tv Americas News HQ FOX News October 6, 2019 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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♪ >> in the nation's capitol. anything but a quiet sunday as congressional democrats continue to push ahead with their impeachment inquiry into the president of the united states. we are now learning that a second whistleblower has come forward with what is now described as first-hand knowledge of events surrounding the president's call with his ukrainian counterpart. welcome to "america's news headquarters." i'm leland vittert. that key word, first-hand versus secondhand which the initial whistleblower said he had. arthel: i'm jillian mele.
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thanks for joining us. political controversy has the president moving into overdrive on social media continuing to deny wrongdoing. we begin our coverage with poll my hennenberg. reporter: they do not think much of another whistleblower coming forward as leland saying with information about the july 25th phone call between president trump and president of ukraine. they say the transcript is out there and americans can read it for themselves. as for the whistle-blowers one gop senator says the americans need to hear from them directly if the house moves ahead with impeachment. >> it is imperative that the whistleblower interviewed in public, under oath, cross-examined no one pose to jail or has anything done to them without meeting their accuser. the whistleblower come forward under oath, testify, so the
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judge can testify the credibility. if that doesn't happen in the house i will make sure it happens in the senate. reporter: senator graham says it is imperative that the house vote on impeachment inquiry. make it official they're looking into impeachment, not quote, just talk about it. democrats said they are not required to do that by the constitution. as for whistle-blowers democrats are praising them coming forward even if they weren't in the situation room for that phone call. >> whether they were in the room or had first-hand knowledge or talked to somebody who had first-hand knowledge people in the very core of all of these events are saying this can't happen anymore. again the president's problem is not with the democrats or with adam schiff. with the fact that people around him are saying we can't tolerate this anymore. reporter: house intelligence committee chairman adam schiff says the whistle-blowers have quote, every legal right to remain anonymous. jillian? jillian: molly, thank you very
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much. >> president's personal attorney rudy giuliani says the call with ukraine was appropriate. they are defending the their not to cooperate now. kevin corke north lawn of the white house. what do you make of this, sunday morning during an impeachment inquiry, not a single member of the administration not on any of the sunday shows? reporter: interesting decisions. you might have expected one or two, to be candidate they were really out there in full force near the end of the week. the president has you also know loves to take his message out directly to the american people although we saw rudy giuliani out this morning on sunday morning media buzz with howie kurtz. follow up on something jillian said, if there is house vote, that puts members on both sides of the political aisle on the record for impeachment. that is particularly important for the new house democrats,
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that came to capitol hill from the flipped red districts. that is really frankly one of the many reasons the white house wants nancy pelosi to put up or shut up. they know that it is a lot tougher for them if they have to go on the record. meanwhile subpoenas from three house committees made their way to the white house as you pointed out, looking for detailed information about the president's conversation with the leader of ukraine. this as fox news has confirmed that second whistleblower allegedly expressed concern about the conversation and claims to have first-hand knowledge of some of what was alleged in the original complaint. the president is skeptical as you can well imagine saying on twitter, coming from the deep state also with secondhand info. his attorney talking about the whistle blower or her attorney, whichever, says they have first-hand knowledge. now the white house is expected on perhaps on monday, we'll see, to tell speaker pelosi, it won't cooperate with any requests until the house moves forward
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with a vote. >> we'll be issuing a letter, as everybody knows we've been treated very unfairly. reporter: now i want to share this tweet because we were just talking a moment ago, leland, about the attorney for this latest ic whistleblower says this on twitter, does andrew bakaj. ic whistle-blower update, i can confirm that my firm and my represent multiple whistle-blowers in section with the underlying august 12, 2019. disclose you are to the icig. no further comment at this time. there are a number of questions. did hunter biden get hundreds of thousands of dollars because of his dad's influence in ukraine, was joe biden's threat to withhold u.s. funds done to get the government to remove a prosecutor who by some accounts was hot on his son's business dealings.
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the former vp says that is not the case. the president's attorney meanwhile isn't buying it. >> the guy's crook, big time, and he made a mockery of the united states of america. we are laughed at in the ukraine. in the ukraine they say you lecture us on corruption and your idiot press can't figure out we were paying off joe biden. what do you think chinese think? the chinese were paying 1.5 billion to this kid? they were buying the vice president. reporter: strong words there from rudy giuliani with howard kurtz on "mediabuzz." the president even offering a an invitation dem sate say looking into biden is a tacit something of value. that is completely ridiculous white house says. especially as lawmakers try to dig in, get house speaker nancy pelosi to come up with a vote or get rid of this whole charade, their words. back to you.
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>> that was the tamer part of the rudy giuliani interview. a repeat to come later on fox news channel. get the popcorn. kevin, thanks so much. jillian? jillian:firy 30 minutes. joining me florida house republican member of house judiciary and house oversight reform committees, greg stuebe. a busy sunday. let's begin with the information everyone is talking about on the program, we are hearing there are reportedly multiple whistle-blowers we're hearing reportedly with first-hand knowledge. what do you say to that? >> i say the president made the transcript public to the american people. any american or anyone wants to read the transcript of the conversation between the president and ukrainian president can do that, judge for themselves whether they think anything in that transcript that is impeachment conduct. i don't think there is anything in the transcript that is
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impeachable conduct. there is no quid pro quo. there is no coverup in the information. there is nothing in my opinion the president can be impeached upon. jillian: what do you make of the timing of whistle blowers and multiple whistle-blowers is coming forward. >> this is what i've done been dealing with. the democrats will stop at nothing to impeach this president. first it was russian collusion hoax. that was a fraud american the american people after 2 1/2 years. the mueller report came out said there was no collusion. democrats moved from collusion to obstruction of justice. from that, to the phone call with the ukrainian president. it is clear democrats will stop at nothing to impeach this president. jillian: talk about joe biden for a second. when he is asked about this, obviously the last two weeks he is dealing with a lot of questions about this. he deflects a lot of them. he hasn't really said much.
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do i think we need to hear more from joe biden? >> we need to investigate the information that we have. i don't have evidence in front of me but we know for a fact his son was being paid $50,000 a month from a ukrainian company to be on some both of an energy company which he had no background or experience to v the former vice president threatened that the ukraine wouldn't get a billion dollar loan guarranty unless they fired the prosecutor who was investigating his son's company. that calls into serious question some crimes that may have been committed and should be investigated. arthel: i'm not sure if you heard all of the rudy giuliani interview earlier this morning. he made mention couple times. you hear from folks who say, hunter biden says i didn't do anything wrong. then all of sudden, okay, we believe you, the investigation stops. his point was, then you have the president saying i didn't do anything wrong but he doesn't get the same reaction. >> no, of course not because democrats are in control of congress. for the last since i've been sworn in january, six committees
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have been investigating this president from everything from his tax returns to conversations he has with foreign leaders, to the mueller report, you name it. it is not going to stop as long as democrats are in charge. they have not done anything for floridians, for the american people in the 10 months we've been in congress all they have been focused on is impeaching the president. jillian: where do you think it goes from here the next few weeks? do you think the house moves forward with a vote? >> i hope they do. i hope put all members to decide if we should put forward impeachment inquiry. every single past president impeachment inquiry from johnson, clinton, nixon, had a vote before the house authorizing a pipe pipe inquiry. that has not happened. >> you're part of a motion to condemn chairman schiff. talk about that. >> chairman schiff stood before the committee, completely misrepresented who were watching that afterwards in the telecast,
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completely misrepresented what was in the transcript. i believe those comments should be censored. jillian: thank you,. >> thank you. eric: >> great interview. democrat from this side of the aisle, deb dingell. glad you're filing better. good so see you. if there was a vote tomorrow for impeachment inquiry, are you a yea or a nay? >> i probably would be a yea but right now i the facts are very simple to me. under enormous amount of pressure last summer, tom steyer buying ads from moveon.org i'm worried about the how divided this country is. mueller report talked about how russia tried to divide us as a country. i'm only interested in the facts. the facts are a whistleblower
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came forward filed a complaint. a trump appointed inspector general came forward and said the was credible. >> you're a yea on impeachment inquiry vote, does that mean that you, and you say you want the facts, courts have recognized it a lot easier to get facts if there is formal impeachment inquiry. strengthens subpoenas sent to the white house. so why not have the vote? >> we need to make sure we get the facts. right now many of these hearings are taking place in a classified setting which by the way i'm not part of. don't think ii should be part of. i need to be worried about the cost of prescription drugs while they were working that but i think we need to take a lot of drama out of what is happening right now. this is very serious time for this country. i'm really worried about it. >> if it is such a serious time, same for serious people why go on television and avoid
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centuries of precedent say that we are not going to have a vote on an impeachment inquiry which would be the full house speaking and instead just do it as a press conference? wouldn't it add a lot more gravitas to this and seriousness to use your words if there was a vote by the full house? >> i think six committees but three committees doing much of the work. if those three committees think there is enough evidence to move forward on impeachment inquiry we do that. as i listened to my previous speaker, we don't have a democratic congress. we have a democratic house and republican senate. if the house were to, no decision has been made where we're going to go, this trial would go through a republican senate. that is what, you know, we have, we are three houses, branches of government that are balanced. we have sense of check and balanced.
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>> genius of the founders. speaking of balance, amy klobuchar talking about issue of impeachment. take a listen. >> i thinkhave been very clear. i think this is impeachmentable. that the case should be heard about it house and come over to the senate. you have a president acting like a global gangster. he is basically going to one leader after another trying to get dirt on his political opponent. i consider that a violation of our laws. i consider it a violation of the election laws. >> that doesn't sounds to me like taking a serious, sober, moment to look at the facts and then be impartial as you judge them. does it to you? >> i think, she will be. look, i'm sorry, but i myself am deeply disturbed when you see tweets call for civil war, call for coops. >> i don't think they were calling for that. that is where they were headed. that is distinction. >> i'm deeply disturbed by the tone of the rhetoric of
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everybody. i want to be calm, cool, collected, focused. get the facts. that is what i'm going to do. i will listen to my colleagues taking the lead on that. i will tell you something else. i have people in my district that say to me, what are you boeing to do about prescription drugs? i have uaw picket lines, what are you going to do something getting a trade deal done? i have people worried about pfas they want to know we'll keep doing that my commitment doing that. >> we have a big trump supporter, steve gruber, radio show host, talked about the issue of the usmca, you brought up, whether or not that comes up for a vote. if it does. when it does we'll have you back to talk about it. feel better. have some tea. enjoy the lions game. see you soon, ma'am. >> maybe we'll win. >> good luck. much more on the impeachment inquiry as chris wallace interviews two house intelligence committee members
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val demmings and chris stew stuart. "fox news sunday" at top of the hour. don't miss it. jillian: immigration, executive power, abortion rights, job discrimination against lgbtq workers, some of the issues the supreme court will confront in the election year docket. the term kicks off monday. garrett tenney has a preview. reporter: the court may add issues dealing with gun control, religious liberty about and the environment. no shortage of hot button items on this term. first big one is this week on tuesday and deals with civil rights protections for lgbtq whether employers can be sued for job discrimination if they fire an employee coming out as gay or changing their gender. >> the issue title vii, which is the big employment discrimination law prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex applies to situations where a person is terminated because they changed their sex,
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transgender or found out to be gay. whether the supreme court will agree with them will be quite interesting to watch. reporter: that ruling is being closely watched because it could impact cases around the country dealing with businesses that claim a religious liberty right to deny their services. one of the most closely watched cases deal with daca. the high court will decide whether the trump administration is able to move ahead with plans to end obama era protections for 800,000 people brought into the country illegally as children. up until now, federal appeals courts rejected administration arguments on this case. but the white house is hopeful that will change in this final ruling. all of these rulings are expected to come down in june in the thick of the presidential campaigns. like the last election, the high court is expected to be a major issue in 2020. >> i suspect the last few years have underscored the significance and importance of a single seat on the court.
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how changing just a single vote could have dramatic repercussions for the law in our country. i suspect the supreme court will be an important campaign issue as it well should be given the importance that the court plays in our life. reporter: normally the supreme court tries to avoid taking on a lot of highly political cases in the election year. court watchers say they tried to do that last year in the wake of justice kavanaugh's turbulent nomination, the cases have been piling up since then. it will be an interesting session to watch. jillian: interesting and thank you, garrett. we'll have much more with the legal panel coming up in a next few minutes. >> look forward to that. kansas city police are searching for a gunman who opened fire in a crowded bar overnight. motive unknown. the man is on the run. four people killed. christina coleman joins us with what police know. reporter: leland the preliminary police investigation reveals a
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dispute over something in that bar led to the shooting. it is unclear what that dispute was over. as of now police are looking for two shooters who may have ran off with handguns. no arrests have been made. we're just at the beginning of this homicide investigation. the shooting happened at the tequila kc barlow indicated along a strip of businesses a spokesperson for the kansas city, kansas, police department detectives are able to review surveillance video. they were caught out to the small bar 1:30. they believe two patrons may have left the bar and open returned and opened fire. no details have been released on a possible suspect or suspects. although no one has been arrested for the shooting they say the threat to the public is minimal at this time. >> we do not believe this was random. we believe this was an isolated incident i guess you would call it. we don't feel these suspects are going to go out and do this
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again. reporter: five people who were injured were taken to the hospital in stable condition. they are all expected to survive. the victims are hispanic men between their 20s to late 50s. police have not identified the four people who lost their lives in this shooting. leland? >> christina, thanks so much. over in hong kong processes and tire gas continue it fly. you can see the fires in the streets. greg palkot is on the ground as it happened. hi, greg. reporter: hi, lead land. it was a day of rain, tear gas, arrests and a provocative appearance by a chinese soldier. explain it all next. ♪ she wanted a roommate to help with the cooking.
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jillian: welcome back, the a 25-year-old turned himself in for the murder of his girlfriend and three family members in as you street. he shot the ex-'s father as soon as he opened door. and her mother and brother. before climbing over a balcony to fatally attack the 19-year-old woman and her boyfriend. ♪ >> wearing a mosque is now a crime in hong kong as police are
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making arrests amid a new wave of pro-democracy protests. greg palkot was in the crowds as the police moved in and joins us now from a rainy hong kong where it is already monday morning. hi, greg. reporter: leland it has been raining all day into the night. that did not stop tens of thousands of protesters coming out. they're rejecting this new government face mask ban on very tear gas-filled day. look what we saw. this is cat-and-mouse game here sunday afternoon in hong kong. we're looking down at protesters being pushed down one street there. we've seen a lot of tear gas. police are trying to push them back, just in case we're looking at a line of riot police on the overpass ready to act stronger. after a peaceful start the police moved in, yes, with tear gas and some pretty tough tactics. protesters were fighting their
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foes. most were wearing masks aimed at hiding identities from authorities. 13 people were arrested. we saw a few detained. with legal efforts to block the ban so far failing, hong kongers were speaking out. take a listen. i see you have a face mask on? >> yes. because hide face. reporter: you don't care, you will not take the mask off? >> yeah, yeah. reporter: you don't care what the government says? >> it is okay. it is fine. for democracy. reporter: for democracy? >> yes. reporter: what is seen as significant though small the first reaction in four months of unrest. two protesters from chinese troops who were posted here. one held up a banner on top of their headquarters warning of arrests if the protesters continued to point distracting laser lights in the eyes of soldiers on guard. leland an intervention of those troops would be seen as a last
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resort beijing, maybe the most dangerous but we're watching it. back to you. >> game changer in case of potential u.s. response. greg, real quick, you and i have been in these crowds and various places. cairo, comes to mind as well as ukraine. how do the protests compare to what we've seen of popular uprisings in the past? reporter: very tough on both sides, leland. month by month, we've been here starting since june have been playing a tougher game. we've seen it from the protesters. they were peaceful months ago. now they're moving, throwing rocks, molotov cocktails, gas bombs and erecting barricades. i have to say they are the most polite protesters i have ever seen. in iraq, in baghdad, other places, these guys take their time. they part the ways for an ambulance. they make sure that you're okay. if i have to be around some protesters i take these guys but
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it is dangerous on both sides. >> for you and your crew, great job out there, greg. we'll check back in with you. thank you. jillian: always good to be polite. speaking spiritual strength, the supreme court start as new term. our panel offer as preview coming upnd next. or pharmacist today about getting vaccinated against whooping cough. but how do i know if i'm i'm getting a good deal? i tell truecar my zip and which car i want and truecar shows the range of prices people in my area actually paid for the same car so i know if i'm getting a great price. this is how car buying was always meant to be. this is truecar. hi, my name is sam davis and i'm going to tell you about exciting plans available to anyone with medicare. many plans provide broad coverage and still may save you money on monthly premiums and prescription drugs.
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middle of a presidential election year. here we have a stellar panel, carrie severino, constitutional accountability center president, elizabeth wyle. workplace discrimination when it pertains to lgbtq. both people say they were fired because they were gay. a transgender case as well. what do you see happens with this? >> we see this in and other cases both sides are trying to claim the man tell of text allism, originalism. our meaning is first, original meaning. this is challenge to do so, because of sex, very clearly 1965, it was clear what they meant. they meant because of sex specifically. there was a there is distinction between discriminating someone on basis of sex. so if you fired someone who is gay man but not a lesbian woman, that is discrimination on basis of sex.
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this case the question is not a good idea to add to the law, but is the court right entity to do it? that is something should be reserved for the legislature f they are changing. jillian: what do you say. the law says because of sex. if i am person attracted to person of same sex that is because of section, if you fire me because of that if i present and adfy the gender difference from one assigned at birth, that is because of sex. it is really about the words that congress passed and applying them equally to our lgbtq colleagues, coworkers and neighbors. jillian: move on to the next which is immigration and executive power this is stemming from the process trying to phase out daca. where do you see this one going? >> this is real interesting case particularly the chief justice because certainly have the discretion in immigration areas
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like this but president trump put forth this, you know, in my opinion a bogus pretext that he had to withdraw daca because it was unlawful. not because it was bad policy but because he was unlawful. that is not true. it is a lawful use of executive enforcement in immigration but he knows that daca is incredibly popular. that hundreds of thousands of dreamers are parts of our communities and valued by this country. so he wants the chief justice and the supreme court to do the dirty work for him saying his hands are tied. that is not true. the question is whether the court will see this as bogus pretext it is like the census case or go along with the president as they did in the travel ban case. jillian: do you agree? >> i agree. if they go like the travel ban, it is not appropriate to look behind what the, what the actual actions being taken is. everyone can agree, what the president can make these regulations, he can change the regulation. that is within the executive
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authority. it is really, are they going to treat president trump than they would differently any other president saying no, no, we'll try to second guess what he is doing? that is a real problem we've seen in the courts. we'll see whether the supreme court -- jillian: one to watch. we'll see how that plays on what is going on in 20 to, out come of all of these. gun rights. specifically a case in new york state and new york city. law regulates license gun owners can take locked and unlocked. this is moot but the city revised the law. something heard in the supreme court. you were making a point in the commercial break this extremely important. >> not just the case itself which is significant is it completely moot. because after brief filed by senator whitehouse an several other democratic senators more or less threaten the court in thinly-veiled language if you don't rule our way, dismiss it as moot, we may have to
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restructure the court. the proposal to pack the court. that is something even justice ginsberg would be boldly political an inappropriate. this is worrisome, a part of pattern of intimidation to the court and threat of judicial independence which the court is want to reject. jillian: and you minute. get to abortion regulation. elizabeth go to you. louisiana going to be a big one, requiring a louisiana statute requiring doctors who perform abortions at nearby hospital. you said this will be a big one to watch. >> absolutely because the supreme court in just 2016 struck down an identical law from texas. there is change in the court with the new trump justices. the question? just such a short amount of time will the important right to choose access to abortion whittled down to such an extent it has no meaning? again in the context of an election year whether or not the supreme court will strike down the right to have an abortion in just such a short amount of time after it upheld that right in
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the whole women's health case is going to be a huge, huge issue. jillian: we had a lot to talk about. all the ones we had on our list anyway. there will be a lot of conversation surrounding all of these in the coming months and year. thanks for joining us. leland? >> ginger baker best known for his work on the group cream has died. the london native with flaming red hair had a pounding rythmic drumming style. it inspired countless imitators. paul mccartney remembered his friend as wild and lovely. peter ginger baker has died at 80 years old. that's where i felt relief. we're the rivera family and we plan to be with usaa for life. see how much you can save with usaa insurance. see how much you can save our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition...
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forces. tray yanks in our mideast newsroom. hi, trey. reporter: leland, that is right, turkish president erdogan saying his forces will soon launch an air and ground operation in northern syria as turkish military personnel and equipment was spotted over the weekend along the syrian border. there are u.s. backed curish forces near the turkish border. they said any unprovoked attack by turkey could lead an all-out war. kurds helped united states fight isis but still remains tense relations with turkey. turkey and the united states agreed to create a safe zone for millions in northern syria. millions displaced following the defeat of isis and the ongoing syrian civil war it appeared to be a positive sign for the warring region. turkey and the united states started working on the project carrying out six air missions and three land patrols, ankara
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says washington is taking too long. the situation is difficult because the kurdish forces that turkey plans to launch the assault is backing united states. they are fighting the kurds with american weapons as the united states continues to with work with turkey to provide a safe zone for civilians fleeing violence. >> translator: we were given the operation plans. we were given the necessary orders. we will conduct it from the ground and from the air. reporter: still have assad regime forces fighting rebels in is lip province. isis fighters are popping up. a war between turkey and the kurds would complicate an already volatile region in the middle east. leland. >> quickry, trey, are there u.s. soldiers on the ground conceivably where the attacks would take place or u.s. advisors? reporter: unlikely u.s. advisors are anywhere close to where the operations over the coming days
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are expected to take place but you still have coalition forces in the region. the united states has been urging the turks to hold off on the larger operation but so far the turkish government under erred sew juan has not heeded those calls by the u.s. state department. >> nothing like a nato ally not listening to you. trey, thanks so much. jillian. jillian: just ahead home for these astronauts requires more than a typical double a batteries. we'll tell you about it. ♪ it's my after-work decompression zone. so when my windshield broke... >> woman: what?! >> vo: ...i searched for someone who really knew my car. i found the experts at safelite autoglass. >> woman: hi! >> vo: with their exclusive technology, they fixed my windshield... then recalibrated the camera attached to my glass so my safety systems still work. who knew that was a thing?! >> woman: safelite has service i can trust.
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♪. jillian: welcome back. hope you're having a good day. astronauts aboard the international space station are challenging series of spacewalks to replace aging batteries. jacqui heinrich is in the new york bureau with the incredible images. reporter: the first of a series of 10 spacewalks planned for three months to begin repairs and upgrades to the international space station. on today's the missions the astronauts andrew cook and christina morgan. they will exit from the airlock in their spacesuits and work on the port six truss structure replacing with more powerful
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lithium batteries. the strut stretches a length after football field. the area where the battery is put in is beyond the reach of the robot arm. they have to manually remove the batteries from the end of the arm to the worksite. they will focus on the spectrometer which analyzes dark matter and cosmic ray events. nasa announced teams an dates for future spacewalks include as date for the first-ever all female spacewalk a few weeks away on october 21st. seven months ago, nasa had to cancel the all female spacewalk that they didn't have enough suits that were the right size. this has female astronauts excited about the milestone. >> i think it is important because of the historical nature what we're doing. in the past women have not always been at the table. it is wonderful to be contributing to the human spaceflight program at a time when all contributions are being accepted, when everyone has a role and that can lead in turn to increased chance for success.
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reporter: nasa is streaming the spacewalk online. if you want to watch, christina is ed-1. sued with red stripe and helmet camera number 11. andrew morgan is ev-2, no stripes and camera 18. the spacewalk could set the record for the most spacewalks in a short period of time if they go off as planned. jillian: always fascinated what they do. when i was younger i wanted to be a astronaut. that never happened. >> what went wrong? jillian: i don't know. they're better than me. >> which is has you know is critical to donald trump's presidential victory. he won the battle ground state by 23,000 votes. less than a 1% margin for those counting at home. he became the first republican to take wisconsin since ronald reagan nearly ran the country in 1984 but a new "fox news poll" shows how hard it could be for him to recapture
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wisconsin's crucial electorate. head-to-head matchups trump trails democratic front-runner joe biden by nine points. senator bernie sanders slightly better five points for p trump. elizabeth warren beats president by four points. those last two important to note are within the margin of error. this reflects overall unease about wisconsin voters on things like key issues reflected in the president's approval numbers. 54% disapprove president trump compared with 44% approval. when it comes to the democratic led house impeachment irwinery into the president, our poll shows 62% showed some level of concern about the situation, calling the issue in ukraine, quote, extremely troubling. so let you digest those numbers. think about how president trump won wisconsin, michigan and pennsylvania. when it comes down to it.
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we were talking, with a number of members of the trump campaign who feel as though, not only do they want to keep those, they will fight there, but looking to expanding the map a little bit. we talked a little bit wisconsin. jillian: specifically in wisconsin to add to some numbers, polling numbers the you were talking about. the president won rural voters about 27 points in 2016 they only back him over biden by two points right now. that is pretty significant difference. a lot of people are worried about the tariffs. a lot of people see that as a positive. a lot of people especially in rural communities worry about that. >> farm communities in michigan, wisconsin and minnesota where the president wants to pick up have been really, really impacted. not only farmers themselves but implement dealers, feed stores, people who work on the farms, et cetera. long way to go before now and next november. stay tuned. jillian: a lot is going to happen. >> no reason we can't keep talking about it which we will. this is fall now, in case you didn't get the memo. about 100 degrees here in d.c.
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earlier this week but evidently fall weather will sweep across much of the united states. adam klotz in the extreme weather center with more. not so much extreme but seasonal i guess, right? fox news seasonal weather center, rename it. >> that has a ring to it. that is what it is this weekend. absolutely gorgeous, feeling like fall. numbers widespread into the 50s and 60s. some spots falling down into the 50s it has so far this past weekend. there is an area where it continues to feel like summer. yesterday a little bit warmer. stretching from portions of texas where the feels like temperature, heat plus humiditied numbers running up into the 90s. that is stretching across the southeast. anytime air this warm, bumping into air a little cooler, numbers falling back down into the 60s. that is cold front. when you see a cold front likely you will see a little bit of storm activity. we're not seeing anything at a severe level but thunderstorms
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along the frontal boundary from portions of the mid-atlantic back across the mississippi river valley getting back towards that, just north of memphis. currently not expecting these to become really big storms. that is frontal boundary. everything behind it. cooler air, fall-like air. that will continue to move. by the time monday, temperatures falling down into the 60s and 70s for absolutely everybody across the country. a beautiful, beautiful weekend. kicking it back to you from the seasonal weather center. a very seasonal forecast. >> seasonal jacket. there you go. very nice. >> trying to brent in with fall. >> if we had an jillian's dress yesterday we would have a party. thank you, sir. jillian: for those who weren't watching i wore an orange dress. hail the gathering of the geeks. we'll take you to a megaconvention forsh lovers of sci-fi, fantasy and more.
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♪ ♪ >> hey, guess what? time is running out to get your geek on. thousands converging on the last day of new york's comic-con from television, film, gaming, toys, comics you're going to find in one of the biggest such gatherings on the east coast. it continues to be a -- i don't even know what that is, what is it? popular performance art. leland: sometimes to occasionally you realize you're
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completely uninformed -- >> i know nothing about this. [laughter] who's this? our producer gabby sent us this, this is so not my realm of anything. leland: that's all we have, thankfully. "fox news sunday" is next. chris: i'm chris wallace. president trump now calling on china to investigate joe biden as house democrats forge ahead with their impeachment inquiry. ♪ ♪ >> we are looking at corruption. we're not looking at politics. chris: the president lays out his defense and dares nancy pelosi to hold a formal vote to authorize the probement. probement -- probe. >> some republicans are very nervous about us bringing that vote to the floor. chris: we'll explore new revelations in the case that help and hurt both sides. >> well, it reads like a classic organized crime shakedown. >> chairman schiff should be disqualified. they are fact witnesses in the
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