieve pressures on social media. their account no longer publicly showing how many likes they get. once bitter rivals on the football field, tom brady and peyton manning apparently made up. the two quarter backs posing for a selfie at at recent event. spoiler alert. we were friends all the time. always great to see you, peyton.
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there you go. steve: streets of new york city, janice dean has folks and some for casts. janice: look at folks on the plaza in fox square, everybody. wave to everybody at home. i love it. it is summertime in new york city. take a quick look at maps. i will show all the beautiful faces. across new york it is 76. we'll get into 90s today for much of the country. severe weather in the morn plains and midwest. be prepared for that. wind and isolated tornadoes. it will feel like summertime my friends. that is great news. are you excited to be on "fox & friends"? look at all the amazing people. [cheering] wave to everybody, my friends. thank you so much for coming today. oh, my foodness. summertime in new york. brian: bring bigger crowds every single day. these are the most handsome and pretty. steve: i hear a siren. thanks, jd. how bad is the crisis at our southern border? the mayor of yuma, arizona put
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his city under a state of emergency. he is begging washington for help. that mayor will join us live coming up next. brian: first every day i thirst to find out what will be on sandra smith's show with bill hemmer before you guys do. so sandra, would you give me a exclusive preview? >> absolutely, steve, brief an a lisa. democrats took the stage for the first 2020 debate. who won, who lost, who was surprisingly left out of the conversation? chris stirewalt here with analysis. boring, the one word president trump used to describe the night. kaley mcenany have fresh coverage. we're standing by at the supreme court, two big decisions should come down this morning. join us live from "america's newsroom," top of the hour.
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jillian: good morning we're back with a fox news alert. moments ago pentagon identified two troops killed in afghanistan. michael riley and james johnson of new york both died in small arms combat fire. they are the 8th and 9th american servicemembers to die in afghanistan this year. brian? brian: wow. all eyes on capitol hill this morning as the house expected to send its revised version of a emergency funding bill back to the senate before they break for summer recess. our next guest testified before the house budget committee pleading for more resources. talk about comprehensive? he wanted to talk about the emergency. surge of migrant put his city under a state of emergency. everyone seems to be ignoring it. joining us the mayor of yuma,
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arizona, douglas nichols. mr. mayor, how bad is it, did you get your message across yesterday? >> an example how bad it is, 5000 people come through the shelter system in the last three months. if you relate that to say a city like the phoenix area, 4 million people that would be equivalent of 200,000 people coming through the phoenix area. yuma is only 100,000 people. the order of magnitude is depending upon the community which releases are happening. so 200,000 people released in phoenix would be a dramatic impact. yesterday at the house committee meeting it was a lot of, really explaining what is going on and i think most people really understood but it was kind of divided between discussion about illegal and legal immigration. brian: meanwhile you have a crisis. you have 50,000 have already come here, up until may 23rd in the yuma sector. the facilities can't hold it. everyone want to be critical of the facilities people are held
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in. they don't want to stop people from coming here illegally. what do you say to them? >> well, it is never going to stop until we fix the system, we find a way to discourage that, that process from happening where people come through illegally, if there is an asylum claim, we should handle that through regular order. not being in a forced situation where people force themselves across the border. brian: right. in mexico they're supposed to wait there for asylum claims to be processed s that working for you? >> that would be a lot better to manage. i know right now there is over 700 people waiting in the community right across the border to come through the port in regular order to get asylum claims made. so there are, there is a group doing that but, the majority are just, don't want to wait for whatever reason. so they're coming around the border. brian: in 2018, 26,000 apprehensions. in 2019, you are are have 50,000. this is crisis. in terms after barrier, not talking about controversy after barrier, in terms of barrier, if i give you what you need, what
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would you ask for me? >> as far as barrier we need something contiguous. we have river, rough terrain, that is where they come around in very, in large groups, hundreds sometimes, more than 100 at a time. so a physical barrier helps but technology helps. but ultimately having more people in uniform on the border, agent, customs agents as well as border patrol agents, "ice agent," those would help really manage the situation because at this point, they are completely overwhelmed. brian: mr. mayor, what do you make sure you get? if 4.5 million coming to border community, you're one of them, what part goes to yuma? >> i think the big thing we need to do alleviate the burden on the small communities. what i would like to see, ability or funding in order to keep the traffic moving to the larger i.c.e. facilities, so releases can happen in communities that can handle this kind of impact, get yuma out of the shelter business. it is too much of a burden on
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our community in the long term. it is not sustainable. brian: what do you have to say to people who are critical of the conditions? >> well the conditions are kind of a cause, not so much an effect of what is going on. the facilities that border patrol currently using are what was designed for immigration patterns over the last 20, 30, 40 years. they haven't been constructed as of today. really looking at how can we modify those two to accept families. they were all set for short-term, six hour type of holds. now we're doing multiple day holds t requires a just a different approach. to be critical of what we have today, and not fund how to fix it, that is, it doesn't make any sense to me. brian: it is maddening. there are hard problems sometimes. this is not a hard problem. it's a will. you have to shelf politics. mayor, thanks so much. >> thank you very much for having me. brian: more "fox & friends" in just a moment. don't move.
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♪ >> all right. well there goes three hours. another debate tonight. you can see the coverage here tomorrow morning. >> is we can make that happen, i'm going to be in florida. i am going to be doing this on fox nation. it is going tv streaming. orlando, july 20th. show in north carolina, and birmingham, alabama.
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>> you are so popular. >> awesome. >> a lot of people are going to be dropping by tomorrow. our all american summer concert series. >> thank you -- >> sandra: one hour from now, the supreme court will issue its final decisions on two highly anticipated cases that could impact politics in america. election maps and the scope of executive power and whether the trump administration can include a citizenship question on the 2020 census. those rulings are expected top of the next hour. but first, the trump campaign calling out the far left as the first ten democratic candidates took the stage in miami last night, and in a matter of hours, round two will be underway. good morning, everyone. i'm sandra smith. >> trace: good morning, sandra. i'm trace gallagh

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