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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  October 18, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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the u.s. brokered cease-fire appears to be. there has been shelling and smoke going on in the overnight hours. "fox & friends" has the latest on that it starts right now. have a good day. ♪ baby, you just ain't seen nothing yet steve: well, you haven't seen anything yet because we are just starting. three hours of telecasting live from studio m here in the heart of midtown, manhattan. the world's number one cable news show. ainsley: it's a friday. brian: what is on today? steve: today we have the band from famous dave's. ainsley: famous dave's is celebrating a big anniversary and skip bedell is going to be out there too. brian: skip is the best. a lot going on from president trump's rally
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astros big win. i know we have a big texas morning. ainsley: mike pompeo and the president are on their way back. that takes us straight to this fox news alert. the u.s. brokered a cease-fire and it appeared to go up in smoke. steve: new photos from syria showing shelling and smoke as you can see right there rising in the air just hours after turkish officials agreed to stop the attacks. but that sure looked like an attack. brian: griff is working the phones right now. working his sources overnight and joins us from washington. hey, griff, could this be the syrian free army? could this be the kurds? or does this look like the tuckers. >> this is the free syrian army. forces alived with turkey it's a little complicated stay bheevment the point is the fighting clearly has not stopped. let me show you the images again where much of the shelling started two days after the president withdrew the u.s. troops. you can see the smoke and clear signs of fighting. i have been on the phone
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with my source all night long as recent as 10 minutes ago. he is 10 kilometers from that town as you are looking at. cease-fire broked any questions or attempted to do. so ngo trying to get trapped kurds out all night long and they cannot. he makes an interesting point. he has not seen airstrikes in the last several hours but kurdish syrian fighters have told the a.p. that they have seen shelling going on overnight. now that is very, very troubling. kurds cannot retreat, my source says. roads are blocked in this cease-fire, this five-day cease-fire supposed to give kurds time to retreat, they cannot. no official statement from turkey. around 4:30 national security analysts dr. rebecca grant who knows these things made this observation. >> it would be a lot more bombing and smoke if this was turkish tanks or aircraft. but it looks like it may be their proxy, the free syrian
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army making trouble in that disputed region around ras al-ayn. griff: this comes as the president hailing cease-fire in the nation. interview with vice president pence over trusting erdogan. here's what happened. >> based on his behavior, based on his action, can you trust him. >> we will take this agreement for what it is. president order gone knows president trump says what he means and means what he says. and i think on the foundation of that kind of a candid and honest relationship, we can go forward together for a more peaceful region. griff: you know what to watch for pence and pompeo are landing. we will see if they have anything to say about a broken cease-fire, guys. steve: griff, just to reiterate. appears smoke rising. we don't know who is doing the shooting, right. >> my source has been been 500 meters from the free
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syrian army forces. they are aligned with turkey he has witnessed them aattacking syrian kurds with whom he is with. i have been with these guys in 2016 in mosul aligned with kurds fighting with isis. i trust. also matching our recording, red cross also unable to get there because of the continued fighting. brian: in a way turkey has to feel good about this. they get to stay in so-called safe zone. the sanctions don't get there the kurds get a chance to get out. the turks get the buffer zone that they wanted. am i missing something? >> griff: that's the very big concern right there that this cease-fire really doesn't give us what we wanted, which is the fighting to stop. but yet turkey gets what they want, and that is a continued assault to drive and pretty much kill syrian kurds. that's what we tried to stop. ainsley: any word on how washington will stop this? do they plan on meeting this morning?
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>> no idea no. word out of turkey and the administration, ainsley. that's why pence and pompeo are on the ground it's going to be so very important to hear what they have to say. now, secretary pompeo was asked by our pool reporter about this cease-fire being broken. he had no comment. steve: indeed. all right. thank you very much. griff. we understand the vice president has landed at joint base andrews. if he is going to have a statement, we should know about that shortly. other big thing we didn't know if it was going to be a cease-fire for five days whether or not the kurds would leave the safe zone. stay tuned. meanwhile the president of the united states was down at the airlines arena dallas, texas. a gigantic crowd on hand for a speech that lasted 87 minutes. i was reading in the dallas morning news today, it was the eighth longest speech he has given as president. ainsley: there were a lot of people there some estimating 30,000 outside watching on the flat screen. he was praising the opening of louie vitton which we talked about yesterday. women are happy.
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brian: we're still debating the merits plus or minor newses the clutch bag. steve: it's made in america and that's great. that's the plus. brian: he has no shot and future republican candidates have no shot of winning a presidential election if texas goes blue. and if you watched last night, it's going to be a hard slog to or really have to bend your mind a little to imagine that state going to a democrat. let's listen to the president. >> do nothing democrats -- the more america achieves, the more hateful and enraged these crazy democrats become. [cheers] they are crazy. i hate to talk about them. do you know why? i don't think the guy has a chance. sleepy joe. i don't think he has a chance. last week, a very dumb democrat candidate for president, that's the end of him in this state, pledged to revoke the tax exempt status of many churches and
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religious charities. [crowd boos] and by the way, that was after a few weeks ago he said excuse me, we're going to take your guns away. that doesn't work well. [crowd boos] >> that crazy nancy, she is crazy. [crowd boos] >> and shifty schiff. how about this guy? do you know why, really i don't believe anymore that they love our country? i don't believe it. [chanting four more years] steve: you get the idea. he did say the impeachment is being done by democrats who are enraged. they are trying to redo 2016. meanwhile beto o'rourke who would like to be president of the united states. brian: how is that going? steve: not well. brian: i haven't noticed. steve: he had a rally. he had 5500 people in
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attendance. the president last night in dallas said regarding beto, in just a couple weeks he got rid of guns and religion. the president said not too two good things in texas. brian: add that with take down the wall. if i become president i will take down the barrier. ainsley: think about confiscating everyone's high powered guns in texas. and then you would shut down ultimately churches and mosques and synagogues. steve: charities. ainsley: they wouldn't be able to afford to run. probably not the smartest thing to say. brian: i don't know if that's been poll tested. a desperate guy who can't find a tie. sara carter a lot of voters are not buying in to the washington play by play or what hollywood thinks. watch. >> they demonize, they demonize, and they demonize. they think by doing that somehow the american people are going to say wait a minute, maybe the democrats are right. maybe we aren't going to listen to trump. but the reality is that the american people are not
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stupid. they showed up. they showed up by the thousands in dallas, texas. they show up all across the country. and they continue to push for president trump. why? because he is the only person that's actually listening to them. the only person that actually listens to the american people. ainsley: here's the message that the president is trying to send on his twitter account. he posted video rally. democrats the party of high taxes, high crimes, late-term abortions, socialism and blatant corruption. republican party american worker, the personal family and american dream. something that kag 2020. brian: interesting not exactly maga. talk about the little guy in manufacturing he has to cut a deal with china. maybe the first phase of that is done. we keep hearing things going back and forth. good news yesterday and bad news for china. their growth is down to 26-year low. they were growing at 6.2%. now they're growing at 6%. that makes them more
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vulnerable, susceptible to cut a deal. that plays into the intimidation game they are playing with other countries around the world and even with the national basketball association. as they just tried to play a couple exhibition games and meet the mets and lakers. along the way before they went, the general manager of the houston rockets tweeted out something in support uftd hong kong protesters to keep them in mind. since that moment, china's overreaction shows number one how sensitive and thin-skinned they are as a country and how powerful they think they are because they are such a valuable market to mercedes, tiffanies, marriott, everything. even to this league. steve: well, adam silver, the guy who runs the league, the nba commissioner was asked yesterday at an event, he said -- he was asked what's going on with china? he said the chinese government asked him to fire the general manager of the houston rockets rory because of what he tweeted in support of the hong kong protesters. and adam silver said they want me to fire him? that's not going to happen. watch.
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>> i didn't think at that time, while we were saying we regretted upsetting our fans but also at the same time supporting darryl morey's trite express himself and right to tweet. obviously we made clear that we were being asked to fire him by the chinese government. we said there is no chance that's happening. there's no chance we will even discipline him. we wanted to make sure that everyone understood we were supporting free expression and also making clear that the chinese people, again, less about the government, but our chinese fans understood that providing a platform for freedom of expression is different than adjudicating a particular point of view. ainsley: sorry, china. in this country there is freedom of the press, freedom of speech. you are allowed to talk against another government. he did say. steve: which happens every day. ainsley: exactly. he said they have lost money over there, significant amount. he said they are continuing to refuse to play game there. steve: the future of the nba
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in china is uncertain. brian: i'm very happy. look at this second statement. it was really strong. adam silver might be the best commissioner in sports and jillian as we return to you. i think lebron got hurt the most by. this the backlash that he feels. i know he feels impervious to everything. the burning of his jersey. outrake i have heard from outside sports circles. ainsley: even dennis rodman who is friends with the north korean leader says either choose sports or politics. don't mix them. jillian: curious to see what happens. there is a lot of business as you know in china as far as the nba goes. you look at lebron with sponsorships with partnerships with nike, with fans. there is a lot at stake there. steve: that's some real dough. ainsley: let's see what happens. jillian: meantime get to this fox news alert right now. two deputies served overnight while serving an arrest warrant. >> we need an blams. ambulance. we have an officer involved shooting.
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officer down: the deputies were airlifted to a local hospital. one person inside the apartment was also shot and a third deputy suffered a non-gun related injury. all are in stable condition. two people are seriously hurt after a plane with a high school swim team on board misses the runway. the penn air flight traveling from anchorage to dutch harbor alaska. according to to the school all members of the swim team are safe and secure. the ntsb is investigating but certainly scary moments for everyone on board that flight. steve: no kidding. jillian, thank you very much. meanwhile, the media are going wild over what mick mulvaney said yesterday at the white house about ukraine. >> the stunning exchange today, the white house acknowledging a quid pro quo. >> mick mulvaney was a remarkable admission. >> was this in effect a confession? ainsley: ari fleischer, he knows a thing or two about
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messaging at the white house. he's here to react coming up next. ♪ ♪ we didn't start the fire ♪
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>> he also mentioned to me in the past the corruption related to the dnc server? absolutely. no question about that. that's it. that's why we held up the money. >> look back to what happened in 2016 certainly
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was part of the thing that he was worried about in corruption with that nation. that is absolutely appropriate. >> described as a quid pro quo. >> get over it. there is going to be political influence in foreign policy. brian: there you go. that was the line that the mick mulvaney is having trouble shaking at this hour. the media grilling white house chief of staff mick mulvaney claiming he admitted to a quid pro quo during trump's phone call with the ukraine. but, are the democrats spinning his words more than they are supposed. to say here to react is ari fleischer. you watched this ari, did he make things better or worse. >> worse. >> first of all that is the reddest, hottest room on earth. you don't take that podium unless you are aware of the implication of every word and sentence you say. he went too far. he tried to explain the intricacies on foreign policy on such a red hot issue that he made a terrible mistake. brian: what was that mistake? >> his mistake saying
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something contrary to what the president has said. the president has said there is no quid pro quo and that's exactly what his schaf should have said. he tried to come out later with a statement to explain it. what happened here is mick mulvaney is a very smart man and in this instance i think that his words were moving faster than his mind and he should have stopped, paused, slowed down and not tried to heducate reporters. he should have said what needed to be said. brian: walked it back by saying the full security system in the ukraine was not conditioned on kiev relating conspiracy related 2016 interference walking back the statements. >> right. brian: have you got to show to me it's not going to go into a rabbit hole or sinkhole and history of corruption show me it's not corrupt. that's normal. >> okay. that would have been fine. the problem here and this goes to the original call the president made to zelensky. if it was all about corruption and the only thing that president or mulvaney talked about perfectly appropriate. once you bring in the name of your opponent, hunter biden, joe biden, once you talk about the 2016 elections, have you gone beyond corruption.
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have you made a political, personal and that was the central flaw here that we're all discussing. brian: ari, the other big thing is leaking out yesterday, democrats do seem like they are running an impeachment script. they are saying the same thing. the networks keying on the same thing. i don't know how that is they say the same thing as democratic lawmakers. it seems to happen. i want to throw some of these words at you democrats are using and tell me what you think. this is one of your many areas of expertise. national security endangered by president trump. is he undermining our elections. look at 2016. investigate 20206789 abuse of power. he is trying to say $400 million is linked to him getting what he wants on biden. and no one is above the law. saying the president is doing something that exceeds his office. are they working? are those buzz words working? >> those are the democratic talking points put out by the office of nancy pelosi, speaker of the house. and look how short they're. look how quick summaries they are. they are actually well-done for being on the attack.
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the problem is they are all factually substantively wrong. whatever president trump has done and i criticize him for it, this is not stuff of. we have. this is where the democrats want to impeach him because he won in 2016 and they never liked him. he is not going to get impeached over the phone call to ukraine. he is going to get impeached over the 2016 election and its results. inappropriate by the democrats. this is not impeachable. so they can have all those magic words on paper, we are about to have a partisan impeachment which we have never had before, and then no conviction in the conviction. we are going to have wasted everybody's time in this country. brian: maybe make this so routine that every time a party is not in power they impeach the president. that's what worries me the abuse of the entire system. >> much more like a no confidence vote than a real impeachment in america. brian: for the record i have full confidence of ari fleischer handle everything except for the yankees. >> go yankees. brian: they might be going home one more loss. thanks, are ay. joe biden has been touting his achievements on the
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ainsley: quick headlines for you. lawmakers down in florida want to ban the sunscreen bans. there is a group of state senators that are now pushing a bill that would make those types of laws illegal after a proposal to require a prescription for lotions that contain certain chemicals. backers say the chemicals are killing the coral reefs. critics say it's more important to fight against skin cancer. if you are decorating your house halloween with pumpkins and live in new jersey. it's going to cost you. the state is taxing residents who buy pumpkin force dec decorations. pumpkins used for food, however are still taxed into. steve, if you are using the
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pumpkins for your next cookbook you are okay. steve: pumpkin tax in new jersey? ainsley: yeah, the pumpkin police are coming after you if you put one on your porch. steve: great. mine is plank. thanplask.plastic, ainsley: >> i'm going to say something that is probably going to offend some people here. i'm the only one on the stage ha has gotten anything really big done from the violence against women's act. making sure we passed affordable care ability. steve: he is the only one who has gotten anything really big done. can democratic voters name any of his accomplishments? campus reform went to find out. >> what do you view as joe biden's singular like accomplishment you would points to. >> i don't know of a specific accomplishment. >> to be honest with you, i am drawing a blank on what he accomplished. >> no. >> anything? >> no. >> i don't know.
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>> i don't know. >> i don't know if i have an answer for that. >> here with more of his interview is cabot phillips, editor and chief of campus reform.org. okay, so, there you were interviewing people back in august about joe biden. he famously had been vice president of the united states, he was talking at that point about his many accomplishments but nobody knew any of them. >> this is what happens when you are never asked the why. so many democrats voters never ask the why of having to explain why do you support who you do? what are the accomplishments you can point to? if you are a donald trump supporter. every single time you tell someone that why do you? you have to arm yourself and note accomplishments of you who like. when you are not asked that why question you see responses. to these people's credit i don't know if there is exact lay long list of accomplishments that people can point. to say well, he has been in d.c. 30, 40 years. he was vice president. you so give them a little bit of leeway there. i don't know if there are at times. steve: you asked a great question.
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that is what is the biggest issue for democratic voters. here are some answers. watch this. >> the ability to elect somebody that can defeat trump. >> at this point it's still the economy. >> climate change. i have kids. and not many -- not too many politicians, you know, speaking up about this. >> i was a healthcare -- healthcare is more important. >> climate change is of course right at the top. steve: so righ all over the place. >> none of those things are the focal point of the debate we have seen so far. the focal point has been donald trump. these voters probably feel disservice because hasn't been exact policy positions putting forward. to go back to the accomplishment point also on joe biden, i think if you asked him that same question. steve: right. >> so far it's all been i have been in politics. i understand d.c. that's not what voters want right now. i have talked to thousands of voters in the last two years with leadership institute's campus reform. some of them continuously
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say i want someone who is going to shake things up and tear things up. i think the democratic electorate is like somebody they had in 2016. they don't want establishment candidate. every time joe biden says i have been in d.c. and this is what i have done. that almost drives them farther from them because they don't want an establishment candidate this go around. steve: debate the other night with elizabeth warren he was talking about how i helped to get the votes for your consumer protection thing that she was instrumental in. and she said you are right. thank you, president obama. she didn't give -- gave obama the credit and not biden. >> we have already seen this shift happen where joe biden is saying i'm a unifier. get people together. i'm moderate and get people elected. i have to push further and further the fringes. starting to distance from president obama. we have seen president obama get attacked and interesting to see how much further left he goes. steve: cabot phillips, thank you very much. >> absolutely. steve: great interview. thank you, sir.
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meanwhile, what did the president's supporters think of his rally in dallas last night? rob schmitt is in the metroplex talking with some of them. he is in texas. hey, rob. rob: hey, steve. yeah. democrats have a bold agenda coming up in 2020. that includes turning red texas, blue. the president came to dallas last night to try to make sure that doesn't happen. more from a big rally coming up ♪ ♪ good afternoon board members.
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easier, right? it would have been so much easier. steve: there you have got president trump deep in the heart of texas, rallying his base in dallas. ainsley: "fox & friends" co-host rob schmitt was there for all the action and spoke to some of his supporters. hey, rob a little chilly in texas. rob: it is chilly in texas. i think it's coldner dallas than new york. we are downtown by the way. this is where the dallas mavericks play. 20,000 seats inside the arena. the president filled the whole thing up and this whole area in front of here where can you see some these people back behind me, this was full of supporters too. there could have been 25,000 people here at this rally in blue dallas inside of red texas. dallas is a very blue city. we talked to some his supporters about the democrats' new push for impeachment. take a listen. >> what do you think about impeachment? big push to get him out of office. what do you think of that? >> they need to stop. it's not going to work. >> that's obviously just a hoax. it's something to take your mind off of what's really going on. what's really going on is
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we're making america great again. and we're going to keep it great. >> it's so polarized now have one way or the other. and i think a lot of people are going his way just because the opposite way is just doing nothing. >> i was raised a democrat. not the democratic party i was used to. not at all. >> day one, he was attacked by the left. since day one they have tried to impeach this president. the russian collusion didn't stick. the racism is definitely not sticking there are several people here that are hispanic, that are black americans that support this president. >> president trump has made it through every one of their egregious attacks unscathed. he is a man of honor and integrity. no other president has gone through what this president has been through and done what he has done in the amount of time that he has done it. god allowed him to be in the white house. and he is going to be there in 2020. >> so, guys, you remember
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how nancy pelosi avoided the whole topic of impeachment for so long. she was being pushed by the far left wing to do. this the reach she did that is because she didn't want to inspire the president's voters any more than they are. when we talked to them last night. everybody had a definitive answer about impeachment. they did not like it. you can tell that's going to push them to the polls. i also want to tell you beto o'rourke had a competing rally. a rally against fear that was just down the road. this one i think we are going to see something like 20, 25,000 people. beto polled about 5500 people. pretty good for a beto rally. still only a quarter or fifth of what we saw here in dallas. ainsley: is it like a tailgate party? some brought in the flat screen tvs and food trucks. steve: they get there days in advance. >> right, yeah. of the foot trucks are right here. not really a tailgate party. heart of downtown not like a football stadium and tailgate open and people drinking. just a lot of people out there. that big screen. i don't know if you can see it black behind me. that's got the rally going. big speakers playing it. people that got here at 4:00
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yesterday, it was like a 7, 7:30. people got here 3:00, 4:00 couldn't get. in that's how big this rally was. 3 or 4 hours they waited and still couldn't get inside. steve: you can't get inside right now because the american arenas airlines is locked up. >> i was going to shoot some hoops. brian: rob has to work this weekend and he flies over to dallas. unbelievable. who does his expenses? ainsley: i heard a sermon this morning do not complain. rob is not a complarn. we are grateful to have jobs. brian: why are you laughing? will. ainsley: did you tell show yourself this morning. jillian: who does expenses. who thinks of that? brian: i worry because apparently when brian thinks i'm going to go out of town oh but then i'm going to have to do expenses. steve: i think i'm going to go to a new place and new people. jillian: welcome to the brain of brian kilmeade. ainsley: that's why you have a butler. brian: they laughed when i
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hired him. jillian: they're not laughing now. other stories we are following. we begin with this jodi arias wants her murder conviction thrown out. her lawyer trying to convince an appeals court in areas that are prosecutors mishandled her case. she is serving a life sentence for killing boyfriend travis alexander in 2008. prosecutors say she flew into a jealous rage stabbing him to death. she claims she acted in self-defense. her attorney says the prosecutor improperly witness and courted the media. na disturbing report shows a majority of baby foods in the u.s. contain toxic metals like arsenic and mercury. according to a new investigation, 95% of the baby foods tested contained heavy metals that can affect your baby's brain development. crisis based products. sweet potatoes and fruit juices were found to have the highest risk. now to an update on a story we told you about yesterday. new video from inside a train showing the terrifying
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moment it plows into a car just seconds after a state trooper saves the driver. dash cam video showing a utah trooper pulling the unconscious driver out of the car stopped on the tracks just moments before the crash. the train's engineer says he hit the emergency brakes late laid on the horn and said a prayer. wow. look how close that was. former secretary of defense jim imagine dog mattis biting back on reports president trump called him the world's most overrated general. >> i'm not just an overrated general. i am the greatest, the world's most overrated. [laughter] he also called meryl streep an overrated actress. so i guess i'm the mayoral streep of generals. [laughter] and, frankly, that sounds pretty good to me. jillian: his remarks coming at the annual alfred r.
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smith memorial dinner. the dinner hosted by the archdiocese of new york raises millions each year for needy children. maria bartiromo was there and so was sandra smith and bill hemmer and i think i know some other people there our own ainsley earhardt. brian kilmeade seated next to senator schumer. [laughter] and brian with his wife dawn and general mattis. >> there we go. kelly in the middle. that's john mcdonald. we are not married. but that's my neighbor. ray kelly in the middle. he looks like he doesn't have a care in the world. after cargo the city 10 years. he doesn't have that stressed look on his face anymore. ainsley: this is a wonderful event, raises a lot of money for the city for catholic charities. and they always have this amazing speaker. every year during a presidential election the two contenders, they speak. steve: square off. ainsley: next year president trump and whoever the democrat will be. in the back they have the dase where all important sit. brian kilmeade is on there got a huge ovation when you
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walked out. brian: why had a fox table. and that's my wife dawn, general mattis in the middle. steve: it's a white tie event i should point out i have never seen new a white tie. brian: i didn't know how to do it. i was afraid i was going to go to my local guy. i had to call do you have a recommendation? steve: on white ties? brian: just go in there and tell them white tie and tails. hard to work around new york city and feel normal in tails. i kept feel like someone was hitting in the back of the leg. the tail was hitting me in the back of the leg. ainsley: like a duck. brian: a little bit. so much money. they say non-presidential year they raise an all-time high for the catholic charities. so you had admiral -- cardinal dolan who was fantastic. martin short who is very clued into the political process. and i had two hours of quality time with the most powerful democrat in washington, chuck schumer. and i think -- and. ainsley: if we could hear
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the conversation. brian: off the record so fascinating to get his perspective. ainsley: everyone at our table brian kilmeade is signature next to chuck schumer and bill de blasio is two doors down. brian: that was wonderful. ainsley: ray kelly came out and the crowd went crazy. that shows you how important law enforcement is to this city. steve: how influential the catholic church is because they're the ones urge. big night. brian: john -- also. steve: out on fox square janice dean joins us and kind of chilly. janice: it's very chilly but i have friends to keep me warm. happy birthday young lady. what's your name? >> shirley. janice: where are from you. >> dixon, illinois. janice: you going to celebrate your birthday in new york. >> i am. janice: it starts now. are you ready. >> yeah. janice: i love mostly sunny. >> where are from you? >> arizona. janice: we have barbecue coming up. it's a fantastic friday here on "fox & friends." let's take a look at the map. i want to tell you about a tropical system. this is not named yet. however, i'm telling you
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right now that we could see the tropical storm conditions later on today into the overnight along the gulf coast. regardless of if it gets named or not. still the potential for heavy rain, strong winds and potential for flooding as well. we will keep you up to date. wave to steve, ainsley and brian. brian was in a tuxedo last night. >> oh, wow. brian: two hours to give it back. got to get there by noon. ainsley: better not have spilled anything on it or you lose the deposit. steve: thank you, ainsley and folks for stopping by. janice: come down to fox square. brian: i hope to see janice again. ainsley: kamala harris says president trump is fighting a, quote, war on rural america. she has $100 billion plan to stop it. >> sounds like she needs the farmer's vote. are the democrats the ones that forgot about rural america in 2016? new outrage coming up. you are watching "fox & friends" on a friday. ainsley: going to get rid of the deplorables. ♪ ♪
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>> my partnership with rural america is $100 billion investment in creating new jobs that are necessary to sustain communities and allow communities to not only survive but to thrive. ainsley: 2020 hopeful kamala harris announcing a plan to fight what she calls president trump's war on rural america. here to react is the president of the heartland institute frank lisea, thanks for being with us. >> good morning. good morning to everyone out there listening. ainsley: what does this mean? what does she want to do? it's a lot of money. >> it's a lot of money. first off, she is late to the table. she is the 8th or 9th democratic table for president talking about a rural agenda of some sort
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they have being mentioned rural 10 times. not high on priority list. kamala harris said 100 billion sounds like a nice number. let's throw some money at this problem i will come up with idea to do something. sender piece of this, require three jobs. three jobs for the $10,000 each. she will have these subsidy farmers rather than real people in rural areas starting real businesses that last a long time. ainsley: break down what is in the plan. the first item is $10,000 tax credit as you were mentioning, businesses that create jobs in rural communities. she wants to end the trade war by eliminating trump's tariffs. she wants to increase access to rural healthcare. 80 billion to bring broad band to every home by 2024. let's start with the tariffs. the president is saying in the long run this is going to benefit our farmers, benefit our country. what do you think so if she ends the trade war? >> well, i think we have
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entered into this and we need to do this now while our economy is bigger than china. china is being unfair. has been unfair for years. it's cost lots of american jobs for instance i know someone in the green bay area importing things from cline and now starting to import from cambodia and vietnam as the lowest cost provider. he looked into and wanted to export dog food to china. huge demand nor american dog food partly because they can't trust chinese makers that they might put something in there that poisons your dog. every now and then there are news stories. huge demand, checked it out and started going to work and there are dog food producer notice green bay area. if they were able to export to china they would increase their employment. they would hire more people and expand their business. when he started looking into it he found it would take a year or two, 20 to $50,000 to get approval to ship dog food being fed to dogs. pay $20,000 a year for licensing fee and what he
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heard from his research is after 2, 3, 4, years, not even two or three years they don't give you a renewal suddenly your chinese partner is now doing that business. you look at it and say how am i going to make this by the time i build it a chinese person will take it over. those are the types of unfair practices that china has been doing for decades that hurt american workers. hurt american companies i think trump understands that and i don't think senator kamala harris understands that. and it is about american jobs. particularly in the rural areas that dog food maker is a great example. if china gets to be the world's largest economy and they practice this unfair trade and we just saw that with free speech we will have a real problem. ainsley: frank from the heartland institute. from a great weekend, frank. thanks for joining us. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. shocking new report reveals colleges are tracking students before they even apply. kurt the cyberguy explains how they do that next.
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brian: student tracking and secret scores new report how colleges are snooping on perspective students and ranking them before they even apply. steve: let's talk to kurt the cyberguy with an eye-opener, if you go to their website, turns after did you go to their website they have got you. >> they gotcha. many universities are signing up with this particular software that enables them to place a cookie or a tracking device on your device if you are browsing. is there is a perspective student or even the parent. so why would they do that? well, they want to know if
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you have demonstrated interest, whether you are actually going to go to that university if you keep engaging. and then they also are interested in understanding what is it that you are also looking at because that cookie or tracking software delivers back to them where ainsley might be poking around on the web. what parts of other universities you might be looking at. did you. steve: so they're spying on you? >> they are definitely spying on you without a doubt. steve: so, in other words, why would we offer that person admission when they're cheating on us and they are looking over there at the university of blank? >> it doesn't mean that you are browsing the universities that you are not going to be going to that one or that it is bad for the university that is spying on you what they want to know are you being honest about the information you are giving and how are you demonstrating yourself as a pinner? where are you going? where did you go online says a lot about who you are. and what universities want to know is -- is what you are telling us adding up with who we see you are through our tracking.
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does that make sense? ainsley: yes. >> very good friend of mine from an admissions consulting group where kids go to them to help with admissions called accept u told me this is what they are really looking for is just deep information to understand if you really want to go in that direction. brian: this is what the admitting. steve: capture hire. >> they have the software. capture higher ed helps schools provide relevant information to students who have chosen to receive that information. students can opt out of web tracking through a variety of methods including contacting schools directly. steve: should you clean your cookies out. would that clean it out. >> really good idea. there might be a pro-to being tracked by a university. if they see that you do want to go there, and that you are being honest about yourself. well, it might work in your favor. steve: very good. more information at
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cyberguy.com. cyberguy, great to see you. >> have a good weekend and happy birthday. steve: thank you very much. stephanie grisham, secretary of hhs alli azar mollie hemingway and geraldo. my body to release it like it's supposed to. trulicity is for people with type 2 diabetes. it's not insulin. i take it once a week. it starts acting in my body from the first dose. trulicity isn't for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you're allergic to it, you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have an allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases low blood sugar risk. side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, belly pain and decreased appetite, which lead to dehydration and may worsen kidney problems.
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so hurry to bass pro shops and cabela's for big savings on the gear you need from top brands. the go hunt sale is going on now. ♪ brian: i like rascal flatts when they swing bret baier. i will take banjo for now. slow pan into us. that's what we look like today. steve: come on over. welcome aboard, folks. thank you very much for joining us. yesterday we had heard that the president of the united states was very excited because mike pompeo and the vice president went over to turkey, talked to that guy for five hours and got a cease-fire. fast forward to today and this is our fox news alert. brian: yeah. it's a brokered cease-fire, we thought. could it be going up in smoke? ainsley: some new photos out
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of syria show shelling and smoke billowing into the air just hours after the turkish officials agreed to halt attacks. steve: trey yingst is live in turkey with the very latest. trey, it sounds as if turkey is shooting at the kurds, right? >> that's exactly right. just after this cease-fire was announced yesterday by vice president mike pence here in ankara following hours of meetings with turkish president erdogan we have confirmed reports that turkish shelings are renewed and reports of civilian casualties. new images do show black smoke rising from several kurdish controlled areas hours ago. the agreed upon five day pause in fighting if it were to hold would neuron a permanent agreement with the united states is able to convince the kurds to retreat from a safe zone turkey is trying to create along its border. there are questions how exactly the u.s. will facilitate the withdrawal of kurdish forces since president trump if you would pulled all the troops from northern syria. they were taking directions
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from the united states. fighting under the orders of the russian brigade operating in syria along the government of bashar al-assad. early indications were that the kurds rejected the cease-fire yesterday but last evening they actually said they were agreeing to the terms. president trump did comment on the situation last night at his rally. take a listen. >> i said they are going to have to fight a little while. sometimes you have to let them fight a little while. and then people find out how tough the fighting is these guys know right up here. these guys know. right? sometimes you have to let them fight. it's like two kids in a lot. have you got to let them fight and then you pull them apart. >> there were some serious consequences to president trump letting them fight it out. namely high civilian casualties, reports of suspected war crimes and also the russian government taking over forces that were armed and trained by the united states. brian, ainsley, steve? steve: all right, trey yingst live in turkey with the very latest where the cease-fire appears not to be a cease-fire. brian: i would think one thing when stephanie grisham
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comes on they could easily put out a communique on this. if the president is talking about a cease-fire and there are explosions it's in the president's best interest and everyone's best interest to find out what's going on. don't wait for turkey toll us. ainsley: stephanie is the new white house press secretary. we haven't heard a response yet from washington. steve: i do believe she was in attendance last night along with 20,000 other people inside the american airlines arena in dallas-fort worth. ainsley: thousands more outside. steve: 87 minutes the president spoke in front of 20,000 people. there had been big lines outside. i read in the local paper days before, dallas county though, one of the state's wilbluest areas. the president got 25% of the growth in 2016. he will get a bigger number next time because as he said last night, he is going to have a landslide. the democrats are going to face a crushing defeat. >> stake in this fight is
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the survival of american democracy itself. don't kid yourself. that's what they want. they are destroying this country. but we will never let it happen. for three state years radical democrats have been trying to overthrow the results of a great, great election. maybe, maybe, the greatest election in the history of our country. [cheers] >> they believe america is the world's biggie bank and that your tax dollars should subsidize the economy, military, and defense of every other nation in the world but our own. the only message these radicals and and and they are radical lefties will understand, is a crushing defeat on november 3rd, 20206789 save that date. steve: a crushing defeat the president said last night. he also called the democrats corrupt people. called nancy pelosi the
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speaker, crazy and nuts. and got big cheers. ainsley: said that schiff was making up his conversations. he was praising the opening of the louie vitton plant. they are making instead of in another country they're making the goods here in texas. and the crowd started chanting four more years. four more years. brian: and every democrat passed out of that thought. they seem just to be exercised in getting the president out more than any other president i can imagine. but there's no -- there is a lot of people who look who is on that stage the other night and the ones who aren't and cannot see somebody on that stage, even though the numbers look like they should. steve: the democratic debate. brian: the democratic debate that would beat the president of the united states. that thought occurred to ben shapiro. he has a prediction. watch it appears there is royaling tension inside that democratic field. people are not satisfied with the field they have. honestly if hillary clinton were to make her grand reentrance now would be about the time she should do it.
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the fact is a lot of people are dissatisfied with biden and dissatisfied with warren and hillary is enormous name. if she were to jump in right now i think there is a good shot she wins the nomination. is she actually going to do that? probably not. that means the democratic field is pretty extraordinarily weak. brian: we will see pete buttigieg getting another look. elizabeth warren scrutiny. joe biden able to enjoy the fact able to talk about somebody else yesterday. yesterday elizabeth warren's camp came out and says oh by the way on the medicare plan the reason we don't talk about raising taxes we haven't figured out how we are paying for it. steve: you look at how the democrats face, regardless of who their candidate is, can they beat the trump economy? you look down in texas alone, in texas, 774,000 jobs were added to texas according to the president's campaign last night. 70,000 manufacturing jobs. compared to 55,000 lost during the obama years. so, how did the democrats
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run against that? with impeachment. that's what's going on right now. ainsley: i'm not sure if hillary clinton could win. i know in f. michelle obama got. in. steve: or michael bloomberg. ainsley: he was a republican and democrat and then independent or maybe i don't know the order but he has been all the parties. steve: he has been. brian: i don't know if he has national appeal even though he has had remarkable career at 74. i don't know if that is the answer i also think to n. mind this the democrats best hope of getting the white house back is make the president look unworthy of the job. that seems to be the concerted effort whether it's russia, this latest thing with the ukraine. he had a meltdown. he is unsteady. so the only thing to say to make him unworthy of the spot, don't have anybody to take it we can't give it to him again. steve: here's the problem. the democrats have been saying that for three years. drip, drip, drip. are people just numb to
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that? he is twitter all the time. people say he should not have a twitter account. kamala harris said this about that. he should be banned from social media. if you missed it, it's extraordinary. here she is. >> he has abused the privilege and that privilege should be taken away. he should be removed and there's no -- it's not a debatable point. and there should not be a difference of opinion or difference of standard for facebook vs. twitter. all of these corporations have to be held accountable. because they have an outside stability to influence people's perception and behavior. this is not a matter of free speech. this is matter of holding corporate america and these big tech companies responsible and accountable for what they're facilitating. brian: it's not up for discussion. we just want the president of the united states banned. but don't you discuss it. not up for discussion. ainsley: we're not going to remove freedom of speech for everyone. just the president. brian: why does he need it?
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steve: she is talking about social media. dain got an amazing interview with mark zuckerberg the billionaire founder of facebook and asked him about kamala harris calling for trump to be suspended, booted off of social media. and his answer might surprise you. watch. >> kamala harris said that she thinks that twitter should shut down president trump's account. do you think that's a redick idea? >> my belief is that in a democracy, i don't think that we want private companies censoring politicians in the news. i generally believe that as a principle people should decide what is credible and what they want to believe and who they want to vote for. and i don't think that that should be something that we want tech companies or any kind of other company doing. brian: dana's whole interview will be in the 2:00 hour. she missed yesterday's whole show to do it. mark zuckerberg, i'm curious, why he thinks he has to do this now. is there something about
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facebook that he really feels as though this is an emergency? steve: he doesn't want to be regulated who would do it. >> the federal government. he doesn't want that. he wants it just the way it is got to appear politically unbiased. ainsley: maybe political aspirations? brian: wondering why he thinks he is the best person to do these interviews because he did not have the best appear ands in the bass pa front of congress you will hear him talk about that. is there an anti conservative bias at the big social media companies. all in the 2:00 hour right here on the fox news channel. dana has a great get interview-wise. you will want to see it. brian: if you want to quickly snapchat with jillian mele. jillian: i don't snapchat. brian: it disappears. jillian: snapchat is for
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younger than me. brian: younger people to get the news have a news feed on snapchat. jillian: add that to your busy schedule one more social media site to add. jillian: perhaps but not. begin with a fox news alert. mexican authorities releasing the son of infamous drug lord el chapo after his arrest turned a city into a war zone. he is wanted in the u.s. on drug charges after he was picked up by mexican troops. word quickly spread and those intense gun battles broke out. burning trucks and buses, blocking roads out of the city 500 miles south of el paso. the city insists it was to protect lives. say goodbye to master sergeant mark allen. the american hero died last weekend 10 years after he was shot while looking for bowe bergdahl.
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bergdahl was captured by the taliban in afghanistan after walking off his post. he was later freed dishonorably discharged and reduced in rank for endangering the lives of fellow soldiers including al allen. the sniper attack left allen paralyzed and unable to talk. he leaves behind a wife and daughter. authorities revealing the crane collapse that killed four people was caused by human error. the incident that occurred was totally avoidable. if the company on site follow the crane would not have fallen and four people would not have lost their lives. jillian: this happened in seattle. workers disassembling the crane prematurely removed repinn the mast mast. brian: now sports. jillian: losing two game losing streak blowing out the broncos 30-6.
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did come at a big price. star quarterback and reigning league mvp patrick hopped off the field. he was able to walk on his own. reports are that he dislocated his kneecap. stay tune for more on that. in the meantime it is do or die for the yankees after the astros dominated game 48-3. big game happening tonight. houston leads the series 3 games to one. game five is on fox sports one. what do you guys think? brian: combination when they stop pitching and hitting. that's usually not good. ainsley: not impossible for the yankees though, right? brian: it's not. jillian: i know. brian: quick thing on the kneecap they that sawng the kneecap back into place. isn't that unbelievable. steve: when my dad was a basketball coach when i was a kid. he did the same thing for one of his players. we watched it and it just popped in. brian: he stayed in the holiday inn the night before. steve: he had done it before. ainsley: it happened to my friend and she popped her own back in then she had
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surgery later. ecigarette giant juul making a big announcement as the vaping crisis hits a new level nationwide. steve: we are going to talk to hhs secretary alex azar coming up next. retire your risk dot org.
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>> our ambitious campaign to reduce the cost of prescription drugs has produced the largest decline in drug prices in over 51 years. [cheers] >> people don't talk about it. the press will not talk about it. steve: well, we are, president trump praising his administration's work to lower prescription drug prices. as a new report released by the white house council of economic advisors shows prices have actually dropped in the last year. here with more of an explanation, the secretary of health and human services, alex azar. alex, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: all right. that's interesting right there that the price of prescription drugs have gone down. we know that nancy pelosi has been talking about doing something corning doesn't get much done these days. >> president trump has been delivering. this is the largest decrease in prescription drug prices in 51 years. steve: where is it coming from. >> it's coming from historic levels of approvals of generic drugs. that's what we just announced the other day, the fda has the third year in a
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row under president trump's leadership of approving historic levels of these affordable generic copies of branded drugs. saved $26 billion for american consumers in the first just 18 months of the president's term. steve: but i think some people, mr. azar, think, you know, if it's the generic, it's not add good as the brand name. that's not true. >> i'm your health secretary. and you know what? every single drug i take is a generic. they are exact copies. they wouldn't get approved by fda if they weren't. steve: all right. very good. let's talk a little bit about juul. juul now says they are going to stop selling a lot of very popular flavors. for what reason? >> well, i'm very glad we are seeing people recognize that these products are attractive and available to kids. these are addicting a whole generation of kids to nicotine. and that is a really serious health problem. so we are glad to see these coming off the market. the president and i, we are going to continue to work to get these products regulated by fda as congress required.
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it's important to remember, every ecigarette on the market right now is illegally on the market. congress said these products. steve: wait. back that up. what do you mean everyone is illegal? >> think are illegal. they have to be approved by fda as in the public health interest before they can be on the market. the obama administration started a program saying let's let these be on the market initially so we can get adults to get off combustible tobacco. and then what we saw was this surge up in youth using these products. so the president and i are taking action. we are saying we have got to come, in get approval before you go back on the market and then we can make sure you keep your products away from kids. steve: because there have been so many deaths. i know that we are north of a thousand here across the board regarding vaping. meanwhile medicare open enrollment now through december 7th. if somebody right now is watching 65 or older. it's time to act. >> you bet. so right now until december 7th, go to
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medicare.gov for open enrollment. you have so many choices. president trump has made it clear. is he going to protect medicare for our seniors and he is going to make it even better. we have got more options, premiums are down. you can get these medicare advantage plans that may even have zero premium prescription drug coverage for you. all kinds of new benefits. we have added so much go to medicare.gov. and pick your plan for the next year. steve: because it is medicare for all if you are 65. >> if you are 65. steve: very good. alex azar, the secretary of health and human services. sir, thank you very much. >> thank you so much. steve: 7:22 democrats slamming president trump for pulling troops from syria. didn't they praise president obama for withdrawing troops from iraq? mollie hemingway called out a double standard and she is coming up next. here, it all starts with a simple...
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♪ ainsley: time now for news by the numbers. first 550,000. that's how many criminals japan will pardon as the new emperor ascends into power. justice ministry says the petty conflicts have a chance to cleanse their spirit and start anew. is he taking over for his father who stepped down in may. next $250,000 that's the price tag of that lamborghini, a 14-year-old smashed into with a stolen car. police in australia pulled the teenager over after they spotted the car. he backed into their cruiser and then took off. but he didn't get far, slamming into the sports car in a nearby intersection. $263,000. that is the record haul for this contestant on the price is right. >> actual price is 29,446. congratulations. [cheers]
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ainsley: mike "studio bar" breaking the show's records for the highest winnings in the show's 63-year history. he is excited. >> thank you, ainsley, for the toss. you can toss to me later. ainsley: you owe me a toss. that's my car, that's my car. brian: let me talk about this because we were talking about this. railing about pulling troops syria. wasn't too long ago that those same democrats were praising president obama's decision to pull out troops from iraq in 2011. so why the shifting sands? do they think we weren't taping it? here to weigh in senior editor at "the federalist" fox news contributor justice on trial mollie hemingway. i'm stunned by the fact and justice on trial is still a best-seller. i was stunned by the fact these people never leave their jobs we don't remember who was against the surge. we don't remember who called the isis a jv team, who pulled the our troops out of iraq entirely despite other advice.
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why have we forgotten that. >> i think if there weren't double standards there would be no standards at all for a lot of people. but i actually think that this -- thinking back about the history of this really speaks to how difficult it is for presidents to not be interventionists in the area. president obama had a lot of electoral success, how did other democrats by opposing the way in which we were fighting the iraq war. people were largely supportive of going in there, but they did not like the way we were fighting or how it turned into nation-building exercise. he removes troops from iraq. he says 16 times i will not put boots on the ground in syria. the american people largely did not support the idea of putting boots on the ground in syria. president obama asked congress if you want in this so much, pass a saying the thing authorized use of military force. didn't come close to passing even though harry reid introduced it. yet here we are many years later having remove troops from syria because he did end up getting pressured doing just that president trump said he opposed
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intervention in syria and look how hard it's been for him to pull our troops out. brian: bottom line is, if you are a good leader you react to things in reality and don't worry about politics. let politics take care of itself. president obama, remember. this a few years ago, when he promised what he promised in syria not to do. >> in no event are we considering any kind of military action that would involve boots on the ground. >> we would not put boots on the ground. >> it does not involve boots on the ground. >> i will not put american boots on the ground in syria. >> the resolution we have submitted today does not call for the deployment of u.s. ground combat services to iraq or syria. brian: so how does that happen? we end up with forces in syria. never got authorization. the president amped it up. wipes out the caliphate. and now all the same people that were suspect set that we are leaving and i'm one of them. i think we left in a terrible situation without any plan, but those people
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are now look like war hawks. how could we leave the kurds? here's an example. maxine waters she comes out in 2011 and says if the war in iraq comes to a close it's my hope serve as constant reminder. we must carefully examine how we war international peace. 2019 if the united states abandons the kurds these courageous ally also never trust us again. gift to russia iran and isis. what was it before? >> well, there's a lot of consistency in washington, d.c. about the idea that if there is a conflict going on in the region, in the middle east, the u.s. has to be involved. and that has been pushed, even though american people don't support such an idea, again, they were willing to go into iraq. they believe that american wars should be fought in our interest and that we should have a clear path to entering and exit. so this is the problem that happens when you don't have congress authorizing the use of military force, when you don't have people weighing in and having debates but you just have people pressuring to intervene.
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and so, it, again, shows the difficulty, once you get involved, it seems almost impossible to extricate yourself. but the american people, i think, have been clear really for a long time now that they want to have a better way of fighting wars, prioritizing where we are involved, and making sure that we have a clear way out as well. brian: mollie hemingway always makes sense. bestselling author. justice on trial. thanks, mollie. >> thank you. brian: what do the president's supporters think of the rally in dallas last night. rob schmitt is live with some of them. rob? rob: yeah, brian. we are going to talk about the president's american first policies coming up after the break with his supporters. maybe his vulnerability right now the situation in syria. that's coming up. stay tuned ♪ turn around ♪ go to town ♪ boot scooten boogie ♪
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politician. i don't like it but it is what it is. steve: it is what it is. he is who he is. he is not a politician. brian: president trump touted the economy and his america first agenda to voters in dallas. ainsley: "fox & friends first" co-host rob schmitt is live where he talked to supports. hey,. rob: rob dallas a city that hillary clinton dominated in 2016. last night the maverick's arena behind me was overflowing with trump supporters. >> i like trump's policies how he goes out and fights for us. >> president trump i'm behind. >> you we need the wall badly. i live three miles from the rio grande. i have seen people weighed uwade upto here. >> every country has to have a border in order for us to have a level ground where everybody has the same opportunity to come over. we have to have a system and that's what he is trying to do. >> i like the way is he
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america first. defended this country like i did. i'm for this president. >> would love donald trump because what obama did was just like a -- he did nothing. when -- a lot of killing in syria. >> we have got to stop these endless wars. the people in the neighborhood take care of their own neighborhood. >> i have got mixed emotions. i hate to pull out and hopefully leave or potentially leave somebody undefended. >> i think that he is just letting us know that there is a time to where the fight is over. >> looks to me is he trying to take our troops out of harm's way. >> my children are in the military. this effects me emotionally. we need to take care of america first. rob: we are talking to the president's biggest supporters. people who sit in line for hours to watch him talk. we asked about immigration. he has tremendous report on immigration here in texas. this huge border state. we asked about syria. and that is a vulnerability
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for the president had a lot of supporters didn't know what to think about that. they still support him but not sure about his decision on syria, guys. brian: i know this is not -- not going to give me a scientific answer. just from your gut, is this like the grateful dead where the same people are following him around like they went from arena to arena all the fans or are these people actually from the area? >> yeah. this is all regional. some people come from, you know, maybe five, six hours away. it's definitely regional. texas, maybe oak. oklahoma. we did talk to one woman from alaska who was here to see her grand kids. these are 25,000 unique viewers a lot of the them their first trump rally. steve: indeed. rob thank you for joining us outside american arenas. ainsley: not dead heads. trump fanatics. steve: jillian joins us with some news regarding the fbi. jillian: that's right. here's the story. the phish says the
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mysterious death of american tourists in the dominican republic were the result of natural causes. the agency's conclusion lines up with the claims island authorities made earlier this year. at least 14 american tourists have died since last summer. the dominican tourism industry has since updated some of its emergency policies including hotel inspections: a missouri man missing for a week found inside his crashed car at the bottom of a ravine. ryan was spotted by a dirt bike ridener wreckage along the kansas city interstate. it's not clear exactly how long his car had been there or how he is doing this morning. investigators say finding him was like find ago needle in a haystack. wow. heroic commuters helped save a woman getting hit by oncoming subway. take a lock at this. surveillance video showing a man fainting on the platform in argentina sending the woman onto the tracks. several people frantically waiving onto the driver who was able to slam on the brakes. two passengers seen jumping onto the tracks to pull the
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woman back onto the platform. and then there is a story. 84-year-old vietnam veteran challenges a tsa agent to a push-up contest. check it out. >> 4, 5, 6. 7, 8, 9,. [cheers] >> 10. okay. in addition to already being a hero, she is definitely a hero. times two. lieutenant colonel maggie completing 10 pushups in her uniform on the floor of the phoenix airport. look at that smile. she was on her way to an honor flight to washington. she served as an army nurse in vietnam helicopters to treat wounded shoulders. wow, what an incredible woman she is. time to go out to janice dean on fox square. janice: tough join us. what's your name, my friend. >> my name is tarran. >> do you want to be on tv. >> yes, ma'am. janice: you are on tv. >> yes.
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janice: good job, my friend. take a look at the maps real quick. i want to talk to you about a tropical system or a subtropical system. we think this might get the name nester in the next couple of hours. regardless if it's named or not we will see the potential for of course some heavy rainfall, tropical storm force winds. severe weather. good news is a quick mover, bring much needed rainfall to a drought-stricken region. we will continue to watch that and bring you the very latest. there is your forecast today. it's going to be mostly sunny here in new york city. look at this great crowd that's here for "fox & friends." [cheers] janice: steve, ainsley and brian, over to you. 25 years of famous dave's. ainsley: i know. [cheers] brian: come over here and grab a rib. steve: america's favorite restaurant famous dave's a staple on "fox & friends" for 20 years. celebrating 25 years of award-winning food. brian: he has a lot of trophies. here to help us celebrate is the founder himself dave.
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you are here. dave anderson. ainsley: dave, congratulations. >> i know. 25 years serving up the best ribs in america. it just goes to show that anybody with a dream starting from little kid on the west side of chicago, using a garbage can lid for a smoker can be america's best rib joint. steve: started with a garbage can lid. >> garbage can lid. in fact we have one. this garbage can. brian: look at it this. ainsley: that's sweet. this is all-american barbecue feast served on a garbage can lid which pays homage to the fact that i started off with nothing. brian: i hub cab for a while. steve: because you have been 25 years in the business now. i understand you are having throw back prices for a while, right? >> we have throw back prices where we are rolling the prices all the way back. you get $10 ribs. $5 pork sandwiches. and $2 bread pudding.
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how does that sound? [cheers] brian: you didn't hear, did you. ainsley: you picked the best day to come because tomorrow is steve's birthday. janice: steve's birthday? ainsley: he is going to be 25, too. janice: fabulous. steve: i'm rolling back my prices. ainsley: have to taste it. brian: how hard is it keeping it going today as opposed to when you broke in? >> actually, we have become america's best loved barbecue joint. people love our ribs. and we have grown from one little restaurant way up in the northwoods of wisconsin, only 2,000 people. and that first summer we were serving over 6,000 people a week in a town of only 2,000 people. brian: i didn't know there was enough ribs in the country for all those people. >> i will tell you what, we are so excited. 25 years. this is such a great country where anybody with a dream can make it. steve: with a garbage can lid. you will have all sorts of free prizes people can win. including a free grill. a year's worth of barbecue
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sauce. free rib force a year or more. just follow him on twitter. ainsley: i love. this brian and i -- what did you say one time mob. actuallmops the ribs. >> i had to bring the secret sauce. ainsley: what did you call marinading you called it something else? >> we are slathering. brian: i think i'm slathering. janice: great job, brian. steve: ladies and gentlemen, breakfast is served. [cheers] still ahead on this friday, geraldo rivera and white house press secretary stephanie grisham. you're watching "fox & friends" on famous dave's barbecue. ♪ precious child ♪ and know a mother's love ♪ n, so the whole world looks different.
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steve: united kingdom striking a brexit deal with the eu paving the way for a vote this weekend. prime minister boris johnson hailing the plan yesterday. >> this is a great deal for our country, for the u.k. i also believe it's a very good deal for our friends in the eu. i'm very confident that when my colleagues in government wilparliamentwill go for it. it's been long, painful and divisive. now is the moment for us as a country to come together -- >> ainsley: here to react is author of the "madness of crowds" douglas murry. good morning to you, douglas. >> good morning. very good to be with you. ainsley: good to have you here. tell us how this all plays outs. out. >> it's been a long and
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arduous process. it's been three years since the u.k. voted to leave the european union. we have seen off two prime ministers since that vote. and now the third, boris johnson, has managed to do what everybody said he wouldn't be able to do. all the people who wanted britain to remain in the eu kept saying there is no way that the deal that theresa may, boris johnson prepredecessor negotiated will ever open eu. we got a new prime minister in boris johnson and he seems to have managed to get a deal from the european union against the claims against all of his critics and against all of the naysayers. now parliament is going to have to vote on this on saturday. steve: so how is it going to turn out? you know, as you pointed out, it's been back and forth boris johnson himself said it's been long and painful. and there are a lot of people in positions of power. >> yes. steve: neck glanced, as you know, who don't like this idea. they don't like the idea of breaking with the eu. >> that's right. well, you know. the two big upsetting votes of 2016, the brexit
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referendum and the election of donald trump have one thing in common more than anything else, which is. this both cases there are major portions of the elites in both countries in britain and america who have never accepted the results of those votes. steve: right. >> in the case of britain, as in america. have campaigned for years to try to undo those votes. in the u.k., that is going on as we speak, parliament may not agree to pass boris johnson's deal. they may keep doing as they have for the last few years everything to keep us. in we will just see. now, if the results of the referendum against parliament at this stage. brian: doug, real quick. this is the right president to cut that trade deal with. so as soon as the u.k. breaks off, they go right into a deal with the u.s. and this is a president that wants to do that deal. so there is a window here that what could have possibly closed? >> >> well, it could close. look, the fact is that we have been in this horrible
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knot in britain the last few years. we have voted to lee for multiple reasons. one of them is that britain wanted to trade with the entire world not just preferential deals within the eu. hopefully, by the end of this month out of eu, that means we will be in a good deal to make good deals with the u.s. and there are many other allies and friends around the world including the eu. but this, i hope, and all of us who voted brexit is beginning of new and much more dynamic britain. we just to hope that that is the case. brian: have you dynamic book and we'll be sure to get that we have to agree between countries to not wash our chickens with chlorine. that is the one thing that bothers the british that we do. if we can get over that then we will be okay. >> you would be amazed at how many experts we now have on chlorinated chicken in britain there are so many experts on chlorinated chickens. brian: makes my eyes red. ainsley: thank you, doug. his book is "the madness of
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crowds." time to get the house ready skip bedell has tips for your home and also good on your health. fox square with janice ♪ let's twist again treated his cancer and side effects. so job can stay strong for his family. cancer treatment centers of america. appointments available now. cancer treatment centers of america. pacifica: ted! goin' oneighbor: yes. takin' it off road station wagon? you know it's an suv! i know for fact your suv does not suck. why is that? it ain't got that vacuum in the back! we got to go. ♪ vacuum in the back, hallelujah! ♪
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wifi up there? -ahhh. sure, why not? how'd he get out?! a camera might figure it out. that was easy! glad i could help. at xfinity, we're here to make life simple. easy. awesome. so come ask, shop, discover at your xfinity store today. ♪ steve: all right. as temperatures start to drop and they certainly are in new york city. windows are closing, fireplace are heating up and families are heading back inside for the season. what better way to focus on sprucing up the house before holiday chaos sets. in home contractor skip bedell is here on fox square with healthy do it yourself upgrades can you do this weekend. and skip, we just wound up with one of these air filtration things for the living room. it's amazing. >> this thing is unbelievable. from 3 m fill treat the number one name in air
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filtration. air purifiers perfect for the holidays. closing the windows, lighting candles all things in the air. dust mits and allergens this 99 pulp 7% with a true hepa filter most don't have a true hepa. steve: like something you see in a hospital. >> highest quality. comes in different sizes. it's amazing for filtering out all the bad con tammaro nance and allergens. holidays. steve: pet smells. >> pet odors, smoke, dander, everything. steve: next up. >> listen, it's really important, brian, ainsley, it's so important to filter all the water in your home. we think by drinking bottled water or using filters under our sink we are getting away from the contaminants like chlorine and all the other bad products in water. this is a whole house water filter from king water filtration. what this does is filters better than bottled quality water from every faucet in your house. so here is what crazy.
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we actually absorb more of though contaminants skin and inhale it from water than drinking. unit has no maintenance. never change a filter. never do anything. it's completely self-sufficient. and it gives you better than bottled quality from every faucet in your home. the shower, everywhere. janice: where and how do he we get it? >> this is set up for the life time the filter. you never maintain it. it comes with a warranty. basically this set up to not ever have to do anything to it. completely self-sufficient. huge promo for fox viewers king water filtration.com $1,000 off on their website if you click on the special link. brian: what do you guys think of that? [cheers] >> thousand dollar promo for fox viewers today king water filtration.com. ainsley: we drink out of our faucets at home? we shouldn't do that? brian: i drink out of the hose. >> we use filters at home. everybody knows have you got to filter the water. refrigerator filter. you have to replace those
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things. when i was doing the investigation for my own home we take in much more bad things from showering. when you take 10 minute shower absorb up to 6 ounces of chlorine in your skin and inhale it brian. ainsley: that's why brian doesn't shower. >> put it through everything. this is the best system that the price. you can't buy a better machine. brian: better than all of. this no more filters. throw all this stuff a way. no more bottled water. better than bottle quality from even year shower head. unbelievable this thing. i put it in my house. best thick i ever did. brian: you are going to come back next hour? >> absolutely. brian: we have more stuff the next hour? >> of course, i will be back. steve: can you just install this. >> i will bring this over to your house. steve. we're putting it in today. >> i live 25 miles away. coming up, white house press secretary stephanie grisham is going to join us along with geraldo rivera. he's in the green room. you are watching i "fox & friends" for a friday ♪ oh
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♪ ♪ being de . .
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♪. steve: president of the united states is both those places. you're looking at the white house, you're looking at him last night at american airlines arena. 20,000 people packed inside. he talked for 87 minutes. somebody who does this metric figured out, that was the eighth longest speech donald trump has ever given. ainsley: the eighth longest. >> they are keeping track. brian: good for him to get out of washington. wow, he has to go back on the campaign trail. steve: he never left. brian: just the opposite. he looks forward to campaigning as much as he does being
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president. maybe even enjoys doing this more. this is almost therapeutic. inside of washington he is almost surrounded by enemy forces. when he goes out to texas or minnesota he has last two weeks. this is why i'm doing it. this is why i put my business on hold. steve: he has to go back to washington to get stuff done. ainsley: the crowd kept chanting four more years. here is what donald trump said if you missed it. >> for three straight years radical democrats have been trying to overthrow the results of a great, great election. maybe, maybe, the greatest election in the history of our country. [cheering] now they continue the outrageous impeachment witch-hunt with nothing. with nothing. they come after me but what they're really doing is they're coming after the republican party and what they're really, really doing, is they're coming
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after and fighting you and we never lose. steve: you got to the president. joining us live here in studio m. >> delighted to be here. steve: president trick to talk about what the democrats are trying to undo since 2016. >> i have no doubt. that is their goal. megyn kelly, our former colleague made a surprise appearance on tucker carlson. she said as good as anybody, they have been trying to get him out since the first day he has been in office. with all the talk of 25th amendment and impeachment. they wanted to kill him from day one. steve: almost to the last year. why bother impeachment, just let the people vote him out if that is what they want? >> impeachment is a sure thing if it works. it disrupts him. election is very problematic,
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you saw this alternate reality in dallas rally, tens of millions of americans who want to vote him back into office. to reelect the 45th president of the united states. in washington you won't know that. in washington there is this toxic atmosphere. some created by some of these policies. why does he want to host doral national golf club in miami. why does the president want to host the g7 there. steve: it will be very hot. >> i have a solution though. the president can comp the rooms. pay for their food and booze and tips. attendees at the g7 summit at his resort. he comp the rooms. he can do it. he gives back the salary. it's a good gesture. removes one of democrat talking points. brian: that is least of it. >> but the constitution says you can't do it. brian: the president has this other thing with the ukraine
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situation going on right now. did mick mulvaney made it worse or better? >> i think mulvaney may have spoken with refreshing candor. he reminded me of sean spicer, worn sean spicer's suit not using on stars starks, the ill-fitting things. he said absolutely unnecessary. like sean spice on the size of the inauguration crowd, mick mulvaney yesterday saying that politics influences foreign aid. yes of course it does but why in the world do you rub that, like salt in the wound. that all pales in comparison to the, to the syrian withdrawal. you know -- steve: cease-fire. >> talking about the withdrawal first. we'll talk about the cease-fire. it is the president at his impetuous worst. to withdraw under those circumstance, so abruptly, causing deaths or displacement of hundreds of thousands of kurds who were our allies.
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putting at risk the isis prisoners security. you know, casting, i know, doubt on the president. i am opposed to the united states being in syria. i have for eight years. to get out with poor planning and no -- steve: you know why he did it. the same reason he was in texas. he promised people when elected -- >> there is orderly way to do things. you tell your allies. okay, next wenz we're pulling out. ainsley: geraldo, here is the thing. that happened days ago. it is already done. let's move on and talk about the cease-fire. erdogan meeting with our vice president and with mike pompeo. they come back, before they even land on the ground the president was praising cease-fire. there is reported fighting going on there. there is no cease-fire. >> cease-fire is naive notion.
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you have the town of kobani it is in middle of the kurdish safety zone. kobani is kurdish town. the kurdish general is named kobani. what will you do with the kurds in the kobani, in the middle of the turkey safety zone? are they going to evacuated. are they going to be compensated for their homes? the russians have been there for generations. they have a naval base in syria. it is, it is for them, you know, this fighting against assad has prolonged the suffering of civilians. it has unleashed all these millions of refugees on turkey and the rest -- brian: which had nothing to do with us. >> nothing to do with us. brian: but assad insurgency was his people rising up against him. >> we had no business fighting against him. it was, with all due respect to
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the retired generals, it was industrial complex, the military just dell complex. we got to fight a war. here is potential place. let's go. we can do this. we can help the sunnis over throw their shiite, alawite masters. rearrange the country of syria just as successfully as we did in iraq. brian: that is not the way it happened. all barack obama said assad should go. we didn't do anything t was when isis came into iraq, they came back the caliphate forms. we felt it was in our interest to blow that up and we did. >> i understand what you're saying. isis was the prime reason we escalated our presence in syria. but we were funding anti-assad forces, sunni forces well before that. during the obama administration, when the president, 44th, president obama could not really
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decide how intensely he wanted to go in. they gassed their people. here is the red line. they can't cross the red line. maybe they can cross the red line. slowly but surely the generals advising obama we have to help sunnis and help rebels. we put money in. we prolonged the war. we prolonged suffering. it was a stain on our foreign policy. but none of that forgives the way president trump left our allies flat. steve: we have seen president trump responding to his critics regarding the syrian pullout on twitter. kamala harris who is running for president of the united states because president trump says so much crazy stuff essentially is what she is saying, twitter needs to suspend his account. yesterday dana perino sat down for an interview with mark zuckerberg, the guy behind facebook. they asked about that. here's his answer. listen to this. this is interesting. >> kamala harris said she thinks that twitter should shut down
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president trump's account. do you think that is a ridiculous idea? >> in my belief that in a democracy i don't think we want private companies censoring politicians and the news. i generally believe that as a principle people should decide what is credible and what they want to believe and who they want to vote for and, i don't think that should be something that we want tech companies or any kind of other company doing. steve: so private companies should not censor politicians he said? >> that is essentially correct. i have quit facebook. i think it is intrusive. i can't stand the omnipresent of it. everything i look and touch facebook knows and recorded that. every step you take, every move you make. president's twitter account as patriotic american i would volunteer to be the president's twitter editor he causes a lot
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of his own misery. steve: you're trying to do that right now. >> i am in a sense. ainsley: title on the cabinet, twitter editor. >> would volunteer. i would work for free. i think the president has made up his twitter account with 65 million followers. he made the most effective way of countering his critics. there is an alternate reality. the dallas rally shows the intenseness as lake charles before it, as minneapolis before that. the president has enthusiastic support that is never recorded by the mainstream media. that is ignored by the main outlets. he reaches them through twitter. let him have at it. brian: kamala harris will not win this? >> kamala harris is reacting, she is frustrated because she has has no traction. whatever traction she had has faded. i think michael bloomberg might be the democrats last best hope.
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brian: for the rest of the country outside of new york. ainsley: thanks, geraldo. behind you is jillian. >> hi, jillian. brian: pride of philadelphia. jillian: i i want a signed copyf your first album as a singer. >> first and last. jillian: get to the fox news alert. two iowa deputies shot overnight while serving an arrest warrant. >> we need an ambulance. we have an officer-involved shooting. officer down. jillian: at least one suspect arrested after barricading inside of an apartment. the deputies were airlifted to a des moines hospital. one person inside apartment was shot and a third deputy suffered a non-gun related injury. all are in stable condition. breaking overnight the mexican authorities releases son of infamous drug lord "el chapo." after his arrest turned a city
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into a war zone. wow, listen to that. lopez is wanted in the u.s. on drug charges after picked up by mexican troops. word quickly spread. the intense gun battles broke out. burning trucks, blocking roads outside of the city, 500 miles outside of el paso. they say the release was to protect lives. normally taking a live look at history. in this case you're taking a live look at her story in the making. nasa conducting the first-ever all woman spacewalk. astronauts christina cook and jessica meer. are replacing a broken charger on the international space station. it was originally set for march but had to be delayed because there is a spacesuit shortage. they didn't have enough of the right size.
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brian: go on amazon. jillian: despite what you think, brian, women are powerful. ainsley: thanks, jillian. 12 minutes after the top of the hour. what did the president's reporters think about the president's rally in dallas? rob schmitt talked to them. we'll report from the rally live from texas next.
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♪ brian: thousands gathering for president trump's rally in the lonestar stay last night. ainsley: rob schmitt is coming to us live from dallas where he spoke with some of those supporters. hey, rob. reporter: good morning to you. democrats of 2020 are coming after texas and 38 electoral votes that come with it. the president of course can't let that happen. he was in dallas shoring things up. we talked to his biggest supporters what issue matters most to them. what are the policies that you vote on? >> i do want him to build the wall. i do like the fact he is fixing unemployment. >> my big issues, freedom of religion, safety with being able to keep my guns. >> more capitalism. i'm from india. very poor place. the reason i came here and it worked for me because i decided to hard work. >> thanks to his policies in my
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work i'm able to offer latinos a medical health membership model so we don't have to be price gouged by insurance companies. >> a lot of jobs brought back from overseas. >> we're here, there is a lot of hispanic people and christian people that have christian values, we think donald trump is fighting for our values and all minorities across the board. reporter: how old are you? >> i'm 12. reporter: what the policies has you support. >> everything is heartfelt. it is passionate for our country. >> this man doesn't have to answer to anyone. he is not in anybody's back pocket. >> i love my president and what he is doing. >> putting america first. reporter: yeah, democrats had the last debate last month in
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houston, at mostly black college. beto o'rourke, last night he is from el paso, texas, had dueling rally. had 5000 people which is pretty good for beto. there were somewhere between 20, 25,000 people where dallas mavericks play. overflow crowd here in dallas. brian: have you seen porzingis. he is 7, 5, and left new york. have you seen him. reporter: i used to see him in new york. he used to go to my gym. he is so skinny and 20 feet tall. you can't miss him. brian: mark cuban is betting his future. we'll see. ainsley: highland park village, if you want a shopping spot. you clearly like shopping. you look nice. brian: 7 11, you can get coffee. steve: california homeless crisis pushing owners to the
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brink. >> i have to clean up the poop and pee off my doorstep. i have to chin up the syringes. i want to know what you will do for us. steve: that woman's viral plea went unanswered. we have an update next on fox. ♪ but with less carbon footprint. can we have both? at bp, we're working every day to make energy that's cleaner and better. and we see possibilities everywhere. to make energy that's cleaner and better. they give us excellent customer otservice, every time.e. our 18 year old was in an accident. usaa took care of her car rental, and getting her car towed. all i had to take care of was making sure that my daughter was ok. if i met another veteran, and they were with another insurance company, i would tell them, you need to join usaa because they have better rates, and better service.
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brian: new york city lawmakers vote to shut down one of the world's largest jails. mayor de blasio, was sitting two seats away, replace rikers island with smaller, facilities, critics fear that closing rikers
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will reduce prison space where dangerous convicts can run free. lori loughlin wants felicity huffman what prison is like what she gets out. she served a 13 day sentence for paying 50,000-dollars to change her daughter's s.a.t. scores. loughlin, her trial starts next year. we'll track it. steve. steve: brian, thank you. to an update on a story we brought you earlier this summer. sacramento hair salon owner went viral for slamming california's governor for the state homeless crisis. remember this. >> this video is for gavin newsom. i had a business in downtown sacramento for 15 years. what happens when i get to work, i have to clean up the poop and pee on my doorstep. i have to clean up the syringes. i have to politely ask people i care for, i care for people who are homeless to move their tents. i want you to know what you will
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do for us. steve: she is talking to the governor. after appearing on "fox & friends" in august, her salon was broken into again. she is closed for good. now relocated. that woman from the video. elizabeth novak joins us from sacramento. good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: last time we saw you you were super frustrated trying to get the governor to talk to you. he never did. but now, because somebody broke into your salon and stole everything, where have you moved? >> well i just moved to the suburbs away from downtown sacramento. the thing is, there still is a homeless problem there as well. steve: why is it better in the suburbs for you than in the city center? >> because homelessness, although spilling over it hasn't quite reached magnitude of what it is like downtown. actually my salon now where i rent a station is very close to gavin newsom's house.
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steve: is that right? maybe he could stop buy sometime? >> absolutely. >> luckily for you, in the industry it is hard to get to good client who are loyal to you. a lot of clients followed you from the city center out to the suburbs, right? >> yes. all but two. i feign ad lot of clients from being fox news as well. steve: that's terrific. we look at video from sacramento. tell us how bad it is. how it got that way. >> like i said before the legislation in place right now, things aren't changing because of the legislation. they're getting worse. they can't arrest people for drugs. if they don't steal more than $900 worth of property, they can't arrest them. a lot of people say it's a housing crisis, but it is definitely a drug crisis. it's a drug problem. steve: how would you like your state to deal with this? >> i would love to hear that, you know, these people need
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help. they need, let's start, not saying bottom, people on the bottom. these are people that jesus sat with the homeless, drug addicted the people. we need to start with that problem. it will affect everybody else postively. they need places to go. they need detox. they need to be reprimanded. sometimes that helps. steve: why do you think gavin newsom has not responded to you? here you've been on television. your viral twitter message was seen by some people. yet he, and now he is down the street from your location. has inreached out to you? >> i think that, you know, i think he is a little bit more concerned with trolling the president on the internet than on dealing with the problems in his state. steve: that's sad. >> yeah. steve: we'll see what, how things turn out. right now. 25% of the nation's homeless population is in california,
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according to a survey done at the end of january 2018. why is california a mecca or magnet i should say, for people, for the homeless? >> i really don't have an answer. i'm not sure. they bus people into sacramento from places like san jose and the bay area. steve: certainly is a problem. elizabeth novak, thanks for joining us from sacramento. >> thank you. steve: what do you think about that? email us friends at foxnews.com. after a tense meeting with democrat at home to negotiating deals overseas, white house press secretary stephanie grisham will join us live coming up next. ♪. [ music: instrumental which continues throughout spot. ]
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♪ ♪ ♪
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♪. >> the economy is booming, our people are prospering, our country is thriving and our nation is stronger than ever before. but the more america achieves, the more hateful and enraged these crazy democrats become. i really don't believe anymore that they love our country. i don't believe it. >> four more years. four more years. four more years. four more years. steve: i think he likes that part. brian: 28 minutes before the top of the hour. stephanie grisham was there last night during the fun. i imagine it seems like fun for just about everyone. we had reporters there. she joins us right now as white house press secretary among your many jobs. how hard was it for the president to turn the page, what he left from washington, the
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chaos from the day before, with the speaker leaving the meeting along with senator schumer, going to that stage, putting that behind him? >> it wasn't hard at all. the president is still working for the country. he went to texas yesterday for an official event. he opened up a workshop, a new louis vuitton workshop supposed to bring 1000 jobs in texas. went to amazing rally. full, more than 20,000 people there. has no problem continuing to on on behalf of the american people. talking about all he is doing for the american people. the rest in washington is just noise. the dems doing what they do. steve: what they're doing right now is impeachment inquiry which congress has not voted on. president made it very clear. he said the president said he has never done anything wrong as president. they're trying to relitigate the 2016 election they lost and they don't like it. >> that is absolutely what they're doing. it is comical. i was with the president on the campaign. watching since the stay we took
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office they have been throwing temper tan tum after temper tantrum, trying to undo. it is it is gaining momentum. the people of this country know what the dems are doing. they're tired of it. he will work on immigration, health care, bringing jobs to the country, on the economy, on the opioid crisis. he has a goal, successful all along. the dem the will not stop it is jv. ainsley: secretary of state mike pompeo and vice president returned to washington this morning. overnight there was were more bombings, smoke in the air. reports are civilians losing their lives and smoke and machine gunfire. how will the president respond to this? >> the president as president has obligation to look out for the troops and look out for the country. when president erdogan made it clear he was going to invade,
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the president acted decisively to pull our military out of the way. he sent a delegation over to get a cease-fire. that takes time. i will not talk about operations on the ground. i leave that to the department of defense. the president is to protect our country. he is putting america first. he always said that we'll not be in never-ending wars anymore. as for the cease-fire, i'm really happy that our delegation was successful. we'll leave it at that. brian: stephanie, a couple of things, we know what happened at the white house the other day or there is two different accounts of what took place and you say the president was calm, cool and collected. nancy pelosi said he had a meltdown. now she wants all the meetings recorded. will you record every meeting for the speaker? steve: worked out so well once upon a time. >> we would love for the impeachment inquiries be transparent as well. we would love for the meetings recorded or have access to that. maybe once she agrees opening up this kangaroo court of hers, we
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can record meetings that happen in the white house. i was in that meeting. the president walked in. he greeted everybody as he does. speaker pelosi started out the meeting, actually quite bizarre. she had no intentions of sitting there we had military people. people there to brief them. she was not going to listen. she got up. she stormed out. her focus was getting to the cameras. it was funny to watch schumer chase after her. he was a little worried if he didn't leave with her, she would get angry. i was at the meeting. the president was measured. he worked with the democrats that remain behind too. we continued the briefing. that was it. this president has work to do. we'll not be swayed by all the dems and theater they continue to perform every day. steve: i think that picture we're looking at right there is now nancy pelosi's official twitter picture where she is doing that right there next to the president. speaking of the president yesterday it was announced the apparently g7 summit will be
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next year, during the summer, is going to be at doral, which is the golf course resort owned by his family. a lot of people are saying, number one, in the summer it's really hot in florida. just telling you ahead of time. but the other thing, while the president might say i'm not making any money off this thing, the promotional value, marketing value is off the chart. >> i don't know if that is the case. tell you what, the way the media, mainstream media is covering it, i don't know that the trump organization would agree with that. i will tell you this -- steve: everybody knows about it now? >> everybody knew about it before the president took office. the trump brand is known everywhere. we had members of our military office, secret service, advance teams, we had several people, the state department go out to 10 different states and look at 12 different sites. doral was one of those sites. all of them came back made the recommendations to the president that doral is the perfect place to hold such a summit.
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you've got to imagine the things that go into looking at these sites. you need hotel rooms that will allow for the foreign delegations to come and their staff. transportation needs to be nearby. airports, hospital, helicopter landing zones. one site we looked at, won't name what site or what state was it is, the altitude could make people sick and okay again tanks brought in. brian: denver? ainsley: colorado. >> nope, wrong. brian: why didn't you do the press conference yesterday? why did mick mulvaney? will we see you do the press conferences which is traditionally with while house press secretary does? >> right now, i have said this a bunch. if the president ever wants me to go out and take that podium i will happily do it. as evidenced by yesterday with mick. it was again more theater. it is about people wanting to be on tv making names for themselves. mick took, he was there more than 30 minutes. he took probably 40 questions.
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people were talking over one another. he did a great job. he mentioned the sail message over and over. now the media of course, we put a statement out clarifying some of the things that the media got themselves in a tizzy over. to answer your question, sure i'll do it if i need to, but this president speaks for himself every day. he offers opportunities for the press core to ask him questions every day. there is no better spokesperson than the president. i'm doing tv interviews. i'm doing many, many print interviews. i'm out there to defend and talk about all the accomplishments of this president. i will continue to do that. it seems to be working right now. ainsley: energy secretary rick perry tells the president he plans to resign. last night at the rally president was complimenting them. they still appears they have amicable relationship. what is going on down there? why did he step down? steve: president said this was the plan for secretary perry all along. he has begin with us from the beginning. there will be next steps from
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him. i will not get ahead of him. he will go on for great things. we wish i am really well. steve: ukraine had anything to do with his departure. >> absolutely nothing. this was not works quite a while. the president has known about it. nothing like that. we wish him well. brian: president says he has somebody for the position already. could you tell us who it is? >> i cannot get in front of it. no way. brian: tell steve and steve tell me later? >> sure i'll do after we're down. steve: energy secretary has to have a lot of energy. >> yes. like everybody in the administration. steve: stephanie grisham, thanks for joining us from the bureau, rings perry is with me last hour. ainsley: he will do bigger things. been governor. steve: be on "kilmeade and friends." >> ainsley: coanchor on radio. brian: maybe it will be a strong arm situation. steve: 20 minutes before the top. hour.
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jillian joins us with news. jillian: we'll begin with this story. two badly damaged planes that collided over a hotel in new orleans will be blown up. two construction workers died and another is still missing after this collapse that you're seeing on the screen. 10 people injured in the collapse are suing the construction companies accusing them of negligence. it is unclear what caused the collapse. nba commissioner insisting houston rockets gm daryl morey won't be fired despite demands from beijing. >> we said there is no chance that's happening. there is no chance we'll even discipline him. the values of the nba, these american values, we are an american business travel with us wherever we to. one of those values is free expression. jillian: adam silver said he called morey's tweet about the hong kong protest regrettable because it upset chinese fans, not because of backlash from the chinese government.
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chinese foreign ministry denied making demands. look at this, surveillance video catching a bare naked burglar stealing from a yacht. the pantless pirates swiped an american flag before jumping on to another boat, diving into the water. he is still at large. so if you know him, let the police know. steve: first time we've run video like that. just saying. thank you, jillian. ainsley: i don't know him. dope recognize him. steve: okay. u.s. supreme court split. the justices deciding if states can prosecute illegal migrants who use false social security numbers to get a job. shouldn't this be a clear-cut case? discussion is coming up next. ♪. with advil liqui-gels, you have fast-acting power over pain,
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♪ brian: supreme court split over a case. three illegal immigrants were accused of using identity theft for using false social security numbers to apply for jobs. prosecutors say this is identity issue. kansas's high court says this crosses over into federal territory. peter luma, who i am self, himself born and raised in communist albania. it was wednesday's decision a surprise. >> no, it was not actually. but what will happen on this case the supreme court is going to have to analyze the facts here, figure out is this identity theft? or does it involve legal employment issues in the united states. this is an identity theft. obviously it's a both federal and state violations. therefore the states can
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prosecute this case. the key question is going to be, how was the information obtained with regard to this violation in kansas? the form i-9 which deals with employment, people put certain information of their. was that violated? was the information obtained from other sources? so the court is going to have to sort that out. if it is identity theft case the state can prosecute it. if it's a federal issue, obviously the state will be precluded from prosecuting that case. brian: where do you get the sense the supreme court would lie? >> i think the supreme court will not interfere with the states fighting identity theft. earth wise you preclude the states from fighting identity theft people applying for driver's license, other benefits, financial aid. i don't see the supreme court ruling in favor of the states in this case. but they will make that distinction very clear. brian: kavanaugh is one teetering on this, right?
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>> look. i think he is questioning, he just wanted to ascertain the proper information here. because there is conflict between the state law and federal law over here. the 1986 act, immigration act, court decision that involved arizona in 2012, very clear that the states con not be involved when it comes to prosecuting cases involving employment. in this case, i think the kansas, the state of kansas is making that clear we're dealing with identity theft. the justices wanted to make that distinction clear before they i can mat argument. brian: when do you think the timing will be? >> i think take their time. it will be obviously before the next election. i think you're going to see the administration fighting, they made a a great argument to begin with. the solicitor made a great argument with this. i think you will see the supreme court rule in favor of the states, not preclude states from fighting identity theft.
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brian: peter, thank you for breaking it down. >> thank you. brian: to spruce up your house but don't want to hire a designer? skip bedell with the diy improvements on fox square. that is next. check in with bill hemmer. also very handy. does not have to call somebody in to help them out. >> i made plenty of mistakes along the way. nice to see you last time on the big stage, brian. brian: i did not know you were there, brian. >> i was among thousands out there looking up to you. you look great. brian: on the al smith dinner. >> indeed. have a great weekend. rick perry leaving the administration. the first interview since the announcement he will be our guest live. a lot to cover with him. big texas rally in dallas, 30,000 outside. what the president said about syria, impeachment, nancy pelosi stay tuned for that. mike mccaul, john radcliffe. hour one, join sandra and me in
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♪ ainsley: starting to get cold the seasons are changing. everyone happening out outdoors, indoors instead of outdoors now. here on the fox square, diy home improvements that won't dominate your to-do list, home contractor skip bedell. hey, skip. >> we're back. talking about fall proof. easy stuff you can do. ainsley: what is going on here? >> baron's designs. look how beautiful. they make faux wood beams and man tells this is actually foam. this is hand-painted foam, you get look of real wood. ainsley: not as expensive. >> lightweight.
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they custom make them, 30 feet long, hand paint them. ainsley: this is your ceiling i won't be knocking on it. how would you know. >> even stone panels, everything you see here is all faux. they ship it custom hand-painted. unbelievable. brian: is that rocks? >> all made in the usa. hand sculpted hand-painted. they ship it, send it to your house. it is weekend project. panels fit together. peoples are unbelievable. check out barron design. steve: how durable? >> very strong. very durable. heat rated. i love the beams and mantles are incredible. they look like real wood. ainsley: what is going on over there? >> armstrong rigid core flooring. my brother and i did this whole thing in five minutes. you can do your whole floor in afternoon. are you doing a tap dance?
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neat a cain and a hat. >> these are like, hand scraped planks. i love the covering. they come up to 60-inch lengths. super durable. 100% waterproof. >> wine proof? >> everything proof. >> that's a must. >> 30 year warranties. best part you can do it today. no tools, no tools required. you snap over the floor on subfloor base. brian: wood floors look great but you're sanding them down. >> this is the look of real wood but don't have the maintenance. no sanding your thaining. super high dent resistant. 100% waterproof. put them everywhere. steve: people would like more information, go to skipbedell.com. applause for skip bedell.
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>> more information about skip bidel's stuff go to his website. >> we have a special surprise. come on out, everyone. happy birthday. >> look at this. [singing happy birthday] >> his daughter is here. >> happy birthday, dad, we love you so much. the best dad in america, sorry, brian. >> chick-fil-a birthday. >> thank you very much. >> you want some cake?
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>> you don't have to get him anything else? >> hope you enjoy it. >> plus the cake, everybody. >> you are the best. >> bill: good job, steve. good morning. the white house on a bit of defense after acting chief of staff sparks a firestorm appearing to contradict the no quid pro quo deal during his phone call with ukraine's president. so we watched it yesterday, fallout today on a friday. there we are. bill hemmer live in new york city. >> sandra: did you say friday? >> bill: yes, i did. >> sandra: good morning, bill and everyone. i'm sandra smith. mick mulvaney saying his comments were quote misconstrued after he told reporters that the release of $400 million in military aid to ukraine was tied to the demands that kiev look

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