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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  October 31, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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mckamey manor in disguise. critics say it's all in good fun. carley: would you do that. rob: before they shut it down. maybe next year. carley: count me out of that one. rob: haul halloween. carley: "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ ♪ i am invincible ♪ knock me down ♪ i get up again ♪ i am the champion. steve: man, washington, d.c. had trouble falling asleep last night after the nats won, the underdog nats, i should say won 6-2. first time in a world series that the winning team won four games on the road and they have officially run out of champagne in houston, texas. ainsley: took it all the way to game seven. how exciting. steve: it was great. brian: not many people thought the astros would lose the series.
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nationals unproven. they come out of nowhere after a terrible start and win it all. and i think it's great news for fox because it goes seven games. created a lot of drama, a first time champion like no other. people of houston, texas, don't worry about it. you have so much talent you will be back next year. steve: that's right. they made it to the big dance. jillian mele was there start to finish. she joining us from minute maid park in houston. hey, jillian. jillian: good morning. what a series. what a night. so much excitement. let's take you to what things looked like in d.c. last night, just a few hours ago actually when this all wrapped up. it was jus craziness as can you see. nationals first ever world series title. now let's take you to the game itself. we start in the bottom of the second right now. as astros get on the board first with a home run. sole loy shot bottom of the second. astros kept the lead until the top of the seventh and that's when things broke free for the nationals.
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anthony blast the home run to left. that made it 2-1. and then howie kendrick followed 140r9ly thereafter. putting the nats up 3-2. adam eton drives in two runs. the final score of this game 6-2. as you can imagine, fans here, washington fans anyway, were ecstatic. not so much houston fans. but the celebration in the clubhouse just -- i mean, this is what it is all about, guys. you can see them raising the trophy and having that champagne celebration. listen to what fans who were in attendance had to say. ♪ >> crying right now. how do you feel. >> i'm happy. i'm happy. i'm from houston, i'm a houston astro fan but i'm a family. that's my family. jillian: describe what it's like to watch it in this moment. >> man, we are just so proud. the whole family is proud. jillian: amazing. tough game to be at. >> tough game today.
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we couldn't win one home game. but they gave it a good try. >> i'm not going to try about it because we are going to see them next year. >> i have been watching the senators since 1950. jillian: did you ever think you would see this? >> well, i did now with the new team, yes because they are that good. >> wild. the whole thing is insane. go nats. >> unbelievable. destiny. >> surreal, honestly. we have had a good team for years. it's been a struggle to have the run that they did is crazy. it's historic. you had to be here. >> let's go nats. let's go nats. [cheers] jillian: i do have to tell you there were a lot more nationals fans in attendance last night than there were here for game one and game two. i think they started to catch onto the trend hey, wait a minute, they are winning in houston we need to go there to check this out. but, you know, the parade is going to be saturday in washington. they deserve the celebration.
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it's incredible. brian: jillian, if there was a game 8, would you stay? jillian: of course i would, brian. [laughter] ainsley: what did you say it wrapped up last night? steve: late. jillian: we haven't slept. i mean, we haven't slept. i'm sure fans in d.c. haven't slept. the player haven't slept. ainsley: you have been there the entire time. i know it's been fun. you will always remember, this jillian. jillian: oh, i know. steve: i have got the "new york post" back cover national champions 6-2. jillian: love it. steve: jillian, great job out there. steve strasburg was named the mvp and washington nationals say they have a homecoming that is quote absolutely bananas when they return to the swamp. brian: i think it will be hysterical parade 2:00 on saturday. everybody in washington thinks they are v.i.p. excuse me, i'm going to need special access. everyone is going to want special access on a parade to be on a float. i have news for you, it should be about the fans.
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ainsley: three hours, we are wearing orange. today is halloween. steve: it is. ainsley: the democrats are meeting today to talk about haunted house. look at the front cover of ne"new york post." steve: treat for items, trick for trump. will pelosi's ghouls vote today on impeach inquiry. brian: nancy pelosi have normal presser. a lot more interest in it kevin mccarthy. house vote on the trump impeachment resolution is today. they say it's a vote to codify the investigation. even as steny hoyer says i'm not even sure we need this vote. and very few dems who have not weighed in. even nancy pelosi goes i don't think i need to vote on this. i think this thing is a done deal. then the investigation will simply launch. steve: well, you know, when you say codify people don't know exactly what that means. it doesn't authorize the inquiry. because it's already going on. so what this does is it sets out 8 and a half pages of
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procedures. how things will go going forward. and when you read them, clearly the deck is stacked against the republicans. both sides say there's a possibility that each -- while it will be a party line vote, each side could lose up to a handful. there are a number of democrats who are undecided, unannounced their opinion. they include congressman from oklahoma, new york, new jersey, and maine along with minnesota. ainsley: it we go through these names? why would they be holdouts why wouldn't they vote the way nancy pelosi wants them 20? the first four flipped their districts from red to blue in 2018. they are freshman. and the last one, collin peterson he has been in congress since 1991. but, guess what? trump, he won by 52% in his district the last two cycles. but trump won in his district by 31 points in
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2016. he said i will figure it out. steve: it's all about self-preservation. they see the writing on the wall. republicans say that a solid vote today against it will prove to the senate that this is bipartisan -- rather this is partisan. partisan witch-hunt in their words to go along with the halloween thing about a president they have never liked. >> they need 217 yeas and at fox's last tally, they have 228. brian: nancy pelosi has a ridiculous quote. she says we will see if the spirit moves me when asked if she was going to vote. she says i don't think i need. to say she is right, they will be well over what is needed and then this process will take place. important to point out what else is going to take place today behind closed doors, tim morrison giving to question. when he was asked to go behind closed doors he resigned his position. big-time conservative. a long time with a lot of impact. but he was implicated by bill taylor as someone who heard the call and would be
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able to verify what the former or the forming acting ambassador to the ukraine for the u.s. had to say we will see what happens there. third person to resign since this inquiry began. steve: john bolton says he will not voluntarily testify without a subpoena. it sounds like it's coming. anyway, some of the rules include the fact that what will happen is intel committee will issue a report and give it to judiciary. judiciary will take a vote on it. doug collins from the great state of georgia he is the ranking member on that committee. he had this observation about how the deck is stacked against the republicans. >> i think it's another one of these ideas, was said earlier, we are only hearing what adam schiff wants us to hear. this is a part of the problem. john bolton coming or doesn't come or not was left to be seen. they will end up having to
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subpoena him. there is some significant issues there with him coming. i think what we're having to understand is no matter what we have heard about what john bolton heard, said or did is coming through the lens of adam schiff who has become the sole arbiter of everything impeachment wise he has been made the judge, jury and prosecutor of this case. that is a concern that should concern me and the american people. we are not hearing the full story here. brian: if you think that john bolton is going to go behind closed doors and blow up a republican administration, even one he may have clashed with at various times, i don't think you have been paying attention. he certainly knows what part-time's agendas are and the problems he may or may not have had with the president. he said almost nothing but nice things since he left. they just had some different clashes i think john bolton is pretty aware of where he stands with democrats. ainsley: he definitely will not be testifying. jed debbie wasserman schultz
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was questioning ken cuccinelli during the hearing the u.s. citizenship and immigration services director, the acting director, i should say. he hasn't been appointed yet or approved yet. she is accusing him and the president of following a white supremacy ideology. they clashed over that he defended the president and his record, listen. >> you and mr. trump don't want anyone who looks and talks differently than caucasian americans to be allowed in this country. >> i'm false. >> i'm sorry. please don't interrupt me. >> that's defamatory. >> excuse me, there is nothing defamatory about it. you have demonstrated you will pursue this white supremacist ideology at all costs. >> after declaring that i am not a white supremacist as you alluded. >> nor is the president. >> facts matter. >> yes, they do. yes, they do. truth matters. >> that's eye i'm stating them here today. >> you certainly are not. >> please answer the question. >> you are certainly cloaked in legislative privilege. that means can you get away with not telling the truth. brian: you forget how
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abrasive and unlikeable debbie wasserman schultz is. she reminded us that is unacceptable if you are a republican or democrat sit dl there and crack down on him and use rhetoric. if you want to say such and such many people came across the border and this is how much wall has been built. you want to hit them with facts and come to a conclusion. but to go out there and throw things out there like you are just trying to become director of the democratic national party again, which you drove into the ground while you drove around in suvs and private planes and put it into the red where hillary clinton had to go bail out your committee. ainsley: brian to sit there and say and call someone racist and he tried to defend himself and she says please don't interrupt me. you are not allowed to defend myself. steve: i'm making a statement i didn't ask you a question. ainsley: i'm making a statement but and he said it's not true. he is allowed to say that. brian: you have to stand up in these situations like he did. steve: tom homan was in the chair she referred to him as
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bigoted. i'm sure the white house thought his testimony was terrific. he is being considered to replace kevin mcaleenan who is leading the department of homeland security. today is his last day. ainsley: just because you don't want drugs to come into the country and you want to keep criminals out of the country, you want to know who is coming in doesn't mean you are racist. steve: it's all politics. it's all politics. brian: carley shimkus did a great job all week. carley: thank you. happy halloween. we're all busy people. a lot going on today. we will start things off with a fox news alert. right now 10 wildfires are raging across california. fueled by powerful winds. a grass fire narrowly missed the reagan presidential library in simi valley but nearby homes are still in jeopardy. >> it started over the top of the hill behind the house and then it just the wind started blowing and it went this way and now many of the neighbors next door are
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ready to go. cars ready to go. carley: kincade fire in northern california is now 45% contained. christina coleman will bring us a live report from simi valley later this hour. a convicted rapist and child molester accidently released from prison is back behind bars. mendez captured in kentucky overnight five days after walking out of a correction fillings in georgia mendez is illegal immigrant from guatemala he is serving life in prison an investigation is underway into why he was released. those are your headlines. ainsley: glad they got him. they got him back, right? back behind bars. carley: yes, he is in prison. brian: pentagon releasing video on al-baghdadi is astounding. next guest has been part of raids like this. he will walk us through what we were told and what he sees. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance,
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finish clearing the compound a precision strike from above took it out entirely. next guest part of many terror raids like this intel analyst himself brett velicovich joins us now. everything is different from us. it's grainy. how much does that look like what you would be looking at from your drone before a strike. >> it's almost precisely what i'm used to looking at. let me first say how significant this is to be able to release this video for public consumption. i mean, it's pretty incredible that they did that. i have been a part of hundreds of raids just like this designed to capture, kill isis leaders and never once had we ever declassified a video like this for public consumption. so at first i was a little bit nervous about this getting out there but the more i thought about it i'm thrilled that the president really pushed to get this video out there. it's not for us. this is for our enemies. this is designed to be a
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show of force. and to show the next leader of isis that he is going to suffer a very similar fate. and that he might as well already be good as dead. because you see just the shear amount of fire power that exists and the different video angles that are being shown in that video also show how much fire power was above the target that evening because it almost looked like just as congested as lax for a split second. you just don't have drones you have f-15s, fighter jets, gun ships all designed to be able to obliterate any threat to assault force on target. ainsley: bret, walk us through what we're seeing now. walk us through the video. >> sure, what you are seeing really is the greatest counter-terrorism unit ever assembled executing a flawless mission with precision. they could have easily landed helicopters right on top of that compound but they proceeded with caution because it was widely reported that baghdadi went everywhere with a suicide vest. so that changes the way they
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assault targets. very cautious going into it. then it appears that once it was made aware that they were there and all hell started to break loose, we see essentially the air support and fire power from above raining down on that site. they would have gone into that location, by the way, knowing every little thing about that compound. they would have known how the doors open. they would have known where the women and children were located in the house. they would have known where baghdadi was more than likely located. all designed to be able to pull off this flawless operation. steve: you have got to be proud this is your old unit involved in this. ultimately they released this to freak out the terrorists because you just never know. we're probably watching you right now. >> one thing that this operation shows is that we are able to hit our enemies at any place of our choosing any time we want. and the men and women behind these special operations units are not going to rest until these terrorists are either, you know, put in
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handcuffs or put in the dirt. and one of the biggest things that occurs typically after an operation like that is they are really designed to have follow-on raids to take place. they are gathering actionable intelligence to go after the next leader of isis and the successor is after that and successor is after that. we are still waiting to figure out publicly hot next isis leader is going to be. these units already know that they are more than likely conducting other raids as we speak designed to keep the network on the run. because the isis network is just basically going to be dropping phones. they are going to be dropping communications. this next week is incredibly crucial to be able to kind of continue the state of confusion right now that is occurring within the network. brian: yeah. i guess we got to go, bret. they did stay there an extra two hours and get additional information. we did have an asset with baghdadi that told us everything. so you have got to worry about not killing him at the same time killing everybody else. bret, thanks so much. ainsley: thanks, bret. steve: all right. that was cool.
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ainsley: it was. steve: big announcement from kamala harris. is this the end of the road for her campaign? brian: ncaa will allow college athletes to get paid. is everybody on board. next guest serves in congress and he is not sure it's the right move ♪ ♪ with advil liqui-gels, you have fast-acting power over pain, so the whole world looks different. the unbeatable strength and speed of advil liqui-gels. what pain?
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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. ainsley: here's some quick headlines all political ads will be banned on twitter saturdaying the 22nd: twitter ceo jack dorsey says. pay for reach removes that decision, forcing highly optimized and targeted political messages on
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people. high school students could soon vote in mass has. town board member is voting to lower the voting age to 16 in local elections. she claims teenagers deserve to have voices heard. vote on the proposal before sending it to state lawmakers. brian? brian: ainsley, i was just talking about this in a break. stunning move the ncaa voted unanimously this week to allow college athletes to profit from their name and fame and image. the chairman saying in a statement, quote: we must embrace the change to provide the best possible experience to the college athletes. game on, our next guest was a wide receiver at ohio university. a first round draft pick colts playing five years nfl. now he serves in congress. ohio representative anthony gonzalez joins us now to react. anthony, is this -- was inevitable in your mind and do you like where we are going with this? >> so i think after california put their law forward it became inevitable. the ncaa was forced to acts
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the situation california put us in one state who has a particular set of laws and so you have to decide what you are going to do as a result. my response has always been what we need is a federal law or we need a national standard, one national standard so that athletes aren't making these decisions on where to go to school based on the state legislature that happens to have the law they like best that would be a bad outcome. that's what i have been working on for the past couple months. brian: you are working on that. you're going to have something ready to put forward. >> that's the goal. senator rubio tweeted out yesterday, excuse me, he, myself, representative cleaver and some others are going to start working on this and just kind of go forward and see. brian: right. >> what makes sense in the long run. brian: i'm worried that they're not going to be students and what they don't understand is ohio state and the history is why i went to the game or people have to go to the game. if you just tell me it's the
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ohio aaa team, i don't care as much. you are not getting 100,000 people at a stadium. so they can't blow up the college system but at the same time i get it when there is that much money it's to the fair for the players not to get anything. here's some of the ramifications, anthony, senator burr tweets this if college athletes are going to make money on their likenesses in schools, their scholarships should be treated like income. i'm going to introduce legislation that subjects scholarships to athletes who choose to cash, in they are going to have to pay income taxes. are you okay with that. >> i think that's actually the wrong direction. so what i believe -- you and i actually agree on the underlying premise which is that we need to protect the college game. if this turns into pay to play or a world where the athletes are employees of the university, i think that fundamentally undermines the system. i think that's the wrong direction. i do believe there is a way to do and this thoughtful with the right guardrails
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that protects the integrity of the game and protect the players from bad actors and there will be a whole host of them if you let this go totally free reign which is what the california law does and why i disagree with it. that would be the wrong outcome. i do believe with the right set of guardrails in place you can have a system that is more fair to the athlete. and what, you know, what i would say to senator burr is, look, we in this country have decided that scholarships for education are tax-free by and large there are some exceptions, why and large that's true. so the physics scholar, right, that writes a dissertation and maybe wins the nobel prize, that person can go prophet off that write books do interviews, whatever they want. the athlete is restricted from all of that i want the same treatment. brian: that's a great point. very well put out. worry about balance of power. and gender equity. women just don't generate the same amount of revenue. therefore, in a capitalist system they will get less.
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that will get a lot of people in an uproar. there are so many facet to this. >> i disagree on this. i actually think all athletes at all levels are going to benefit tremendously. i believe that the athlete who would have benefited the most from this law in the last decade would have been katie la decky, stanford swimmer. she set all kinds of records at the olympics. she went to stanford two years and now she is a professional. i believe what we'll see is for people like that or even my wife who was a college swimmer, now they will be able to do things like teach camps or teach private swim lessons which they currently cannot do. brian: we need an hour. we shouldn't have sold commercials in this show and i could have just talked to you. if you are doing it in a capitalist system your sport generates the revenue. my sport soccer very rarely does neither does swimming. so you guys should get paid more ideally. so i just don't know how you do this and reward the people that are generating the revenue which is usually how we do it. so, i look forward to talking to you again about
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it. >> thank you so much. brian: wow, two great careers i'm so jealous. meanwhile coming up straight ahead. thanks, nancy, the entire house is set to vote on impeachment resolution today. next guest says this is what republicans want. he joins us now to explain ♪ big time ♪ (count) time for one chore of the day! ah, ah, ah! [thunder crashing] ahh! my mower! (burke) the number "one." seen it, covered it. at farmers insurance, we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. (bert) mmm. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ the o...is more horsepower. horsepower... (engines rev) with dodge power dollars buy any challenger, charger, or durango and get ten bucks cash allowance for every one horsepower. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, every day can begin with flakes.
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>> ready to go. the car is ready to go. ainsley: it's a fox news alert. 10 wildfires raging in california. the officials say the kincade fire up north is now 45% contained. brian: all right. flames fueled by strong winds narrowly missing the reagan presidential library in simi valley it was pretty tenuous. steve: that's where we find christina coleman at this
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hour where it's 3:34 in the morning. >> it is 3:34 in the morning. windy. wind gusts still going strong. firefighters were able to stop those flames from getting to the reagan library yesterday. the easy fire threatened the reagan library. winds fueled by wind gusts up to 60 miles per hour at times. the fire threatened 7,000 other structures and damaged two homes. it burned about 1,600 and auto 50 acres. the fire is at zero percent containment right now but the library was not damaged. >> we were able to protect the reagan library. currently fire moved around the perimeter of the reagan library and we had successful stands up there on protecting the library and the infrastructure around the facility. >> up north in wine country, the kincade fire burned at least 77,000 acres since last wednesday night. but at this point, nearly half of that fire is contained. >> we have turned the corner
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for the better on this fire. and i think that is indicative of the fact that a lot of evacuation orders and warnings were lifted. >> so fire crews have been working at least 10 wildfires here in california during these strong santa ana winds. but we just learned a new fire has started and mandatory evacuations are underway. that's the hill fire that started in the last hour and a half and burned at least 200 acres so far. so we're going to continue to keep a close eye on that. all right. back to you. steve: and you can still hear the wind and that is bad news. kristina, thank you so much for the live report. brian: some of the most powerful people in this country have been forced to evacuate their homes. steve: all eyes on capitol hill where this morning the full house is set to electronically vote on a resolution that will outline the rules going forward on this impeachment inquiry already in progress. ainsley: our next guest argues nancy pelosi is
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giving the g.o.p. exactly what they wanted. brian: here to explain fox news senior judicial analyst host of liberty file on fox nation judge andrew napolitano. exactly what they wanted which is. >> i wouldn't say exactly what they want. but republicans are looking for more transparency so that the better cross examiners among them can challenge the credibility and the essence of the testimony of the witnesses. right now all that's going on in secret. let's compare it to the bill clinton investigation. ken starr, whom we all know, who was the independent counsel at the time, handed a tremendous amount of evidence to the house judiciary committee. how did he generate that evidence? in secret. what did he do he? put witnesses on before a grand jury and the grand jury made all kinds of findings and they took that. steve: adam schiff is getting that stuff together? >> correct. but nothing was used against bill clinton that came from ken starr that wasn't at some point filtered through the public. so that the president's lawyers can challenge it.
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that's what this procedure permits. ainsley: that makes sense. >> congressman schiff is, in my opinion, following the rules of the house of representatives. you generate the information in secret. you decide which you want to make public. steve: right. >> you can't use anything against the president that hasn't been challenged and aired in public. ainsley: so he can defend himself. >> correct. so his lawyers, whoever they are going to be, ultimately will be seated at a table at the house judiciary committee challenging that evidence. when that challenge is over, the house judiciary committee votes and then the house of representatives votes. steve: the republicans have asked for a vote so they're getting this vote about the procedure of the inquiry going forward. but they wil also want it to be fair. there is nothing fair about this. congress has some screwy rules. >> congress does. the rules were written in 2015 when republicans controlled congress. and now they are stuck with those rules. steve: coming back to haunt the republicans. >> yes, it has come back to haunt the republicans. one of the more interesting phrases that i heard the other day is an impeachable
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offense is whatever the houses it is. because at that point, it's political. steve: it's all political. brian: this is what republicans are saying. number one, i would like to subpoena a few witnesses it might balance out the one we just heard. the democrats will go don't think so. >> as unfair as that sounds, the rules permit that. steve: yeah. >> congressman schiff is not making up the rules he is following the rules. brian: you understand, judge, your whole career is built on fairness. you are trying to give the american people a shot at fairness. >> yes, i agree with you, brian, here is where this could come back to bite those who don't want the republicans to introduce witnesses at the polls. if the whole perception of this thing is rail roading and not fair, the people who did the railroading will suffer at the polls. i thought the clintons, which all of us covered, if you may remember, i thought the clinton impeachment was fair. but a lot of the republicans who managed it suffered at the polls.
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ainsley: all goes back to that phone conversation which we have all read the transcript of it. >> now we're getting a lot of context about what preceded and what followed the phone conversation. brian: what could be devastating tom bevan brought up yesterday people challenge the transcript. that's what that lieutenant colonel was doing. so that would be problematic. >> that, to me is, very very troublesome for the white house if there are parts of that white house they intentionally kept out which the lieutenant colonel seems to indicate there are. steve: all right. so they have a vote today. ainsley: he remembers it differently. >> this is the end of it. steve: judge, thank you very much. >> pleasure, guys. is shimkus here? brian: companies carley shimkus. carley: he can call me whatever he wants. guys, i have got some news from the campaign trail. 2020 hopeful kamala harris is shaking up her campaign. the democratic senator is laying off dozens of staffers. some will be transferred to iowa. >> we have made a decision, a difficult decision, but
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made a decision of what we need to do to win. and and that is about a path to iowa and putting our resources into iowa. >> cuts come as harris scrambles to bring in money. 13 million less than bernie sanders and elizabeth warren in the third quarter. the university of michigan will not reinstate its bias response team nonprofit group speech first settle ling a freedom of speech with the university armor than a year. the team worked to expression of bias on campus and report findings to the school. michigan is among hundreds of colleges and universities to establish bias response teams. a delivery driver gets spooked at an unexpected haunted house. watch this. that is so funny. the driver screaming and
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running away from halloween decorations. that hilarious moment caught on doorbell camera. unclear exactly where this happened. but those delivery folks do not make enough money. brian: this is why we have drones dropping off packages. ainsley: during the show it will come up. steve: look and my wife picking up the package. ainsley: brian said he forgot to put batteries in ring doorbell. brian: my wife took my app. away. too busy during the show. ainsley: wanted to see her carrying all those packages. in. brian: so busy it was distracting. steve: thank you very much. you saw it first here exclusively on "fox & friends" yesterday morning, dr. michael baden revealing how he thinks jeffrey epstein died in jail. >> i think that the evidence points toward homicide rather than suicide. ainsley: why? brian: well, now, there are never before seen pictures of the autopsy.
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...it's making them do hard work... ...and getting paid for it. (vo) snap and sort your expenses to save over $4,600 at tax time. quickbooks. backing you. on this program yesterday about real what really happened to jeffrey epstein in new york made yesterday by forensic pathologist dr. michael baden one of "the washington post's" most foremost authorities in the field was hired by epstein's brother to observe the autopsy and he revealed this to us. >> i think that the evidence points toward homicide rather than suicide. ainsley: why? >> because there are multiple -- three fractures in the hollywoo hyoid bone and e indicative of homicidal strangulation.
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steve: shortly after that interview never before seen autopsy photos surfaced of the three broken bones as you can see right there. joining us is former federal prosecutor francey hicks joins us from l.a. francey, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: it was quite an eye-opener, what did you learn yesterday from dr. baden. >> you know, steve, it was quite an eye opener. a couple things are terrible when it comes to trying to investigate suspicious deaths and one is there were no photos. we heard from dr. baden yesterday that when the guard found epstein's body he cut him loose from the ligature that was tied around his neck. and then pulled him away from it. and we also learned that that ligature was apparently not seized or at least not tested for d.n.a. by the medical examiner. and so, who might have handled that ligature, we'll never know. steve: exactly. dr. baden was saying we would like to examine it. we would like to know whose d.n.a. is on it.
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so, we don't have that. and apparently they can't find that. there are no cameras that were working that night. the guards were all asleep. it seems like a perfect storm of a lot of stuff missing. >> >> well, it does seem like a series of unusual events when you are talking about a highly secure federal prisoner, a very high profile prisoner and you are talking about a suspicious death. the other thing dr. baden said that was very significant to me the guard before he stopped talking and give any further statements, the guard said he found epstein leaning forward on his knees as if he had strangled with the ligature. which you can. you can put enough pressure on the carotid artery to strangle that really does not explain the broken bones which you would have expected to have to happen from a force or a drop of some distance or from manual pressure applied from
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behind. steve: medical examiner put out a statement after our story. our investigation concluded that the cause of mr. epstein's death was hanging and the marriage of death was suicide. we stand by that determination. the original medical investigation was thorough and complete. there's no reason for a second medical investigation by our office. but there is still a lot of questions. francey thank you very much joining us live. >> thanks, steve. steve: 11 minutes before the top of the hour dr. oz, cardinal dolan and kellyanne conway. plus, just in time for halloween. what happens when we send rob and todd to a haunted house that was once an insane asylum? rob: oh toddy, what have we gotten ourselves into. [screams] [laughter] [spooky music]
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[spooky music] >> it's halloween, we sent todd smith and todd piro to the legendary haunted house in new jersey. brian: they join us now to tell us if they survived. steve: i guess the answer is yes. rob: ghosts here to tell you about it. good haunted house in new jersey. used to be an old asylum. take a look. rob: getting nervous. dark now. how are you feeling, toddy todd: smart that they waited until night.
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my worst nightmare come to life. todd: i like this song. todd: these do not look real. [screams] [laughter] todd: i'm ready to hit something. ♪ todd: hey you son of -- >> ugh. >> you are not part of the experiment. [laughter] >> i see a hand.
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rob: oh my god. i got some new patients. >> you look like you have a fever. >> even the monsters want to look like rob. rob: oh toddy, what have we gotten ourselves into? oh, yeah. todd: oh [bleep] [laughter] what the hell was that? >> i knew it, i knew it.
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[screams] todd: so what did you think? rob: it's good. fdr said. todd: come on already. steve: you leave a haunted house quoting fdr. rob: only thing to fear is fear itself and then i got scared. todd doesn't like halloween. todd: i'm not a halloween guy. i have a quick trigger. my hand is poised like this the entire time like i'm going to -- some great reporter you are. rob: great haunted house check it out in new jersey. we were telling stories about there is a bunch of really good ones out there. ainsley: one that is supposed to sob scary you have to sign a waiver in tennessee. todd: they are getting in trouble. steve: thanks for wearing a glow stick so we could see you. todd: we went to a rave afterwards. rob: it was kind of like a first date. todd: we are planning a valentine's day one. steve: rob and todd, thank you very much. happy halloween.
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ainsley: names even sound alike rob and todd. steve: we'll be right back. ♪ the party had just begun ♪ 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. we're the gomez family... we're the rivera family... we're the kirby family, and we are usaa members for life. get your auto insurance quote today.
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woman: i'm here, and suddenly my migraine takes me somewhere else,
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where there's pain and nausea. but excedrin pulls me back in a way others don't. and it relieves my symptoms fast for real migraine relief. they were underground -- they were underdogs indeed. the nationals won over the houston astros in a nail biter 6-2. first team in world series history to win all four games on the road. ainsley: normally you don't want to be soaked in champagne like that but when you just won the world series. brian: first time long time nationals ever. jillian mele knows all about it.
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she lived it. she joins us from minute maid park in houston where they have got to be chagrined this morning, right? jillian: oh, absolutely. you think about it. 1924, that's the last time a washington team won the world series. that was the senators. this is the nationals. take a look at the celebration in d.c. the moment that they won this game and the fans realized the majority of them hadner seen in their life. now take you to the highlights right now. and we begin in the bottom of the second. astros get on the board first with a home run. this is a solo shot in the bottom of the second inning. astros kept the lead until the top of the seventh and that's when things really started to change for washington. anthony blast a home run to left. that made it 2-1. shortly after howie kendrick puts the nationals up 3-2. top of the ninth then, adam eaten drives in two runs. the final score of this game was 6-2. and a much deserved
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champagne celebration in the clubhouse after as they raise that world series trophy. look at that. that's why you love baseball. after the game we had a chance to talk to a bunch the players including one of the stars howie kendrick. listen to this. >> the washington nationals are world champions for the first time in franchise history. ♪ jillian: what does it mean to bring this to d.c. who hasn't seen it in 95 years? >> sometimes bumpy roads lead to beautiful places. >> we have a team that fights, fights, fights. we never thought we were out of this game. proved we were right. jillian: what's the conversation like going into the game. >> my wife has been praying. saint anthony the patron saint of miracles. maybe there is a connection with anthony rendone. >> we finally did it. a lot of people up and down on the roller coaster ride with us. the ones who stuck it out we appreciate you. >> unbelievable year from
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where we were in mayened to where we are now the best in the world. there is no words for it. glad we could bring it home. jillian: oh my goodness. what a celebration. it is unbelievable when you think about it. the first time the road team has won all seven games. parade is happening saturday in washington. and, guys, i will say i have gotten a couple tweets from people who said do you know who would have appreciated this? charles krauthammer. steve: 100 percent. no doubt about it. great coverage out there, jillian. thank you very much. felt like we were right there. brian: yeah. fantastic. you got a couple more hits and then you can get some rest. meanwhile about two hours from now the full house expected to start voting on the rules of the democrats' impeachment inquiry. ainsley: two sides are battling over each and every detail setting up a showdown on capitol hill. steve: that's right. that's where we find griff jenkins as the left's push to impeach takes another step forward, griff. i see you are there next to that very famous set of staircases near the scif where all these interviews
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are going on. griff griff that's right. good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. history about to be made. go on record. today's vote is not over arlsz of impeachment but rather on a resolution to approve the procedures of this impeachment process now you need 217 to pass. we expect this to go down party lines no. republican is expected to vote for this but out of the 234 democrats only five are undecided. here's what the rules chairman jim mcgovern had to say yesterday. >> five or 10 years from now people will ask each of us what we did in this moment. what we did when confronted with this crisis. griff: but the top house republican, kevin mccarthy is blasting this entire process. >> if this was in a court of law, there would be a mistrial. this would all be thrown out. but only in nancy's house do we write all new laws and you get no due process. >> now, steve, you mentioned
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where i am. here shortly tim morrison the nsc director for russian affairs who is leaving his job, expected to testify today. and we have learned that next week john bolton, the former national security advisor expected to be summoned. his attorney, charles cooper giving fox news a statement saying bolton is not willing to appear voluntarily. i stand ready at all times to accept service of a subpoena on his behalf. so, it doesn't end this week. it's going to be more drama next week as well. but a big vote today in the house. brian: griff, quick question, is morrison going to be defending the president's side or is he going to be defending the -- the lieutenant colonel brought up earlier this wee week? >> griff: we don't know until it happens if you say expect and democrats think they will hear, they think it will not be positive for the president with regards to the shadow policy with
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ukraine. steve: right. exactly. that's why they want to call bolton out the democrats. the republicans have no right. griff, you are there, they are having these meetings in the scif where the members can't even have phones because everything is off the record? everything is so secret how come we know everythings that that goes on in there who is leaking. griff: we don't know who is leaking one thing for sure a lot of people are leaking and the substance of this hearings going on behind closed doors will ultimately be laid out in some form or fashion, steve the findings have to be submitted in the end to the judiciary committee. the judiciary committee will write the articles of government if some come. ainsley: when all the republicans walked down the staircase and went into the scif room, if that's the most famous staircase. what do you think the most famous escalator is?
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griff griff i have no idea. ainsley: trump tower. brian: can you keep busy and we'll talk to you again in an hour? griff: prepare for any national intelligence given a ring and acknowledged for wearing it so many days. brian: another person who thinks he is a v.i.p. in washington. unbelievable. thanks, griff. ainsley: congratulations, griff. steve: they will have this vote later today it. does not authorize the inquiry. that's already started. what this does is lays out all the rules and the way it's going to go is essentially the resolution by congressman mcgovern says that everybody keeps doing what they have been doing. but adam schiff gets to do more. griff was talking about how they are putting together this big report, the intel committee is. then they are going to hand it over to the judiciary and then jerry nadler will actually decide if the house will vote on the articles. ainsley: starts at 9:00 this morning. brian: good thing is nothing else in the country needs done so they can focus on this. everything else is done. we don't have to fund the
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government. we don't have to pass a trade deal. we don't have to help out farmers. don't have to worry about prescription drugs they are cheap enough. keep doing. this fantastic. steve: in a year look what we tried to do we just wouldn't do it because the other side wouldn't let us. meanwhile, elizabeth warren would be the next president of the united states and she has been talking about a plan that bernie sanders has talked about for a long time medicare for all. here's the problem. bernie is realistic. he has said that you will have to raise taxes. costs are going to go down and taxes are going to go up for middle class and, of course, the high earners. but elizabeth warren was talking on the road yesterday and said some things and got push back and actual numbers that are scary. ainsley: this all started because robert poland u mass economy research center. he said medicare for all is going to result in substantial job loss. steve: millions of people will lose their jobs.
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ainsley: at the hospitals or insurance companies. brian: can't do the math and have enough revenue to support medicare for all. people know it. you know it. elizabeth warren hasn't come to grips with it. listen to her explanation. >> an economist at the university of massachusetts am hurst told kaiser health news earlier this year that that could result in about 2 million jobs lost. he said those would be mostly administrative positions and insurers, doctors' offices. >> i agree. i think this is part of the cost issue although do recognize on this what we are talking about, that is in effect how much of our healthcare dollars have not gone to healthcare. steve: this is part of the cost issue. millions of people could lose their jobs. are you willing to take a chance on that? brian: good news, too. if you are going to lose your job, you will have plenty of company because if elizabeth warren gets in place, everybody in the oil and gas industry will also lose their jobs.
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that line is going to be around every single block in every single major city across this great land of ours. ainsley: $30 trillion over 10 years. how do you pay for that? brian: as senator manchin said yesterday with the great neil cavuto he basically knows we can barely fund medicare for the people who need it now how are we supposed to do it for everyone? we all know what bernie's plans are and no one is on board with it. steve: so that could be the cost. brian: i didn't do his voice but i just paraphrased what he said. i cannot do a good joe manchin. ainsley: you were close though. steve: let's talk about cancel culture. we have been talking about it a lot. you heard those comments from former president obama that we played yesterday. now eddie murphy is talking about what comedy is doing better than ever despite what's going on with the pc cancel culture. >> every now and then somebody might say something to russell somebody's feathers or step on somebody's toes or whatever. for the most part, it's bigger and more global and
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more diverse than it's ever been. brian: he felt as though he had to apologize for earlier specials that he did that was funny then but not now. i still think comedy is adjusting. dave chapelle leading the charge against political correctness says this: political correctnes correctnesk to the levels of coming to an agreement of what that actually looks like. i'm personally not afraid of other people's personal expression. i don't use it as a weapon. ainsley: that has to really affect comedians you will. brian: absolutely. ainsley: they get laughs. brian: that's what don rick kels lived on made funnel of people's nationality. steve: particularly those on the political left and that is who president obama was referring to a couple of days ago in chicago. watch this. >> this idea of purity and you are never compromised and you are always politically woke and all that stuff, you should get
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over that quickly. the world is messy. there are ambiguities. people who do really good stuff have flaws. ainsley: it's gotten to such a boiling point where now you have got so many people even on the left saying okay, hold on. maybe we have gone too far. brian: they overshot their target and shooting themselves now. he talked about in context his daughter is in college. and talking about how the mood on campus is like and what he has seen and noticed and, you know, getz gets cable, i'm sure. he is understands what's happening out there. when barack obama says back off. when bill maher says this is getting out of control. it's out of control. steve: well, and you look at that new movie that's just come out, safe space. that just talks about this. they have gone -- brian: doing a really good job. steve: left one word out. brian: before i read the tease? who is gavin? i have never met him? steve: he is the voice in
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our head. he wasn't very loud with that voice. ainsley: i think there is medication for this. brian: never really meet him just get our instruction. next on the rundown, as the house prepares to vote on impeachment resolution today, a democrat on the house intel committee joins us live. ainsley: and it is the cutest 911 call ever. listen. >> hello, 911. >> hi. is this mcdonald's? >> no, this is the mesa police department. do you have an emergency? >> can i get [inaudible] happy meal? ainsley: guess what? the police department delivered. brian: he was hungry. ♪ hello world ♪ a song we're singing ♪ come on get happy ♪ a whole lot of loving ♪ is what we'll be bringing ♪ make you happy ♪ we have a dream we go traveling together ♪ (male announcer) it's here.
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♪ ♪ >> missed opportunity for illegitimate charade. a circus lacks transparency fairness. listen, they ever losing the process argument. you want to have a substance argument, bring it on adam
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schiff. brian: tensions riding high on capitol hill where today the full house is set to vote on a resolution outlining the rules of the democrats' impeachment inquiry against the president. what can we expect. jim himes sits on the house intelligence committee. you heard what lee zeldin said process bring on substance. he doesn't feel this is going to be about substance. is he right. >> he is dead wrong about that. of course, what you have seen in the last couple weeks republicans talking exliewsklexclusively about the process. the reason they are talking about process they don't want to defend the substance of the president of the united states squeezing a foreign ruler to investigate his political. brian: that's what you think. >> that's not what i think. that's what's happening. the funny thing about this, of course, is the republicans have said you need a vote. you need to make the rules really clear. and you need to give the president rights in this process to have the president's lawyer present ands, guess what, what's being voted on today is a
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vote on the house of representatives. it describes the rules. and it gives all kinds of rights to the president's lawyers. and of course surprise, surprise, the republicans are saying well, that's just not good enough. even though this is exactly what they have been asking for for the last couple of weeks. brian: all right. so it looks like you are going to get the votes there is a couple noncommittals six or seven on the democratic side haven't committed to do. this this is to ratify the rules you drew up. this isn't say the impeachment has started. after this passes, next week we're going to start seeing witnesses, some of the same ones that were behind closed doors front and center and will republicans have a chance to question those witnesses? >> well, remember, republicans have had just as much time to question those witnesses behind closed doors for the last two weeks as the democrats have. there has been perfectly equal time between the two parties. brian: right. >> they, of course, will have exactly that right when we go to open hearings. now, i don't know if it's going to be next week. in fact i know it's not going to be next week because the congress is out of session next week. at some point in the future yes, the transcripts will be
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released. everybody will sequel time to talk to the witnesses and hearings will happen. brian: can i back up one second? >> yeah. brian: it is true that adam schiff would just tell a witness you don't have to answer that question. and he did it to the lieutenant colonel on monday and tuesday. that's something we are not used to. no one was cutting off the michael cohen interview. everyone would get their time and do what you want with that time. that's different. and is it also true that adam schiff, in your committee, which you have the majority, will decide if any request from republicans to brings up a witness will be ar loued or not, correct? so you still have that power. >> so committee chairs for 240 years in this building have had the authority to say that line of questioning is out of order. adam schiff felt and i was in the room and i don't want to get into the details, but adam schiff felt some of the questions were being asked the answers would point to the identity of the whistleblower who has the right to remain anonymous. now, remember the whistleblower doesn't really matter anymore because people who were in the room for the phone call, they have told us what happened.
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but,. brian: i think it does, congressman. i think if someone launches an investigation into a president we should at least have that person, if we keep their identity secret, we should at least have that person involved in this conversation. >> well, that may be your opinion but, of course, everything that the whistleblower and the complaint laid out has subsequently been proved to be true by people who were actually in the room. so we can disagree about that. my point of view is if somebody says hey there is a fire over there and everybody runs over and in fact there is a fire over there, maybe the guy who pulled the fire alarm is not quite so important as they used to be. brian: congressman, keep coming back with us for the play-by play. thanks for getting up with us this morning. >> okay. take care. brian: as the president announced the death of ago baghdadi he stopped to remember two hostages killed at the hands of the terror group. >> think of james foley, think of kayla. think of the things he did to kayla. he was. anna: mall. and he was a gutless animal.
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brian: kayla's parents and james foley's mom joins us live next. the nightime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching, stuffy head, best sleep with a cold, medicine. the o...is more horsepower. horsepower... (engines rev) with dodge power dollars buy any challenger, charger, or durango and get ten bucks cash allowance for every one horsepower. - [narrator] forget about vacuuming for up to a month. shark iq robot deep-cleans and empties itself into a base you can empty once a month. and unlike standard robots that bounce around, it cleans row by row. if it's not a shark, it's just a robot.
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hey. ♪hey. you must be steven's phone.
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now you can take control of your home wifi and get a notification the instant someone new joins your network... only with xfinity xfi. download the xfi app today. steve: the frad has prioritized the return of american hostages around the world. and while announcing the death of isis leader baghdadi over the weekend, president trump named the innocent americans who were killed at the hands of isis. >> think of james foley think of kayla, think of the things he did to kayla. he brought ler into captivity for a long time and then he killed her. he was. anna: mall. and he was a gutless animal how does the president's
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approach working to free americans held hostage differ every from previous administrations? we are joined right now by kayla mueller's parents karl and marcia mueller, the mission that killed baghdadi was named in their daughter's honor along with diane folly mother of american journalist james foley killed by isis beheaded back in 2014. good morning to all of you. thank you very much for joining us. >> good morning. steve: marcia, let's start with you, when you heard the news, what did you think? >> i think i was just numb. we had been doing this now since we learned about this august 5th, 201 2013 with kayla. and we had been fighting to bring her home all along when all baghdadi was killed, i guess the most important thing to me is that he killed himself.
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steve: why? >> because i don't want that on us. i'm glad he killed himself. i don't want anyone else in america to kill him. we were told when kayla was in captivity that she would be screamed at for everything that america had done wrong. they just kept blaming her for all the acts that america had done. so i was glad that he did it himself. steve: diane, when you heard the news that baghdadi was dead. after what video showed him, you know, his men doing to your son, james, what did you think? >> well, i was grateful. he can no longer hurt anyone else. it's the beginning of a bit of justice, however, there are jihadists in. part of kidnapping and
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torture of our american citizens. so i hope that they will be brought to justice here in the united states also. these are horrific crimes against our citizens. steve: indeed. karl, you both went over there to try to do your best. now you feel optimistic that there is new evidence that is going to wrap up a lot of these bad guys. >> we have stepped away from the government and doing our own private investigation. the group has teamed up with us. they are doing incredible job. we traveled to irrelevant beal to talk with the woman who held kayla and prepped her for when al-baghdadi would come to see her. and i would like to say hello to diane, first of all, diane, it's good to see you. steve: you guys have been in touch through the years, right? >> oh, yes. >> we talked to the other two families just a couple days ago about this whole situation.
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so, we have all stayed in touch we all stand together on the beatles, we want them to be prosecuted in the united states and receive the life sentence. steve: they are the terrorists. >> yes. steve: diane, this president has made getting american hostages back a national priority right? >> he has. and we definitely applaud that. it is, you know, for too many years innocent americans kidnapped or taken hostage around the world have been a very low priority. so i commend this administration for doing that and i really -- however, to be honest, it's important that your viewers realize that there are hundreds of innocent americans. steve: absolutely. >> detained or taken hostage at this presented day. so i would ask that our intelligence and our our amazing people help us to find americans before tragic
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things happen. that happened to our kids. steve: marcia, the priority that the president has put on bringing these hostages home has been important you know, it's so sad that yours who damage, your daughter is not going to come. because they have never found her body. you wonder where she is. >> we do. that has been our goggle. we had a foundation for kayla it's called kayla's hands. we closed that foundation because our mission is to bring kayla home. we want kayla home and we want all four of the americans home. we are certaining thanks to ollie and a group of people, you know, we found things that the u.s. didn't know when we went over to iraq. we know, you know, baghdadi took kayla for sure. we know agnani was involved. abu hasan who was killed on
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sunday was involved. there is another man that i'm not going to speak about. so we have a lot of information. we know that kayla was using a laptop is that was sayef's laptop that the government didn't let us know. we need the u.s. government. we are asking president trump to please work with the people that we are working with now to try bring these people home. steve: all right. well nobody knows the story better than karl and marcia and diane. we thank you all for joining us live and telling your story. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you for your time. steve: all right. next up, new york's archbishop timothy cardinal dolan is going to join us live. we are going to talk about joe biden and communion. searching for a way to help stop your cold sore?
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brian: hi, everybody, welcome back. and ainsley does have a great orange dress. i had to give cardinal dolan a formal introduction and i look forward to do it. vice president joe biden failing to comment after being denied communion at a catholic church. >> i'm not going to discuss that. that's my personal life. i practice my faith but i have never let my religious beliefs to impose that view on other people. ainsley: in a statement, a south carolina priest says sadly, this past sunday, i had to refuse holy communion to former vice president joe biden. holly communion signifies we are one with god, each other and the church. our actions should reflect that. any public figure who advocates for abortion places himself or herself outside of church teaching. steve: here now to discuss we have new york's archbishop timothy cardinal dolan. >> good morning. always a joy to be with you.
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especially when i have a chance to pro-meet my book. way to go. steve: so this is a big story because joe biden running for president. he went to this church priest realized joe biden is pro-abortion. the catholic church stands against abortion because the catholic church feels that abortion ends a life. so he cut him off. denied him. >> um-huh. steve: how does this work where, you know, here in new york city there are a lot of famous people. if you know somebody has a feeling about something that the church opposes, do you pull them aside and do you talk to them or what happens? >> that's the personal way to do personal dialogue and pastors will do that sometimes public figure will come and talk to me about it. i would advise them i think that priest had a good point. you are publicly at odds with an issue of substance, critical substance we are talking about life and death and the church you out of
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integrity should not approach holy communion that implies you are in line. if you are not. integrity better not approach holy communion. that's always preferable than making a split second decision of denying somebody. brian: have you ever done that. >> i never have. i have never had what you might call the opportunity or said should i give him or her holy communion. it's never come up. sure could. brian: even in new york city with all the celebrities pro-choice or against -- you never looked at them and said kno i know what you just said on cbs the other day. >> i often see at saint patrick's cathedral glad they're there i wonder did he here or she come up for holy communion. they seem to know i shouldn't do that that could be hypocritical in that -- at this moment on the other hand, we also remember pope francis, i personally can
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never judge the state of a person's soul. so, it's difficult -- that's what i'm saying. i'm not there as a tribunal as a judge and distributing holy communion. i'm there as a pastor, as a doctor of souls. it's difficult to make a judgment on the state of a person's soul my job is to make a decision. brian: cardinal, here's an example. if someone gets in line and they are pro-choice or pro-abortion you say they should keep walking and not get in line. there is people in line for communion who might be domestic abusers. senior citizens financial welfare. might have knocked off a bank. >> you got it. brian: might be mobsters in line. priests going to go you get off, you can stay? >> if only saints could receive holy communion we wouldn't. brian: no line. >> including myself. so every -- sinners, holy communion is medicine for the soul. it's an act of mercy.
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it's intended for sinners. steve: right. >> the fact -- sinner who are sorry and want to repent. then anybody is welcome. come on up. steve: did the south carolina priest do the right thing. >> i think what he said was very to the point. i thought. ainsley: he has his convictions. he wants to follow church teaching. whether that judgment was wise, i don't want to judge him either. i wouldn't do it. ainsley: you there has been talk about change coming to the catholic church, priests allowed to get married. >> what do i think about that? ainsley: yes, sir. >> where were they 50 years ago? [laughter] now that i'm 70 they're talking about it? my doctor on my death bed bacon cheeseburgers are good four. what good does that do for me now. ainsley, i'm glad they are talking about it. sometimes you get the impression that the church is clandestined and we don't want to talk about these controversial issued. everybody talks about celibacy.
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you just did. glad you did. i go to my barber. talks about celibacy. doesn't have anything else to do. but, i'm glad we are talking about it. my only fear is this. the holy father is wise said we have got to take this is seriously. brother bishops around the world bring up something i have to take it seriously. i have enough love and appreciation for him is he not going to rationally rush into anything. this is a tradition to 9 to 11 centuries. ainsley: that was not a tradition at the beginning of the church. was it because priest priests we from wealthy families and the church got their land? >> that had something to do with it. celibacy has been cherished in the life of the church. only mandatory beginning in the ninth and tenth century. historically there were terrible financial abuses because of the futile system. where bishop and priests owned property and it was passing on to their children, for the good of the church we need our priests to be sell bat.
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brian: i'm going to go right to your book. this is out this week. foowho do you say i am? >> couple of things. you guys have talked about it well on the air about the findings of the pugh research center that are socialerring statistics that more and more people do not claim to be practicing their faith. what they do tell us though is that they prize prayer, divine providence and intense desire to improve they call it spirituality. what they're telling me they need little tidbits that can help them do that a lot of people say i don't have time to read huge chapters but if i got a little nugget every day i would find that very helpful. that was the methodology. brian, thoughtful people, close to me said, you know, why don't we -- you have got a lot of writings out there. you can do some new stuff. why don't we put it together because people told us we would find it helpful. i'm glad we did. steve: today is halloween.
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>> i love ainsley's dress. steve: i heard about that earlier. this is today's reflection from your book. i dress up as a hobo for halloween. the word hobo isn't very courteous one to use. it was a term used in the depression. men lost their jobs and hively hood. they simply said we should go back home. in that sense we are all hobos. we are all homeward bound. on our way to heaven? yes, life is good, but it's just an anti posto to what almighty god has prepared. >> thank you. remember dad future on and now i think that's a bit of an insult. i'm embarrassed i did that someone told me the hobo homeward bound. tomorrow is all saints day homeward bound on our way to heaven. steve: weave food into that passage. >> i already got yelled at by dr. oz for taking a doughnut out in the waiting
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room. don't bring that up. [laughter] steve: in moderation. brian: you try read something every day you hope everybody else will get this book. >> we need a little something on, you know that we can read on the train or, you know, when we're -- when we get up in the morning. so there you go. i hope it helps. ainsley: wonderful. it's beautiful. steve: it is indeed. brian: you have a book to sell. this will help. >> this will help and ideal christmas present. if not trick or treat tonight. [laughter] brian: that's the cardinal dolan we know. >> thanks for having me on. brian: you are so comfortable on this couch. >> i love it. brian: unbelievable. >> i would be thrilled to. steve: brand new book is "who do you say i am" available everywhere. and the cardinal just mentioned dr. oz. he is going to join us live on the couch coming up next. [laughter] steve: no pastry for you.
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brian brian fox news alert now. brand new fires sparked overnight in california. ainsley: it is one of nearly a dozen wildfires raging across that state. steve: christina coleman is live in simi valley where flames narrowly missed the reagan presidential library yesterday. kristina, they came yards from it, right? >> that's right. just within 100 yards of this center very scary tense moments yesterday. the winds still moving strong in the simi valley, fortunately firefighters were able to keep the flames away from the reagan library. but, we are learning of a new fire that just began just a few hours ago. this is the pictures that we're getting in of the hillside fire in north san bernardino, it's burnt 200 acres so far. mandatory evacuation is underway for that area right
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now. four homes have burned in that fire and we're keeping a close eye on that fire. again, that started this morning the ease fire that threatened the reagan library yesterday and 700 other structures burned 1600 acres so far. it's at zero percent containment. 30,000 people were evacuated in this area. many rushed to get out of harm's way. >> it started over the want to hill behind the house. and then it just went -- the wind started blowing and then it went this way and now the neighbors next door. ready to go. car is ready to go. >> utility company pg&e is restoring power to thousands of people in northern california where the wind conditions have improved. the kincade fire in sonoma county in northern california is 45% contained.
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>> red flag warning we had in effect has expired. winds have subsided a little bit. we are in a dry air mass over the next several days. >> so, again, with these strong wind conditions, you have the firefighters working around the clock to try and get all of these fires under control. back to you. steve: and that is the key. ainsley: look at that. steve: just need the winds to die down. kristina, thank you very much. ainsley: still ahead your health isn't a game. jeopardy host alex trebek doesn't want you to make the same mistakes he did. listen. >> i wish i had known sooner that the persistent stomach pain i experienced prior to my diagnosis was a symptom of pancreatic cancer. steve: what are the symptoms. why didn't he go to the doctor? he is here in the big room and next on thursday "fox & friends." brian: he got a promo from cardinal dolan ♪ walk this way ♪ talk this way
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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. ♪ ♪ >> i wish i had known sooner that the persistent stomach pain i experienced prior to my diagnosis was a symptom of pancreatic cancer. ainsley: jeopardy host alex trebek psa calling for more attention and awareness to help people recognize the symptoms of pancreatic symptoms. the disease he himself has been battling this year. steve: so did you know there were symptoms and if there are, what should you be aware of? brian: dr. oz is all over. this cardiac surgeon and host of the dr. oz show. dr. oz, i had no idea there were symptoms. i thought you tested positive and that's it. >> it's a harder diagnosis to make. but there are symptoms. the doctor points out that all the western countries
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which have the best healthcare the chance of surviving pancreatic cancer is single digits. the symptoms are vague stomach pain, back pain. steve: 100 different things. >> bad pasta. weight loss unexplained. people often ignore that and by the time you get things like jaundice it's a little bit late because it's blocked off your conducts. the one people don't pay attention to diabetes. onset of diabetes signal that the pancreas has been involved makes insulin should be picking up on. the bigger issue here when folks get diagnosed don't get aggressivelily treated. one-two punch. delay your diagnosis didn't know it's a problem. i adore the man. the one guest want any other alex trebek. surprised me on the set. i was with him. canadian. steve: surprised you on the set? >> that was my present for still being on the air. ainsley: how is he dealing with this emotionally. >> he is a strong man.
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i think he is doing much better than i would do. he has had, you know, small things is he a tv host. trying to talk and hindering him. the way he is doing now so important. listen, this the is month we can make a difference. november pancreatic awareness this month. get out there and learn the signs and stomsz. the only chance physicians have to get ahead of this is by you telling us you have these signs. good news is more than any other time in my life. i'm hopeful we will find cures for some forms of will pancreatic cancer. it hides from you. and hides in a really bad place in the middle of your body where you can't tell it's there the beautiful part about it is we can get your immune system to recognize it's there all of us have cancer right now. every one of us in our bodies have the immune symptoms that hopefully are aware enough to find those cancers and kill them. we can turn pancreatic cancer. brian: i thought blood tests would be more telling. >> they are not valuable.
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screening people that have risk factors in their family genetically that will be valuable. ultimate solution here is to convert it from a lethal disease to one you live with for the rest of your life. you may not cure it but you won't die from it. steve: key is he noticed the symptoms very, very late because it was already stage four. when you can find it before it becomes stage i you see it on a scan of some sort, then you can deal with completely curable. >> that's why colonoscopy just went through one. steve: thanks for spreading the word. >> it's the best screening test of all because you can find the problem and then cure it by cutting it out. before it goes anywhere. ainsley: start doing that. >> colonoscopy by age 50 unless have you family history. risk factor start at 45. steve: dr. oz, thank you very much. steve: still ahead on this thursday, kellyanne conway, dana loesch, and we're getting dressed for halloween. brian brian some of us are. ♪ anyway you want it ♪ any way you want it
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♪. >> the world champions, first time in franchise history. brian: perfect song for it. it it was first time. steve: nationals are world champions, they won 6-2 over the nationals. brian: it took place two weeks. jillian has been traveling two weeks. they went to the absolute end of the seventh game. a portion of jillian mele's life is coming to a close. ainsley: what was it like last night? jillian: i was running out of clothes at one point. it was really exciting a lot more nag fans in attendance, a lot more than games one and two. we'll give you video as the game
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ended. the crowd going crazy. let's get to the highlights. bottom of the second, the astros gets on board with a home run. astros kept the lead until the top of the seventh. anthony randone with a homer to left. howie kendrick put the nationals up 3-2. they ran away with it. look at this much deserved champagne celebration in the clubhouse. raising that trophy, the first time they have done that as a team. we caught up with fans from both teams after the game. take a listen what they had to say. [cheering] jill you're crying right now. how do you feel. >> i'm from houston. i'm a houston astros fan. i'm a ren don't fan. first. that is my family. jillian: what is it like.
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>> everybody is so proud. everybody is in tears. jillian: tough game to be at. huh? >> we couldn't win one home game. they gave it a good try. >> not cry bit. see him one year. >> i've been watching senators since 1950. jillian: did you think you would see this? >> i did with the new team. because they're good. >> the whole thing is insane. go nats. team of destiny. >> we had a good team for years. historic, you had to be here. >> let's go nats. let's go nats. jillian: 1924, last time a championship was in d.c. for the senators. they have a lot to celebrate on saturday, when they have a parade in washington, d.c. just a side note for you, going
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into yesterday's game, seven teams had not won a world series. now that number is six. steve: that is amazes, max scherzer played gutsy game of his life. three days earlier he couldn't lift his arm above his head. jillian: i had spasms. steve: he had cortisone treatments for him to take the mound is something and ultimate thely they won. jillian: it was series about the pitching. there were so many aces. there were at least six in the series. ainsley: very talented. steve: jillian, awesome job. you brought the world series to "fox & friends." ainsley: you got to go shopping. jillian: i'm not going to lie. brian: do the expenses under miscellaneous. under blouse. ainsley: don't teach her to do the wrong thing. am i right? steve: washington is celebrating
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that. they will have the big parade on saturday but later today, just an hour or two, the house is going to have an impeachment vote. what, it is not the authorizing the inquiry because it is already going on. essentially what they would do they would agree to the ground rules. they have a eight-page resolution by congressman mcgovern. it lays out what can happen going forward. as you heard a number of president's supporters here on our air and elsewhere the deck is really stacked against the republicans. ainsley: jim mcgovern democrat from massachusetts, is house rules chair. for the republicans congressman tom coal. he is running things for the gop. oklahoma. top republican on the rules committee. what they will happen, they will get one minute to speak, unless they're one of the big leaders. unless you're nancy pelosi you get five to ten minutes. brian: fundamentally you should think about except you're a lawyer or politician does it
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change the way you feel about the president? does it change your vote? if you don't like the call, do you think it is up to level of impeachment. overarching is it fair early on, according to suffolk university poll, if the house impeaches senate, should the senate remove him. 47% say no. 46% say yes. sounds like vote. what is your personal preference, congress should drop the investigation, 37%. the house should vote to impeach the president 36%. guarranty you in a few weeks when this is done, i don't think the numbers will budge. yet nothing for the country will get done. steve: republicans are very effective, it is all being done behind closed doors. the deck is stacked against us. when you look at the resolution, it's true. essentially what adam schiff is doing, he will put together a
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thorough report after they interviewed all these people in secret all they the damaging testimony of the president is always leaked out. he will put it in a report, send it to the judiciary committee. then they will also, before that happen, they will have open hearings. but here's the thing, some transcripts will be released of what happens, but adam schiff gets to decide which portions of the transcripts are released. if the republicans want to call a witness, okay, we want to call this guy. adam schiff okay, let's go ahead to have a vote. we have more democrats on the committee. you know what? the republican will always lose. ainsley: there are a few democrats worried about their seats. steve: they should be. ainsley: they come from trump country. we have a list of those. kendra horn, anthony brandezzi, jeff van drew, jared goldman. they are freshman congressman,
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they flipped their districts from red to blue in 2018. they're a little worried about it. colin peterson, has been in congress since 1991. he won with 50% last two cycles. trump won his district by 30 points in 2016. brian: steve could mention, argue the procedure, is it fair. you can make a strong case it isn't. others say reminds you of '98. the president wants people supporting him to underline the fact that he did nothing wrong and the call was fine. you can argue on the transcript. i'm fine with the transcript. i'm fine with defending what i did. you don't just have to talk about how unfair this whole thing is. steve: kellyanne conway joins us from the president from the north lawn of the white house. we know what team she was rooting for last night. >> good morning. it is so exciting for the city. since president trump came to office, the capitals, hockey
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team, mystics, nationals won their first championship. we're really jacked up for the whole city. it is exciting. steve: are you saying president deserves the credit for nationals winning last night? >> the credit goes to the athletes. the learner family, what they have done for the city is truly remarkable. they like the owners of capitals, when the capitals won couple years ago they did it for fans. they did it for city. ainsley: will they take the vote today, aren't democrats and republicans to the on this, are they in a good mood? >> who knows. we're confused whether they take the vote. democratic leadership, nancy pelosi says we don't need to do that. steny hoyer completely confused what an impeachment resolution is. all the armchair psychologists out there constantly wanting to analyze the president of the united states ought to have a little go at people like joe biden, hillary clinton, steny hoyer, nancy pelosi. every time they open their
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mouths make no sense. something going on in there this they can't even get it right. impeachment is simple math, you either have the votes and you don't. guess what, dirty little secret they don't have the votes. democratic of congress not committed to impeachment inquiry. that is key. they're the politicians. think about all the people they represent. 17 swing states are basically looked at are in play for next year. the people, especially independents in those states are allergic to a protracted impeachment. impeaching the president is a extraordinary event that is rarely done because we have democratic elections. president trump was democratically elected. don't allow people to overturn the last election results or interfear in the next one. these democrats came to washington, i will reduce your drug prices. they're trying to impeach and investigate the president. i will work on infrastructure. they're investigating the president. i'm going to keep the economy humming along.
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not a single one voted for greatest tax cut and deregulation agenda. where is the usmca? these great trade deals? they're having trouble. even david plouffe helped to run president obama's successful campaigns, he tweeted out what a strong ad president trump's folks issued during the world series. an ad in october during the world series a year before the election is unprecedented. they raised unprecedented amount of money and he is under unprecedented attack. people see through it. brian: before that, he stopped down and spoke to martha and they brought up the ukranian call again. he was on that call. listen. >> i was on the call. i listened to the call. i thought the way the president handled it was appropriate. we were incredibly focused on couple simple things with respect to the ukraine strategy.
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don't, forget, martha this administration provided defensive weapons to ukraine. the previous administration, i couldn't tell you why, if it was because of hunter biden and vice president biden didn't give defensive weapons to ukraine. they will have to answer for that. brian: that is the story for the longest time. they took crimea. infiltrated the country. they reached out to america. we gave them mres and sleeping bags. they never budged from that. >> they never budged that. that happened on obama, biden's watch. joe biden exercising, more involved to help his son get a monthly consulting fee that he clearly was unskilled to receive. has no appreciable skills in that field that we can see. joe biden spent more time on that than helping people in need there. and, secretary pompeo says is important for another reason. not that secretary pompeo and others are on the call, only
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people were on the call the whole world has access to the call. the transcript was released five weeks ago. it was released, whole world can see the call. here is not in the call. any mention of 2020. any meggs that biden is political opponent somebody should feared. any mention of aid held up. any of eight quid pro quos promised to nancy pelosi by the twitter cranks and news. she changed her mind holding forth, holding fast until we had full fair investigation. she changed her mind like that, based on reports, not based on transcript of actual call. she was immediately stuck. they had to do that. go read the transcript. brian: the lieutenant colonel said the transcript wasn't accurate. he wanted to add thinks he remembered. >> we respectfully disagreed with that for the record i would never besmirch a lieutenant colonel. with respectfully disagree with
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his on don't question his patriotism we disagree with his characterization. the president is having due process, challenge witnesses, challenge evidence, present his own evidence, present his own witnesses. it is unprecedented for a white house we think to release the transcript of a call like this. steve: right. >> the president wanted to do that so everybody could see. everybody gets the same message, same time. steve: exactly. the democrats never thought you would release the transcript in a million years. >> correct. steve: talk a little bit about this. the administration launched findtreatment.gov. it is about the opioid crisis swept the nation. >> incredibly exciting. find treatment.gov is brand new tool for all americans to access one of 13,000 state licensed facilities. you can customize it. before if you went to this type of tool it puts quantity over quality. would map for you, say 15 locations within 100 miles of
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your home. instead you can customize it. do you need outpatient treatment, detox, interim treatment? do you want to do residential treatment. also you can customize it by use. 18 and younger. by lgbtq. whether you're a veteran or gender. it is customized. real language from real people. we got rid of the clinical language. smart government. no outside contracting. no big budget. hard-working people, really small team working on this why it is important we know that people and people who love people in need are looking for treatment. they have stigma and silence that prevents them asking right people. they can go type in, find treatment.gov. be connected. brian: kellyanne, good job. we'll talk to you soon. meanwhile -- steve: stocks are up, interest rates went down again yesterday. what does that mean for you?
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♪. brian: in less than an hour the stock market set to reopen following yesterday's surging close. stocks rose after the fed cut rates for the third tame this year. ainsley: what does this mean for you and your wallet? steve: stuart varney joins us, host of "varney & company" over on fox business. stuart if they cut interest rates again, conventional wisdom this is good time to buy a house. >> as a matter of fact you're absolutely right. what this means to you, all of our viewers, the rate cut by the federal reserve, means the cost of borrowing money for ordinary people will stay very low. for example, mortgages. the mortgages, your biggest borrowing of your lifetime for most people. right now you can get a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, the classic mortgage, between 3.7 and 3.9%. it varies a little bit. that is historically very low. good for homebuyers. ainsley: for people renting rate now, their lease is not up yet but they want to buy in nine
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months -- brian: can you go through this one-on-one. ainsley: will interest rates be, will they remain low? >> i don't sea interest rates going up from here. i see them stable or going down a little bit. because the president, president trump wants the fed to keep on cutting. cut some more. ainsley: good news for my friend. steve: if the president is pushing federal reduce the interest rate and did it first time this year yesterday, that means there is something going on with the economy? >> not necessarily, that means the federal reserve could be responding to the european and japanese who cut interest rates below zero. now, we got to keep up with that. that is a part of the fed's reason for lowering rates, so, stuart, we know that china is sucking wind with their economy. we know they were supposed to meet in chile. they were supposed to announce a phase one would be a boon for farmers, dairy farmers, automakers, a whole bunch of
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people as well as for the stock market. i get it. if that is canceled because chile is having unrest, does the president call a special meeting with the chinese leader? does he have to? >> rearrange the summit for the doral club in florida. brian: have meeting at the trump tower? >> why not? to take your question substantial tiffly. they will rearrange the summit. it won't be in chile. it will be someplace else. as far as i know the meeting between president trump gained xi xinping to take place. as mike pompeo said last night he expects the phase one of the deal to be signed. whether signed at that meeting with xi xinping, he doesn't know but it will be signed. ainsley: that is the skinny plan. >> the skinny plan? steve: stuart, thank you very much. >> thank you. see you later. nine to noon we watch you on fox news. >> thank you. brian: new york lawmakers want
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to ban tackle football. they say it is too tough for kids. is that their call to make? we'll throw a flag. former nfl player and youth coach is here to discuss it next along with merril hoge. stuffy-head, fever, sore throat, power through your day, medicine.
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♪. brian: new york lawmakers considering a ban on tackle football for america's children. >> we're afraid, we're damaging the brains of our young children. other youth sports like hockey, they have made rules that say no checking, no body checking until 13 years of age. no heading in soccer until 12 years of age. brian: 12, that is not true.
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study league playing youth football having greater chance of degenerative brain disease. should we end tackle football and is it damaging our kids or up to the parent to decide. author of brainwash muched, former nfl player, bad science behind cte, the destroy football, merril hoge here. we have a football coach, a nice guy. merrill, i know how you feel about it. where do you stand. >> i'm coaching my sons in youth football. football is a great sport. players around the state and look at all the evidence, make the decision for ourselves. we don't need albany decisions for us. brian: is it safer to play they're taking about? >> absolutely not. look at flag football, having options is vital but flag is ahn
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unaware of what happens in flag. incident rate of head trauma. there is more injurieses in flag because there is no equipment. people don't know that. there is no protocol in flag football like having a helmet if you do have head trauma, all the things that exist in tackle football. more options for kids are better. i will go back to support what was said. there is no way government and policy should be telling our parent what we can do with our kids. the goal is to keep them active and football is one of those great opportunity to keep kids active. brian: one thing, kiran, i'm not a doctor but the fully formed the brian is not fully closed at five, six, seven years old. parents get worried they're putting their kids in harm's way unnecessarily. >> if they have that worry, then they don't have to play football at a young age. don't have to play football at all. most of the research you've seen, done in '70s, '80s,
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'90s. '80s, when i played pop warner, a we put a brain buck jet. air bladder. the helmets used around the country are exponentially better, exponentially safer. to be 8-year-old football coach i had to take four hour course on safety, concussion protocol, tackling, not use your head, i had to pass a test to coach 8-year-olds. that doesn't exist in the bad ol' days. >> brian the helmet is 100% better than 10 years ago. the quilt is incredible. talk about the development of the brain. the brain is 95% developed by age five. it is not fully developed around age 22, 23. tell me why is the brain less important around age 12 and 13 than it is from age 7 to 11 oh, certain development. first of all the brain is not fully developed. you can't sit there say less important to age 14, 15, guess what starts to happen? puberty. kids start hitting around age 12
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and 13. from 7 to 11, if you coach youth football, coaching since 1991, they're bumping into one another. the protection they have is incredible. how it is taught and care for head trauma, the safest we ever had in the history of the sport. brian: now if the taxes don't take you out, if the tolls don't take you out of new york, now if you want to play football we'll have to run for the border. another reason to leave new york. merril hoge, great debate. kiran, thanks so much. >> pleasure. brian: straight ahead, democrats have no tout be gun buy backs to friendly voters. what happens when they're actually pressed on the issue. >> okay what about the gun buyback. >> this is -- >> with all due respect, gun buyback. brian: you will not believe what he tried to answer? dana loesch is here to talk about it. ♪ chevy's the only brand...
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steve: this is a fox news alert. a wildfire alert as well. you're taking a live look at a brand new fire that has sparked overnight in california. these flames, as you can see right there, just burned down a house in san bernardino, california. brian: that is 25 miles south of los angeles. one of nearly a dozen wildfires raging across the state. ainsley: christina coleman is live in simi valley where flames nearly missed the reagan presidential library. good morning. reporter: good morning, ainsley. right now the wind is still going strong in the area. fortunately firefighters kept the flames from reaching the reagan library. we learned of a new fire that started three hours ago. this is the pictures of the hillside fire in san bernanadino. it burned 200-acres.
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mandatory evacuations are underway for the area. four homes burned in the fire so far. the easy fire that threatened the reagan library fueled by flames with wind gusts up to 675 miles an hour at times. that fire threatened 7,000 structures and damaged two homes. it has burned 1600-acres so far. that fire is at 0% containment but the library was not damaged. >> we were able to protect the reagan library. currently fire moved around the perimeter of the reagan library. we had successful stands protecting the library, the infrastructure around the facility. reporter: up north in wine country the kincade fire burned at least 77,000-acres since last wednesday night in sonoma county, but at this point nearly half of that fire is contained. >> we have turned the corner for the better on this fire. i think that is indicative of
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the fact a lot of evacuation orders and warnings were lifted. reporter: at this point fire crews are working at least 12 fires throughout the state right now. they're doing this with these strong santa an ma winds blowing throughout the region. we'll continue to monitor this as the fire crews work to get these fires under control. back to you. steve: it's a tough job. christina, thank you very much. 25 minutes before the top of the hour. let's bring in dana loesch, nationally syndicated radio show host. she joins us from the dallas area. >> good morning. brian: we know beto o'rourke has interesting way of tackling gun control, taking them. cory booker thinks that is a good idea. that came up with meghan mccain. i want you to respond to this exchange. >> this is really important issue. what we say about other people says more about us than it does -- >> what about the gun buyback. >> this is moment -- >> with all due respect the gun
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buyback. the gun buyback. >> which is directly related to gun buybacks. these are not -- >> tell me semantically how you will get my brother's gun back? steve: because he will not give it up. >> well, she's right. a lot of people, a lot of us are not going to give up our lawfully owned firearms. i would love to hear how cory booker really has practical way for going out to confiscate everybody's guns. we all remember the horrific jefferson story that took place in for the would the, not too far from where i am right now. that was when you had law enforcement officers going to someone's home. you had an individual who was completely within her rights, second amendment, the to have a fear arm in her own home. lack of communication, everyone is familiar with that story. what cory booker is proposing ultimately to create a ton more of those stories like miss jefferson's story. he never actually answered megan's question either.
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he tried to say we already did that. i guess talking about confiscation as it relates to machine guns. no, we didn't. we didn't ban machine guns. nobody went around confiscating machine guns either. what they did, we can have ally political conversation in the firearms protection acts in 191986, anything manufactured post 19986. has to be a firearm pre191 of 86. cory booker don't know what he it talking about. the democrats will never say they want to take lawfully owned firearms to send police door-to-door. >> that is recipe for disaster. >> i thought democrats had enough problem with criminal justice and policing right now. brian: they vilify police officers. blame them. then go tell them to knock on people's doors, say can i have
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your gun, police. good luck with that. >> exactly. ainsley: can you imagine if my dad were a police officer, dana. he had to go door-to-door, to ask gun owners to give over, hand over their guns? i would be, i would be terrified. >> that is why a lot of law enforcement officers a lot of sheriffs said they're not going to enforce this law. it puts their officers in great danger. we're talking about a group of people targeting a group of people, that studies have shown are the most law-abiding group in the country. so why are we vilifying going after innocent people. steve: great question. brian: dana loesch, thank you so much. ainsley: thank you, dana. steve: 22 mints before the top of the hour. carley joins with us a fox news alert. carley: really pressing story here right now. right now the fbi is investigating a suspicious car outside of their office in pittsburgh. the bomb squad is there and a robot is inspecting the car. the fbi says there is some kind of language written on the
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driver's side door. we'll bring you the latest details as we get them. the justice department suing walmart claiming the retailer refused to hire a naval reserve it because of upcoming service requirements. a representative from a store in grand junction, colorado, is accused of telling the service member the company didn't support giving her two weeks off for training before ending the call. the doj says that violates military employment laws. a police officer brings new meaning to protect and serve. when a little boy makes this unusual request. >> hello, 911. >> hi. is this mcdonald's. >> no, this is the mesa police department. do you have an emergency? >> can i get a happy meal? carley: just want as happy meal. five-year-old charlie, got his wish. arizona police officer, following up on the call bringing him a happy meal. they also spoke to charlie about
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when it is appropriate to call 911. brian: what a lesson. fantastic. carley: get as burger and a life lesson. brian: no kidding. steve: out to the streets we go. janice dean on fox square with the foxcast. >> good morning. how are you, what are your names? >> michael and defend. janice: where are you from? >> beautiful nova scotia. janice: how do you deal with it? >> we deal with it in nova scotia. janice: a big cold front brought incredibly cold air across the west and snow, across the great lakes and upper midwest. this will unfortunately cause problems for trick-or-treaters. listen to the local forecast especially on the east coast. we could potentially see severe storms from mid-atlantic to the northeast. that could cause big problems.
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if you're halloween plans are delayed, it is for a good reason. we could see strong storms and heavy rains. also wildfire danger across southern california. winds are going to relax over the next 12 to 24 hours. better weather is ahead. you want to wave to steve, ainsley and brian. >> love them every morning. huge fans. ainsley: thank you so much. steve: thank you for coming. brian: two people, one umbrella. steve too next week the fox station patriot awards. they will be live from st. petersburg, florida. as it turns out we were under the impression they were sold out. they actually have more tickets available. because they released -- ainsley: once again i was right. you are once again. i think that is the first time. ainsley: i said yesterday we had tickets. steve: we do. ainsley: y'all said, i think it is sold out. turns out there are a few more. brian: red carpet there. book signings going on. it will be a lot of fun. ainsley: stream it live. brian: stream it live yourself if you can't be with us in
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st. petersburg with tank tops. go to foxnation.com. go get it yourself. watch it live on the stream. we never know what will happen. there is no commercials. ainsley: a lot of people were going to go until they heard you would be in a tank top. steve: you won't put on halloween costume but wear a tank top. brian: that is me. i'm not dressing like anybody else. among the people there, john rich will be there. steve: all of us. check it out at foxnation.com. 18 minutes before the top of the hour, the world's most wanted terrorist baghdadi is dead. joe biden refusing to give the president any credit. would he be dead if joe biden was president. ainsley: marc thiessen said it is unlikely. he is live next. discomfort back there?
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terrorist wound up dead but the president biden refuse to the give the president any credit. >> got pulled off in spite of his actions. the president should stay in his lane listen to the military. steve: our next guest argues if biden was president, al-baghdadi could still be alive. marc thiessen, fox news contributor, was speechwriter for president george w. bush. he joins us from the nation's capitol. >> thank you, steve. steve: good to have you. we heard from the former vice president the president should stay in his lane. >> first of all biden is wrong. donald trump deserves enormous credit for the baghdadi operation. this was a very high-risk mission. they had to fly hundreds of miles into al cade controlled territory. the helicopters could have been shot down. any number of things could have gone horribly wrong. donald trump would have gotten the blame. if you think the desert one disaster did to jimmy cart ear es presidency, a president take as big risk when they order a operation like this. he deserves the credit.
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it is fair to ask what would joe biden have done if he were president of the united states. we have little bit of inkling, he opposed it raid that got osama bin laden. steve: i am glad you said that the former vice president wants to be commander-in-chief saying don't go to barack obama. >> we had to make a decision. the president, he went around the table, with all the senior people including chiefs of staff and he said, i have to make the decision. what is your opinion. he got to me. joe, what do you think? you know, i didn't know we had so many economists around the table. we owe the man a direct answer. mr. president, my suggestion is don't go. we have to do two more things to see if he is there. steve: well they did go. barack obama was praised, was completely bipartisan. which is something that this president did not wind up with
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regarding al-baghdadi. >> sure. by the way, joe biden was the only person around that table who opposed the bin laden operation. everybody in president obama's national security team. he is only one who had the poor judgment to say don't go. so you have got the guy who opposed the bin laden operation, criticizing the guy who authorized the baghdadi operation which makes very little sense. the other thing he is criticizing him for, steve, his decision to withdraw from syria. he is right. he shouldn't, trump shouldn't be withdrawing from syria but joe biden is the guy who led the effort to withdraw all of our troops from iraq against the advice of commanders, he said it was proudest moment of his life. that led to the rise of isis in the first place. there would be no need for baghdadi mission if it hadn't been joe biden withdrawing all troops in 20 very much. steve: he wants to being commander-in-chief. mark, thanks for joining us today. >> thanks, good to be with you. steve: wearing an orange tie, it
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its halloween, pumpkin day. it is the annual "fox & friends" halloween parade. we have special guests to help out the candy. bill hemmer is here. >> we have my costume on, already to go. boo. nice to see you. we're watching the floor of the house today. will democrats get it done? who votes with them. who votes against this resolution? we'll see it play out over the next three hours. mark meadows, senator john kennedy, dr. bill bennett. here we go in ten minutes. what will we get? how will washington change after today? see you top of the hour. that's waiting for them. since verizon innovative learning, students have hardware, connectivity, and quality curriculum. the jobs of tomorrow will involve technology.
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steve: happy halloween. time for the big costume reveal. we celebrate america every day on the program, even on halloween. ainsley is -- ainsley: that is great one. you are uncle sam. steve: i'm your uncle sam. janice? janice: lady liberty. steve: carley, so appropriate. carley: in honor of the world series, nation's pastime. janice: we're not only ones in costume. we have special guests to help us pass out can day. let's see who is here. ainsley: come on in guys. a crew of superheroes. janice: "iron man." "ant-man". steve: people from the show to. jedediah, what are you dress as?
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>> a mummy to be. she is dressed as wonder woman. steve: ed henry. ainsley: what are you? >> i'm a skeleton with a liver i donated to my sister colleen. i told her to watch. and a heart. pete hegseth says i know you have a liver, but i don't know if you have a heart. that is what i have to deal with every weekend. >> you may have a liver but he has fake abs. >> my seven lieutenants which are here. gunner, jackson, boon, kensey. luke and gwen. and my lovely wife jennifer. ainsley: you all look great. >> there are the babies. >> in honor of the national as.
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>> are we playing baby shark. the. >> daddy shark. mommy shark. steve: who is that up here? yeah. yea. >> this is elsa and anna. look at the camera. >> great job. steve: i have news for you. they all showed up. so early in the morning for candy. >> yea. steve: here, kids. ainsley: thank you for making all the costumes possible. are you guys going
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trick-or-treating tonight? ainsley: going trick-or-treating right now. janice: they will bounce off the walls. steve: we'll step aside. more "fox & friends" for halloween coming up in two minutes. yes, ma'am. ♪ my mom washes the dishes...
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