tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News September 3, 2019 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT
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because when others take rain checks... we take the wheel. run with us. search "john deere gator" for more. tucker is up next. ♪ ♪ >> welcome. hurricane dorian has left a trail of devastation in the bahamas. pictures on the screen right no five people have died that number may go up dramatically a we get details. at that same storm is headed up the east coast of the united states and we are monitoring hi progress. first tonight, tragedies have a way of revealing who people really are they decent one rise to the moment, hard as it is they bring clarity and comfort and solutions. the low ones by contrast see sadness as a business opportunity. they are happy to leverage the suffering of othersas in order
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increase their own power. they thrive in the aftermath ofl mass shootings like the ones we've recently seen in el paso, dayton, and odessa, texas praye the wasted no time before reaching and sneering at other people's prayers. a could get the thoughts and prayers that you just referred to has done nothing to stophi t epidemic of gun violence. we're averaging about 300 mass shootings a year. no other country comes close, yes, this is a leap up. >> he is the f word on live television. how unbelievably cool is that. he's like a jazz musician from the 50s giving the finger to the man if you're someone that feels finds that hip into peeling. prayed you can buy this is so .irect from his campaign the shirt spells out the word s all your 19 -year-old don't
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forget not to shave very he's not stopping there with t-shirt and profanity he's got ideas on how to stop mass shootings. a they begin and end with banning guns. will it work? we don't have to guess, we know the answer because we tried it before under bill clinton. the assault weapons ban was inr it had zero effect on the rates of. is not a defensens of the secon amendment it's a fact, it's bee studied extensively including b the clinton administration.st he's not interested in what those say he's going to confiscate firearms from tens o millions of law-abiding americans whether it works or not. he doesn't care bewhat you thin about it. >> how do you address the fears of gun owners that you're going to take if you're talking about buybacks. >> is. i want to be really clear that that is exactly what were going to do. americans will own who own air
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fifteens, ak-47s will have to sell them to the government. >> they will have to sell them to the government. you want to hear propaganda so you they describe described thi as a gun buyback prayed that's nonsense of force. americans didn't buy their guns from the government nsin the fi place. they're not buying them back. this is gun confiscation. it's nothing, but that, it's intent to eliminate the constitutional right it won't reduce gun violence, sending armed authorities door-to-door to seize people's offal is itself a surefire recipe for causing violence. if you cared about america and the people who live here, you would not suggest that. but they don't hesitate. bill de blasio shas enforced can. over the weekend joe biden suggested banning not just assault weapons, but apparentl every firearm capable of firing more than one round.
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>> the idea that we don't have the elimination of assault type weapons, magazines that can hol multiple bullets in them as absolutely mindless. yes, mindless. that is the perfect word for what you just said. serious people don't talk like that. mass shootings out to be in alarm that awaken the rest of u to the emergency the real emergency unfolding at the center of our culture. why is this happening? how did nihilism and vitalism i rage and loneliness become a regular features of american life? something is fundamentally wrong . what is it, and is materialism enough to fix it? those are the metaphysical questions we ought to be thinking about deeply, seriously , and debating every time some lunatic shoots up a public pace. instead we get mediocrities lat
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elizabeth warren screaming at rural america rule america abou other in the process and they iged to give up their ancientrr rights or else. we need much more than that. a former army ranger joins us tonight. him think you a lot for coming on. so this is something we've been talking about for quite some time. assess the specifics before we get to the general, joe biden has saidip that any magazine th holds more than a single round ought to be banned, and it's crazy not to. >> i'm hoping this is just another joe biden gaffe that he just has no idea what he's talking about because i don't know of a single magazine that doesn't hold more than one roun of ammunition. iffy means what he says and he knows what he's talking about then he's talking about banning every single gun out there t. >> is so, at this scale of this i think we should put this into some perspective. the scale of this is enormous.
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there are millions upon millions , tens of millions of firearms and potentially up to billion magazines that fall under the band categories is described by these candidates. what would it look like for the government to take them away? >> i'm glad you said take them away because baidoa work is saying they're going to buy the back like the government sold them in the first place. what i hear is ongoing to come door-to-door and take your guns from you and i'm going to bring my guns because if you don't want to give them up i'm going to use my guns to force them from your. or talking mass scale please door-to-door. the e assault weapon ban, not o did nothing to prevent gun violence, we actually peaked ou worst violence we had peaked during the middle of the clinto ban.n. was will do nothing to stop crime overall. it will do nothing to stop islands of robert look at chicago.o. more people shot in chicago tha
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we did in the horrible tragedy in odessa, but we're not t hearing anyone talk about that.w is it because people expected there. is because people know chicago, that's just chicago. why should we care about people that live there to. why shouldn't we realize that when was the last time you heard a politician on the left, begin that conversation. ask the obvious question. why is this happening. >> i haven't. and i hope the reason why is they're just going for attention. i hope they aren't as ma luscious and i hope this realize, this is polling well x this is a way to pull at people's heart strings, and we are talking about them. i really hope their ignorance is
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only going this far, they think it's popular. if they think that because their emotions trump the civil liberty that scare he is. >> l it's something we should be really afraid of. brian, thanks for that. a former pole teachers r story for bill clinton. thanks very much for coming on tonight. so a billion magazines that fit under this definition, tens of millions of semiautomatic weapons. what would it look like if the government tried to take those by force. >> i've got good news for you. i don't think have you to worry about beto o'rourke becoming president. i think what's fascinating is something seems to unite americans today, than support for universal background check. 9 out of 10 americans support universal background checks. 9 out of 10 republicans support it. ththe president supports
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background checks. >> tucker: before i let you get off your talking points, congratulations. you did. and beto o'rourke is a footnote and mediocre character. it's not simply beto. elizabeth warren, who seems to be the democratic party, has also called for gun confecation. what you're calling for is an incitement of violence. i wouldn't want to live here when that happens . >> i would support it only in the context of red flag laws. >> that's not what they're saying. and we can debate in this a real debate. if someone seems dangerous, would we have to convict him before taking his guns away. i don't think what you're saying is insane away. elizabeth warren is saying, is firearms are illegal and whoever poiseses them is a felon and we're taking them away.
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what would happen to our nation? >> i do know the answer to this. wal-mart said they are no longer going to sell ammunition for handguns and assault rifles and no longer going too, lou people to carry openly in their stores. in the face of government action. business is rising -- >> tucker: you know, there's no doubt that business is in the vanguard of the activist left. and wal-mart, who made this country much uglier and empowered the fascist country of china. they out to be ashamed of themselves that, company upon. does it strike you as interesting, the response from the ruling class is not to think why this has happened, but to attack rural america. there's no crime in most places where everyone owns a gun. >> i don't think anyone's call
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ought rural america. the cause of these shootings, i think we need a comprehensive approach. and flag people who shouldn't have guns and begin to limit high-capacity magazines. why do you need these things in no one's hunting with an ak-47. >> tucker: , i guess my question is why so it has have to explain myself. i'm a taxpayer, citizen an adult man in a free country. i've done nothing wrong. i shouldn't have to answer questions from you or anybody else. i pose no threat to anybody. >> but we do have restrictive -- >> tucker: you are attacking the law abiding for the sins of a few. this is a power grab. it's note a sincere effort to make this a safer country. nobody is actually serious about trying to fix the problem.
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if you were, you would be every bit upset about the rest of the murders. less than 10% of murders in this country are not from a rifle. >> the suicide rate would plummet and other number of gun deaths, which are at 33,000 per year, i mean, 93 people are killed every day by guns r.7 kids are killed every day. >> tucker: i thought the left supported suicide. last time i checked the state of maine, for example, the left has now made physician-assisted suicide illegal. i'm opposed to it. >> i'm personally against suicide, but physician-assisted suicide, should be between the doctor -- >> tucker: oh. you're going to take my guns away, because of suicide, but you're going to make suicide
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legal. i think people who are mentally unstable, shouldn't have access to guns. i think we should put an assault weapons ban back on. these weapons are not use forward hunting. thank you very much for coming o. >> tucker: hurricane dorian, whipping his with you up the east coast. rick levin that you will is in atlanta beach this morning. hey, rick. >> and tucker, no question. the state of florida, incredibly fortunate this storm turned to the north and more to the east. we do expect to feel tropical storm force conditions tonight, into all day tomorrow. we're told winds of 35 to 50 miles an hour, here in duvall county w three to 6 inches of rain, but other stretches the florida coast line can also get hit as hard or harder and the states of emergency struts all the way up to virginia.
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north carolina, mandatory evacuation of all barrier islands along the north carolina coast and in south carolina they already reversed the flow. so every lane heading westbound so people can evacuate the coast of south carolina, the storm dorian, only, its worse damage down in the bahamas r it first hit as a category 5. with 180 miles an hour plus winds and we have seen aerial footage from the bahamas. which is just devastating. down there, it wiped out entire communities. businesses are underwater. they are still suffering down there. we know the coast guard made some, they were able to make some medical evacuations, help out the bohemian forces who are trying to get in there and get people out. but we still are hear being 5
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confirmed dead, and we're hoping that number doesn't get any higher. the state of florida, again, there are many mandatory evacuations here. they closed a lot airports. 1800 plus flights canceled, and 650 more tomorrow. a lot happening down here and other weather is getting worse. but the worse of it was in the bahamas, and the worse may yet to be to come out there on the south carolina and north carolina coast. >> tucker: rick levin that you will. we'll be keep being up updated throughout the hour, on hurricane dorian's. >> tucker: joe biden feels like he's running for president because he feels obligated to. is it work something rick humejoins us after the break.
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>> tucker: running for president, isn't easy. it means in some cases, spending year on the road, not much time to rest. you don't see your family very often and that means the people who do it really sincere want to be president. they don't have an ambition deficit. so biden though, meant exception. watch. >> i think at this moment in time, i'm the most qualify person to do it. could i die happily, not having be hailed chief. i could. the longer i've been around, the less that appeals to me. i've watched up close and perjury, what 8 years in the white house is like. and i watched it. and it's not something that i can hardly wait to move in the
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white house. >> tucker: so maybe he doesn't want really be president. the question is is anybody excited about joe biden becoming president. recent polls show, his own campaign is now down playing the state of iowa saying it's not a must-win state for them o. possible, biden is not even the front runner now. so if he's not winning and doesn't really want to be president. why is he doing this? rick humes our senior critical analyst here at fox news. hey, brit. >> tucker. >> tucker: so joe biden. i think a lot of people on the right, me included think biden is the most reasonable person in the field. >> yeah, very nice man. >> i absolutely think this. but i've never thought that his heart seemed in it and i never thought this was his year. >> i think he's always wanted to be president. he's tried it before. that hadn't worked out. i think he thinks perhaps now
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it's his turn. i think he wants to be president because i think he would represent sort of the culmination of his career and i think, you know, his problem isn't just that he makes these gap gasps want he blurts these things out, for example, poor people are estimator than white people. however he put that. that's a gaff. however, tucker, the stuff you see with him more recently, for example, not remembering that when he met with the students of parkland high school, that he wasn't still in office. he had been out of office for more than a year when that happened. the fact that heries remember that would. that's the kind of memory problems people his age, have all the time. and i think the thing may catch up with biden over time, even among democrats otherwise before him circuits feeling that senility is taking
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over and i think it is. >> tucker: jeez, no one wants to say that. do you think that, but you make a compelling case for it. do you think that democratic leaders in washington still exist and have power, share the concern. >> oh. sure, i they do. they're bound t. they see this stuff and you know, you look at the history of the presidential campaigns. you know, it's been he's undone himself repeatedly, the plagiarism of the neat kenneth speech, and stumbles that he's h. he tells tall tales, the most recent one he had, he pinned the medal on the guy and had all the facts all jumbled up. that strike he is as a another case that he's failing. and i think someone going in to confront donald trump work says all kinds of crazy stuff all the time. people know that about him. and if you're going to beat him, you
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can't, you don't want to be a candidate, suffering from the same kind of problem, although expressed in different ways. you cannot be someone who tell us all kinds of tall tales all the time if you are trying to beat the by who you think is bad because he tells tall tales all the time. >> tucker: look at the polls, they say biden is in front. he's the nominee. >> we have no idea who the front runner is. we are so early in this process. we are months and months away from anybody voting. and we are half a year away from just about the early caucus. biden is leading those places is much smaller. he's just a few points ahead, single digits, in iowa and new hampshire. i think that sentiment is very soft and we see these reactions in debates. pamela harris had a big moment when she took biden on. and by the time the second or thirdy defensive end bait rolled around z back to where she
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started from. i think everything is soft want a lot everything is name recognition and so oand the democrats around the country have not really begun to think seriously about this because they're normal people they were not as absorbed as we are, and until people start voting. i don't think we'll have any real sense of who the front runner really s. >> well, from a field crowded with phony hip crates. key positions were transparently false. her accomplishments, defined and then she thought she could present herself as a champion of all 1 60 million american women. >> do you believe in women? do you value women? that is the question. >> when we beat president trump and mitch mcconnell walks into the oval office, god forbid to do negotiations who want do you want to fight for women's right? >> make no mistake, if president
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trump want ace war on america's women, it's a war he's going to have and it's a war he's going to lose. >> tucker: nobody was fooled by that. nobody apparently, except for the new york times. in a piece published over the holiday weekend. the paper suggested that, you guest it. sexism was to blame for gi llibrand's failure. support among women as she had for men. zero percent. and get team bruce on fox nation and worth paying the subtranscription for to see t joins us tonight. so team. it's almost a rhetorical question. but do you believe sexism killed the gill ibbrand campaign. >> no, we don't believe that. but the new york time system really accusing others of that. democrats. they are accusing the democratic base of this. those are the people who are not
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been responding to her candidacy. this is the generation that was supposed to understand all of this. the fact of the matter is, that gillibrand was the problem want these candidates are the problem. not the average democratic voter. not the average american. these elitist, the hypocrites. the journalists. they own it all and know it all. they don't know going. the fact of the matter is, she lost for the same reason she withdrew for the same reasons. men withdraw. it's because they are bad candidates. they have a bad message and especially in today's e.r.a., tucker, that we are able with so much coverage, to be able to assess people very quickly and we know who's being genuine and wean who hasn't. in speak with your conversation with brit. one of the greatest strengths of donald trump is that he is himself. you know, he's not trying to be somebody else. he was he was himself from the start of the campaigning in the
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primary season to this day. is one person of all these campaigners, who didn't shift when it went from primaries t to -- to a general to being himself. that is a a unique framework. so when you see someone like jill brand, remember, she was supposed to be the likeable hilary clinton. and i think that what we have learned here is that no iteration of hilary clinton is acceptable and it comes down also to the story, kind of an insult that if we think we can be president, and i believe a woman can be, and would be a fabulous president, that we need to be taken serious least but we will only be taken seriously when we take ourselves seriously and hold ourselves accountable. as is hillary and many of these liberal women of course raised in an environment where they have no reprecushions to their behavior. they don't have to take going
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seriously. everything is the politicless of victim head hood and thing they're going to shame you. they are learning the american people are far ahead of them when it come to the right moves of the country and at this point, they are they're not it. >> tucker: if i had a child who made this many excuses, i would spank the child. >> and you'd ground them and not let them out and run for any office either. no, you wouldn't. >> tucker: great to see you tonight. thank you. a federal judges toed out the case of steinly's kill expert state of maryland brings more horrific crimes by people who shouldn't be in this country in the first place. plus, hurricane dorian's already caused massive flooding. we're tracking the east coast. stay stupid. clear
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juror failed to convict an immigrant. now, federal judges are doing their point to inflict more pain on steinle's family on friday, a california appeals court, threw out zarate's conviction of being a felon with a firearm. nobody dispute that. the court threw out legal technicality. he is still in custody ocriminal charges but that changer has been thrown out. we have learned a lot about the priorities of the ruling class in this case. jose garcia zarate was deport friday this clerk five separate times. he was a convicted felon. he had been arrested just months before, he murdered kate
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steinle. when the charges were dropped, he was released. instead of being kicked out of the country. deported 5 times. the case did happen because powerful people in this country, won't tolerate even dangerous criminals being kept out-country. they are so extreme and they have become this way. they have become so extreme on the left, not only are they unhandwriting their stop a murderer. they are unwilling to punish him after he's been caught. in a related story. authorities in montgomery county, have arrested another illegal immigrant for another violent sex crime against another child. emilio hernandez, sexually, upon assault his 15-year-old step daughter, according to police. he is the seventh immigrant arrested for a sex crime in montgomery county, just since july 25.
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dc radio host with wmal room thanks for coming on tonight. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: why are we just learn being this now? is there a reason seven of these stories have come to light. >> this is they r question and it's an important one. carsascohernandez, made it back into the country. and now, he rape aid 15-year-old girl and we talk about seven is the number you've brought up since july 25. that's the number of people who have been arrested on rape or sexual abuse charges. the majority of these cases, sexual rape or abuse a mine o. these are children being hurt in almost all of these cases. the reason why we're all of a sudden, finding out about this hot concentration of stories is not that this is a new phenom. it's that rank and file police officers and prosecutors in montgomery county are furious at their own leadership, for allowing problem to continue festering as long as it has much these stories haven't been public before because they are
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dealing with them. the top elected official in the county have made it so montgomery county, maryland is specifically, a place where illegal immigration is protected at all costs, and now, cops and prosecutors are furious. and they want these stories out there. >> good pleas them for doing that. by publicizing these crimes. really, that's the only resource i think people v. mark i wouldridge, the county executive, who more than any other person made this possible possible, sat for an interview with you. >> yeah. >> tucker: what was his explain for this. >> he doesn't have explanations. he points fingers at the federal government for allowing illegal immigrants to be in the area. he said that illegal immigration shouldn't be considered a problem. when i pose questions to him about all, he respondd to me, "l what do you think we should do, deport all illegal immigrants?" if you don't like the laws of
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this c work to charge them. but in the meantime, enforce them. and that's not what they're doing in montgomery county. in late july, he passed an executive order, codifying, what was heading in that county. if you're a county official, you are not a loud allow federal agents into ill jas. the feds have to stand outside, and catch these guys when they're coming out of the jail. it makes it a more unsafe environment to have somebody eject into the public and caught by the feds, rather than a peaceful prisoner transfer. the fed vs. probable cause to issue these arrests. they have issued detainer detainers because they have established, this is someone who we believe is illegally in the c. one story i was so stunned by. inside of these jails thanks gotten calls from feds that say, that guy is ms-13. do not release him. and then they release him. they don't have an address on tile and he looks at these
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jailers in the face, he'll smile and walk right outside the door. even the coleft wing county like montgomery, you have to think people. democrats, this is too much. and they do. i'm glad. great to see you tonight. thank you. >> a young woman in the trump administration just lost her job in the most humiliating possible way. why? because the reporter from the "washington post" decided to expose off the record record comments she made in violation of everything journalists say they believe. interesting story. we have got details on t. plus, we'll continue to track the progress of hurricane dorian as it make landfall in the united states. the death toll in the bahamas, has risen since the show began tonight. stay tuned for details. by the strolle♪s
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♪ >> tucker: purdue pharma is the company that the powerful opioid pain killer. when the company released that drug that i can claimed it would be les addictive than other opioid medications want that was a lie. purdue pharma knew it was a limelight and multitudes died as a result. oxycontin turns out to be terrifyingly addictive. it has killed more americans than any conflicts since the second word war want we know purdue pharma understood exactly what they were doing. recent legal filings have exposed internal communication with the company and show the company's sales staff was to sell as many as they could. prescribing the possible highest doses of the drug, in order to maximize profits q. evidence emerge that would people were
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becoming junkie. purdue pharma began on shaming the patients who the who's this? were hook bod their drugs. calling them degenerates. it's hard to imagine an uglier story. through ought of t we should know, purdue farmer's owners, grew spectacularly rich, looking back, repulsively rich. early there year, they were estimated to have more than $12 billion in the bank, thanks to the opioid epidemolition permit, the sackler family is with the night of richest families in the country. purdue pharma has face aids wave of lawsuits. and apparently, the company's made a settlement offer to resolve all of these out standing lawsuits, purdue upon pharma is willing to pay $12 billion, $3 billion will come from the sackler family. the massive tobacco settlement of 1998 totaled about
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$206 billion. no one would defend cigarette smoking. over do i do tell kill you. but smoking doesn't turn teenagers into zombies. it hasn't destroyed entire towns. the sacklers are hoping to get off with 6% more than the tobacco companies paid 20 years ago that's just wrong. according to bloom bloom berg, they will retain a billion and a half dollars after the settlement. is that justice? no, it's not b. unfortunately, it's a now familiar pattern in american life. the ruling class, gets incredibly rich by wrecking our country, in this case by killing many thousands of young people at the same time get caught doing t details emerge. everyone in washington, new york, and los angeles, spends a week pretending to be horrified, concern, and nothing happens. not a single one of the perpetrators ever goes to jail. nobody's ever really punished.
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we see it again, and again, including the footage crisis of 2008. in the end, and in this characters they take their blood money and head to st. bart's for thankings giving and laugh. they get away with it every single time. it would be nice that people like the sacklers got what they deserve. it might make the rest of us les cynical. madeline westerhouse was the perjury assistant to president trump. she worked hard and did well at her job. it's hard to find anyone in washington who doesn't like her. yet now, she's unemployed and humiliated. she made a mistake of eating dinner with a "washington post" reporter named phil rutgear and made a couple catty remarks about the president's daughter. that can happen at dinners where wines served. what's stunning, what is really unusual is what happened next. the meal was explicitly off the
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record. for journalist, that's the brightest of all lines. information johnists learn in off had the of-record conversations, absolutely cannot be shared. it's one of the few unbreakable rulings in the business. everybody in the business knows that but because she work forward donald trump, phil rut berlindi of the "washington post," decided to casually break that rule. according to multiple sources he shared her remarks worthies. she was immediately desired as we said, humail aited. rutger, meanwhile, returned to washington the here o. in fact, he was happily yapping away on msnbc this afternoon want his boss at the "washington post" issue aid statement, telling the rest of us what, a great guy he is. has something changed the past couple of weeks? is off the record a category that you no long verto observe?
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>> as you mentioned, tucker, that's a commandment. auto like veg. what happens in veg, stays in vegas. when you have an off the record conversation with a reporter, it is understood, as long as the parties establish beforehand, this is an off-the-record conversation o. not goodbye mentioned, talked about. it's not supposed to get out. and in this case, there were other reporters there as well. reporters from bloomberg, and the wall street journal and "washington post." it can't be confirmed that grutger -- again, i can't confirm that and i'm not going to do that here. go ahead. >> tucker: i personally have spoken to people who have confirmed it.
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i'm satisfied with their knowledge of it. so i believe that happened. i'm willing to say so, explicitly. but the call over the "the washington post," as we always do, and ask the subject of the segment, for a statement. the "washington post" refused to respond to our question tha to statements. i want you to confirm for us. this is a really important question. this is not a small thing if you're a journalist. the question would be a broken off the record agreement. >> it's a fireable offense. in my opinion. now, you have taken this career of this 28-year-old in madeline westerhaus. do you think she's ever going to work again. grant t she bears some responsibility here. clearly, you should know, given acronym between the press, and the administration and given fact there's complete mistrust between the last thing you do is go out to dinner, get over
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served. and you start talking, thinking you can tile trust the people that you're with. in this case, it's a means to an end. no one cares madeline westerhaus was burned here by someone. they only care about the message, which i of cree organizations like the "washington post," which are pure political, designed to effect political outcomes. they don't care about individuals, they don't care about the rules. they just care about power. and i think there should be, i mean, you just said it. it's a fireable offense to break this room do you think any chance phil rut berlindi will be fired from the "washington post." >> no. of course not. they would vanished a statement talking about t. obviously, they are backing him. and why would you burn this source if they're openly talking about him. the only thing i could think of
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is it was more access looking this out and letting people know you had this information. >> tucker: all i know is here this young woman has really seen her life derail and they're all patting phil rug eer on his back. joke great sty tonight. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: so bill de blasio is labeled the worse mayor in of the h. a new title for bill de blasio next. clear
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i will take on the big corporations. i will not rest until this government serves working people. as mayor of the largest city in america, i've done just that. i'm bill de blasio, and i'm running for president because it's time we put working people first. >> tucker: weirdest posture. it looks like he left his hanger in his suit jacket. i will not rest, he pledged. that's not particularly true. the one thing he's doing is resting. according to a new report in "the new york post," for the entire month of may, bill de blasio spent a total of drumroll please, seven hours att city hall. not seven hours per day. seven hours total. seth baron lives in new york city, he joins us tonight. look, i'm not as hip as i used to be. i'm not sort of current with what is considered hard work, i guess. but seven hours in a month that's still considered slacking, even in new york.
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>> it's not a full day's work. h tucker, to be honest, everyone i've talked to about this sayso. the less he's here, the less damage he does.we should have s, why didn't he run in 2016? look, this is a man who considers that a normal thing to go in midmorning and take a fleet of limousines to brooklyn to go to the gym and sort of stand on the elliptical and peddle in the middle of the working day. afor most people. then go get a pastry. this is a guy who is reported to take naps during the middle of the day. his campaign has been a disaster from the t beginning, when he wt to trump tower and made an absurd announcement and people were parading behind him withru "worst mayor ever" signs. then he went on to miami and he
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quoted shage overa.it's a joke. >> tucker: i remember speaking to a new york city cop, retired saying that the mansion was full of marijuana smokewhen the debl. do you think that's maybe part of it? >> seth: look, i've heard this, too.ha it's kind of a common theme around city hall and around the press and so forth. whether it's true or not, i don't know, but it certainly would explain a lot. >> it would explain a lot. it would explain a lot. and here, we just thought it was laziness, and a slow metabolismr is really bad because he is really high. >>t seth: he may not be the worst mayor in new york history. [laughter] >> nice to see you. >> thanks, tucker.
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>> it's the one that's it for us tonight. the good news is, we will be back tomorrow and every weeknight from now until om tfully a long time from now. the show that is the sworn enemy of lying, smugness, and especially, groupthink. we'll be back tomorrow, but in the meantime, sean hannity. live from new york city. >> sean: all right, tucker.grea. hope you had good weekend. welcome to hannity. we begin along the florida coast, preparing for potential damage from hurricane dorian.nor stand big in cocoa beach, atlantic beach, daytona beach and we also have a live report from the bahamas. it was absolutely devastated by this hurricane. sad what is happening. our thoughts, our prayers are with all of our friends that have been impacted there. the death toll has now risen to seven.we expect more, unfortuna. we hope and pray not. we'll have more coverage of that devastation. also coming up tonight, the
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