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down more than any district proportionately in the united states. and what she's done -- >> [inaudible] >> and what she's done for that district and then on top of it you've got fires eating away at california every year because management is so bad. the governor doesn't know, he's like a child. he doesn't know what he's doing. and aye been telling them this for two years, they've got to every year it's california, it's rarely somebody else or some ought to go back to the district and taking care of it, it's a mess. all she thinks about is impeachment. you know who wants to impeach, the people who run it is party, the radical left.
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up to him and up to the lawyers. i liked john bolton and always got along with him, that'll be up to the lawyers. >> you said no quid pro quo --
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[inaudible] >> read the transcript. >> but says -- >> read the transcript. [inaudible] >> -- we will see what happens.
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i call them the do-nothing democrats. they are doing nothing. they're not getting usmca done, everybody wants it, even the
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democrats want it. even guns, they don't talk about guns, all they can do is talk about one phone call made to the president of ukraine that was perfect, it was perfect, it was a perfect phone call and hanging their hat on the one phone call and you know what, the republican party has never so unified. [inaudible] >> eric: we have been watching pretty feisty president trump going after the whistleblower accusing him of being partisan who hates trump as he said as well as the process continuing of a variety of issues as he returns from -- arthel: time for
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kristin with new news. ♪ >> yaw saw it live, president trump moments ago pushing back on impeachment inquiry, partisan lines are hardening, welcome to america's news headquarters, i'm kristin. leland: get an hour of sleep? >> i didn't get an extra hour of sleep, i have a small child. leland: fox news polling covering presidential race, approval rating and impeachment, we start, though, with congressional reaction to some of the latest developments in impeachment battle, garrett tenney. hi, garrett. >> we heard the president talking about the whistleblower. this morning the attorney for whistleblower complaint said he's willing to testify and answer questions to members of congress in series of tweets, the attorney tweeted we offer both the the house special committee on intelligence as well as the senate committee on intelligence both majority and minority to have whistleblower answer questions, obviously per house rules gop is beholding to dems, we, however are not, being a whistleblower is not a partisan job nor is impeachment an objective. there are still a number of witnesses, democrats want to hear behind closed door before holding public hearings and one of the biggest names former national security john bolton. it's not clear if bolton will show up. on fox news sunday kellyanne conway said there's no change in white house strategy going forward. >> the house vote doesn't make a difference in terms of flawed process on on opening transparent and they should have done this from the beginning. >> the number 2 democrat on the intelligence committee argue that is democrats were forced to move ahead with impeachment despite lack of bipartisan support which speaker nancy pelosi was necessary prerequisite just a year ago. >> every one of my republican colleagues understand that if they do what is right, i hear them say they know what is right, if they do what they know is right the president lights them up on twitter and they lose primary. very sadly unlike nixon and clinton investigations, this will break down along partisan lines, doesn't need to be that way and shouldn't be that way
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but republican colleagues are unwilling to look at the facts here. >> as many as 11 administration officials to testify next week including energy secretary rick perry, though, so far doesn't appear most of them in perry will show up for depositions. leland: not only rick perry, john bolton hanging out there in terms of he will show up or not. garrett, thanks. >> fox news poll surprising numbers of voters on impeachment and a lot of topics, mar meredith here is break down the numbers for you, mark. >> good afternoon, kristin, new fox news poll shows half of the country feels president trump should be impeached and remove from office but the numbers are down slightly from early october, here are the polls, registered voters on thoughts, 49% said supported impeachment and removal from office, the number is down from 51% a few weeks ago, 4% say the house should impeach but the president should remain in office, 41% say trump should not be impeached.
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senior adviser kellyanne conway say the majority of voters do not support the house's efforts. >> this is not nancy pelosi pledged and promised, overwhelmingly bipartisan move toward impeachment supported by the public. >> president trump and house republicans have called the impeachment inquiry a witch hunt but a majority of voters fox checked with found to be valid inquiry. 52% found legitimate and 39% called it bogus. now, today marks one year until the 2020 general election and the latest polls show the president has a long way to go to convince voters he's doing a good job in office, right now the data shows 57% of registered voters disapprove of the president's job performance, compare that to the 42% who approve, fewer americans disapprove with impeachment inquiry under way than they did back in september. now on friday president trump celebrated his administration's
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accomplishments and he pointed to the latest job's report showing employers adding 128,000 jobs in october as proof that he should not be impeached. 49% of registered voters do approve the way the president is handing the economy, a lot of numbers the white house will be looking at closely in the coming days and weeks. >> what a dye, one year away from elections. >> amazing, isn't it? >> it really is, mark meredith, leland. >> member of house judiciary and foreign affairs committee guy, appreciate it as always, all right, the democrats say there's going to be public hearings soon in your committee, one of the first questions and first things you want to know and say? >> well, leland, i want to know why we had to wait till now to have public hearings, this has been going on for 38, 48 days or so. leland: come on, you know very well an investigations, you're an attorney as well, the grand jury happens in secret, why is
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that a problem? >> sure, we had that with mueller, right, now that we are removing hearings -- leland: this isn't about mueller, this is about something else. >> right. leland, we have to remember that the vast majority of congress has been kept in the dark, i'm very fortunate to be on on the house foreign affairs committee and been in depositions, 75% of my colleagues have not been in the deposition, how are they supposed to make decisions -- leland: back to the original question, what is the first thing in chair committee, we will start with this, what have you been able to read and see in foreign affairs committee that you view as culpatory evidence, no, i agree with the republicans? >> well, i would just say the transcript itself, i read the transcript, there's nothing in the transcript that gives me
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pause. leland: nothing? >> nothing. what i'm interested in -- in regard to the president. when it comes to joe biden and hunter biden, that's what i would like to explore. we have to remember that hunter biden was getting paid $50,000 a month, not a year, $50,000 a month, zero experience with oil and gas, zero experience -- leland: seem unlikely at best that hunter biden is going to be called to testify, you don't think democrats will allow that to happen,, do you? >> no. leland: let's put up one of the timelines, timeline for military aid to ukraine, september 9th, inspector general was informed the house intelligence committee of the whistleblower complaint, september 11th, the white house releases u.s. aid, that could be a coincidence, could be something else, but play out this hypothetical as a judge and former prosecutor as well. >> okay. >> if there was a u.s. official, we will call them a governor, even a president who then called a local official, a law enforcement official, another
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governor, an attorney general the commissioner of the delaware state police, perhaps and said, look, we are withholding federal funding or state fund to go your organization unless you investigate a number of things and included in that list of things you want to investigate is a political rival, you'd have a problem with that, right? >> well, leland, we know the senate, we don't need hypothetical, we know that senate democrats actually did that to ukraine calling on ukrainians to investigate the president. leland: right, democrats went crazy about that. >> right, we also know that joe biden bragged about -- leland: republicans went crazy about that. you're saying that joe biden did the wrong thing, him bragging about strong army in the ukrainians and you want that investigated, why then is the president saying that he wants to investigate joe biden not also a bad thing. >> right, when there's interference in elections that
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needs to be investigated, that's exactly what the president was doing and we know that joe biden openedly opened about getting ukrainian fire and democrats would vote to withhold aid if ukrainians weren't investigating the 2016 elections, what gives me pause is why hunter biden -- leland: congressman, you're laying all the things that democrats did that were bad, right? >> right. leland: the president of the united states also said i want things investigated as it related to my political rival joe biden, that's in the transcript him talking about joe biden, so why is it bad for the democrats to do it and okay and not investigatable for the president to do it? >> because you to look at what the receiver of the information thought and we know that president zelensky, the other person on the line, said he felt no pressure to investigate joe biden, he also did not know that aid was being withhold.
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you can't have a quid pro quo if the other person -- leland: even though the aid was withhold. i understand your point the questioned -- pro without quid. >> reaction from the other side of the aisle, house democratic policy and communications cochair michigan congresswoman debbie dingell. she said the reason was in part because it has to be bipartisan moving forward, but thursday's big vote was partisan, so how are democrats going to convince the american public that this is not politically motivated? >> well, we need to make sure that they are air-operate transparent hearings, i agree with the speaker this past summer as i said before, i was
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-- i was receiving normallous amount of pressure, communicating with me a lot directly and i was very reticent and i'm worried about how divided the country is. for me it changed when a whistleblower had gone to inspector general, that president trump, inspector general, ruled it was credible threat and urgent and potential danger to national security, that requires following the facts, that requires investigation, thursday's vote was a process of how this investigation will continue, i think we need to make sure it's open and transparent, the american people see as much as they can like me i have not participated in any of the hearings because they have been classified like the american people would share information coming from that and remove soon to public hearings and if
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there's enough data collected it would go to house judiciary committee but we need to make sure it's open and fair. >> congresswoman, you explained the moment that you mind changed, any information coming out from public hearings that might change minds of republicans, president trump said from the white house south lawn that republicans are more unified than ever? >> i remember i was young and in college and in turn working for senator griffin during watergate and were all against the president resigning until facts came out, i flew back with the senator the day he called richard nixon the day he needed to resign because facts had become open and public that the president had died. that's why you have an investigation, you follow the facts, we are not republicans or democrats, we are americans with
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the responsibility to protect our constitution, democracy and nobody is above the rule of the law. i'm not going to prejudge, i've seen things, i'm worried about the direction this country is going but i think as a congress we have to come together and act together for what's right for america. >> so you have not made up your mind that president trump should be impeached, are you still -- have you made up your mind? >> i want to see what comes out of the hearings and what the judiciary committee recommends, that's what a fair process does, you look at the facts. >> and these public hearings, we heard big picture, sometime within the month of november, do you have any more guidance on when exactly the public hearings might start? >> you will probably see them in the next couple of weeks but also fair and just process means you follow the facts, you don't let hurry up and get this done before the end of the year drag, i hope this doesn't go on for too long, but i do think that we've got to make sure that we
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are open transparent and following the facts. >> congresswoman today we are exactly one year away from election day, how worried are you about the negative impact that this impeachment inquiry might have for democrats in battleground states like your home state of michigan? >> well, first of all, there are times when your job is to protect to constitution. i, you know, 3 years ago i've predicted that the president could win because i was listening to people, it's a long time between now and next november. i think we've got to make sure as a democrat campaigning hard, taking nothing for granted but i don't think the outcome of next november election has been cast and i think there are a lot of things that could happen between now and next november and i've said that before and i will say that again, unfortunately i was right 3 years ago which i hadn't been. >> congressman debbie dingell, thank you. >> thank you.
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>> leland: you saw president trump a few minutes ago calling the impeachment probe a scam, at the white house, though, they are working through week on how to defend the president in the next couple of weeks, david was there as the president landed also in north lawn, hi, david. >> he spoke to reporters for about 12 minute to be specific, last night he spent time in new york, he went to madison square garden for a mixed martial arts match, as he went into the arena madison square garden audience greeted him with boos and cheers, this is the second time he met both at sporting event, sports aside, as you mention congress moving full steam ahead with impeachment investigation into the president, formalizing the investigation last thursday with a vote. the president's team at the white house telling staffers and former staffers not to cooperate with the congressional investigation as far as testifying is concern and many cases asserting executive
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privilege, white house counselor kellyanne conway with chris wallace this morning? >> will the president stop officials testifying before the house. that's over the objection of the president. >> the president has every right to assert executive privilege for number of administration officials, current and former. >> just a few minutes after the president landed on the south lawn he began talking about the whistleblower asking about the whistleblower, wanting to know the identity, there's a whistleblower protection act but the president says he wants the whistleblower to reveal him or herself, listen to what he said just about 30, 35 minutes ago. >> the whistleblower should be revealed because the whistleblower gave false stories, some people would call it a fraud. >> the president said he has no problem talking about impeachment because he says it is a rallying cry for his base, leland, as you know he was in mississippi friday evening, spoke to thousands there and
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talked about impeachment and believes it unifies republican party and trump supporters even more, thank you. >> back on the campaign trail including kentucky, the governor of that state coming with up in a few minutes, appreciate it, david, kristin. >> iran supreme leader says he has nothing to say, at least to the united states, the rhetoric around this important anniversary just ahead. and unlike standard robots that bounce around, it cleans row by row. if it's not a shark, it's just a robot. most people think of verizon as a reliable phone company.
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leland: world's largest exporter of crude oil begun initial public offering of state-run oil producer saudi aramco, ipo has been closely anticipated in the last few years with the crown prince there first making attempts to go public back in 2016. the kingdom, get this, hoping for a 2 trillion-dollar valuation, apple is only a trillion, amazon is only a trillion, we are talking $2 trillion, but some analysts expect it to be a lot lower. ♪ >> it's been four decades since relations with u.s. and iran were severely fractured and on anniversary of seizure of
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embassy in tehran tensions continue, trey yngst. >> tomorrow will mark the 40th anniversary of iran hostage crisis, this comes as tensions continue between the united states and iran, now, today iran's supreme leader did make a speech before students, the speech was televised on state television, the iotola doubling down not to engage in talks with the united states, iran nuclear program amid heavy sanctions by the united states will not solve iran's problems. >> for the other side getting iran to sit at the negotiating table and accept talks means bringing the islamic republic to its knees. >> again, the iotola comments come on the eve of 1979 iran hostage crisis anniversary, the standoff began when a group of protestors angry about
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american-iranian relations stormed tehran taking 66 people hostage, 52 americans were held for days, iranian-backed attacks and iranian attacking the world's oil field and resurgence of nuclear program, the world once again watching closely the relationship between washington and tehran, iranian tensions continue in the middle east over the weekend a series of rockets in gaza strip into southern israel, addressing attacks and also threats against american allies in the middle east, kristin. >> trey yngst. leland. leland: very tough reelection, president trump is headed there tomorrow, hello, governor, we will see you next cars...
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leland: crowd for democratic field is shrinking, slowly, and our new fox new polling giving uninsight into what democratic voters are looking for, wait-and-see approach, they say, christina coleman broking down the latest numbers for us from los angeles, hi, christina. >> they wish they had over presidential candidates even though they have 16 hopefuls in the race, elizabeth warren is holding the lead in iowa as now, snl aired last night, $20.5 trillion in additional new federal spending. >> first off, right, we will cut military spending, so immediately dead in the water,
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right. [laughter] >> 2, jeff bezos is going to pay -- from paying no tax from a tax and, third, okay, thanks, i'm going to tax the banks, duh. [laughter] >> fox news poll shows major pete buttigieg gaining momentum over kamala harris and coming in fourth between the trio of front runners, former vice president joe biden, senator warren and senator bernie sanders, mayor pete on abc and asked about proposed health plan says taxes on the middle class would not go up. >> there's a lot of money on the table from loopholes in the corporate tax system from the wealthiest among us who could and should pay more and we don't have to look to the middle class in order to solve the problems. >> presidential candidate and house tulsi gabbard, explains
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how she wants to rebuild the democratic party and stay clear of bipartisan politics and hillary clinton implying that she was a russian asset. >> if you descent or if you disagree and speak truth to power and challenge the establishment view especially as it relates to foreign policy, then you too will be smeared and attacked. >> now, it's a busy sunday for the candidates, at least four of them campaigning in iowa today, warren is at a town hall and mayor speaking at a meet and greet. leland: one year till election day, november 3rd, kristina and the team covering, thank you, ma'am, good to see you and there's an election coming on tuesday and there's high-power campaign help going out across the country, voters in several states head to the polls, including virginia, we will talk about shifting demographics in
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virginia and how much help the president is out on the stump. >> well, kentucky is going to decide if republican governor mat bevin gets to keep his job on tuesday but with his campaign and the white house making this state election about a very washington issue, the country is looking at what this race might foreshadow for 2020. >> we stand proudly for the president and the vice president of the united states of america. for those visiting from outside and part of national press corp, this is trump country, let there be no doubt about it. >> send a message to washington, d.c. that enough is enough and kentucky is tired of investigations and their partisan impeachment. >> well governor matt joins us live from louisville, kentucky,
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governor, welcome. >> thank you so much. >> you're running for a statewide office, why are you spending so much time focused on impeachment? >> i love kentucky, i tell you what, it's not that we are focusing on it, the national media is focusing on it and the national media is broadcasting to the homes. >> well, you've been campaigning about it quite a bit? >> we don't, not at all actually. it's brought up, i don't campaign on this issue, i didn't bring this up during the campaign trail, it comes up as a result of people's questions and commentary, it's not a campaign issue but it is absolutely topical everywhere we go, people are outraged at just the charade of impeachment that the democrat-controlled house and nancy pelosi and that elk are trying to poise on the president that they just after 3 years can't seem to handle the fact that he was elected by the people of america. >> well, your democratic opponent the state's attorney general andy, he certainly thinks that you are focusing quite a bit on impeachment and
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he's taking an opposite tactic in these closing days before election day, he's really drilling in on the issues and saying that he's focusing on kentucky while you're focusing on what's happening in washington, listen to this. >> i believe that our families know that this race is not about who is in the white house but about what is going on in their house, i believe our families know that on public education, pension, health care and jobs that matt bevin is wrong, the biggest threat to rural jobs in his policies. >> your response, governor? >> he sounds like a robot, doesn't he? trust me i heard that exact same line about 50 times, it's a memorized line that he says, here is the reality, the united states of america is compromised of 50 states, one of them is kentucky and things that happened here affect the nation and things that happened in the nation affect us here. trust me, nobody has been more focused on actually creating jobs in the state, every record that has ever been set economically in the entire
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history of kentucky has been set in the last 4 years, lowest unemployment, most people working, greatest amount of revenue, greatest exports, greatest amount of capital invested in the state, greatest workforce participation rate, every economic thing you can possibly care about has been at a record level here in kentucky and n the last 4 years, so this has been my focus, but people on the campaign trail want to talk about what they see on tv and what they see on tv are national issues. >> let's pop up the latest poll in your state, it shows that you and your opponent are tied at 46% and i want to ask you about another sort of poll, the morning consult poll because you were ranked the least popular governor in the entire country. now, i believe you're the second least popular governor in the entire country. >> making progress.
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[laughter] >> so why -- >> moving on up. [laughter] >> why is that though, why are you so unpopular in your state? >> if you go back more than 2,000 years, aristotle widely noted that if you want to avoid any controversy, stay nothing, be nothing, i've chosen a different tact, i'm taking on issues that everybody knows have got to be addressed whether it's our taxation system, tort reform, education choice, the pension system, every one of these is a political loser, every one of third rail, i've never been in politics before, this is my first job ever, i'm a business guy, i'm a military veteran and i don't kick cans down the road, i don't need or want this job badly enough to blow smoke and memorize robotic sound bites at people in order to get this job, kentucky has
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got to make hard decisions, we are making them and crushing every economic record we have ever seen and i will continue to make hard decisions in the next four years. >> governor, you're certainly popular with president trump, he has been tweeting about you all morning, he's going to kentucky to rally for you tomorrow night and it's a state that he won by about 30 points in 2016, so how critical is his support for your reelection effort? >> i think it's wonderful, it really is, i would remind people i was elected 4 years ago before he was the president and every poll that time said that i was going to lose by 5% or more, you mentioned that now the polls showed that we are tied. i was supposed to lose by 5, won by 9%, we've never in the history of kentucky ever had a republican win a consecutive term, i'm the fourth republican in 100 years, we've never had back to back terms of a republican governor ever in the history of our state, we are still heavily registered democrat in terms of how people
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are registered but trust me, democrat or republican alike, people love this president, and i'm grateful for the fact that overwhelmingly supported me thus far, i won 106 out of 120 counties last time. >> governor, quite a rally tomorrow, thank you so much for coming on the show and talking to us and i have to point out that we did ask democratic opponent to come on the show as well but we did not get a response. appreciate it. leland. leland: the president will be down in kentucky, he was not in virginia over the weekend, they too have an election, but the vice president was there, so why send him and what does it say about the virginia electorate when we come back?
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ask your doctor about entresto, for heart failure. where to next? entrust your heart to entresto. we chose eleanor. it was great-grandma's name. so we're in this little town near salerno and everyone has dad's eyebrows. help your family discover their unique story, with a gift from ancestry. help your family discover their unique story, but super poligrip gives him a tight seal. snacking can mean that pieces get stuck under mike's denture. to help block out food particles. so he can enjoy the game. super poligrip. leland: fox news alert, former vice president joe biden and behind him terry, former governor of virginia out on campaign trail, says vote november 5th, there's an election in virginia coming up
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for the house of delegates which is what it's called down there and also the state senate and in large part seen as bellwether for how the president is going to do with suburban voters come 2020. the democrats have as you see joe biden terry out campaigning yesterday, the vice president made a campaign swing through southern virginia, take a listen to the vice president. >> the choice couldn't be clearer and the stakes couldn't be higher, the other side is motivated, make no mistake about it and liberal allies around the country want to see, they want to see virginia's general assembly flip to the other side. leland: as we noted the vice president yesterday at one of his stomps, congressman of virginia was with us and with us
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now, appreciate it. >> good to see you. leland: the associated press describe it is race in virginia this way, is the antitrump suburban revolt escalating, question mark, watch virginia, are they right? >> well, i tell you, we are being outresourced there, when going in the south side of virginia where i was yesterday with the vice president, a little bit different but we are certainly being outspent and considerable and i think there's a worry there, but there's a fight still going on. leland: is the reason you're being outspent is because the democrats smell blood in the water? >> two things, they smell blood in the water but there's no caps. leland: republican campaigning about -- complaining about campaign finance? i thought i would never see the day. >> it is definitely a target of opportunity. leland: all right, we have pictures of you and the vice president from yesterday.
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it's important to note as we look through this, it is not the president who they sent, they sent the vice president, that's the decision, the president isn't in popular in virginia, the vice president is and not as toxic why, usmca, bipartisan prescription drug bills, the president's policies are very important, the vice president, you saw the picture, it was incredible how many people were rolling up on all of us and to see them -- leland: crowd comes no matter what. >> there was a crowd and huge apples at carter mountain, huge. [laughter] >> i love them, they are great people. leland: good people, look at 2016 virginia election results, though, is virginia a lost cause you think for republicans?
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hillary clinton won it by more than 5 points. >> i think things swing both ways, goes back and forth, we will do the best that we can, again, it comes down leland the resourcing has been extraordinary coming into virginia, the funding. leland: not painting an optimistic picture. >> i'm optimistic with the fight, i've been all over the state, we put a lot of our direct money in state candidates and also been on the stump for state candidates and in my area, fifth district, bigger than new jersey, we have a lot going on there, there's optimism there actually, but in some other areas i can only do what i've heard, they are word about the amount of money that's coming into virginia. leland: we will end real quickly, this was the president speaking of him on the stump in mississippi yesterday. >> i believe this is a competitive race, it's like embarrassing, i'm talking mississippi, you know, i'm talking to mississippi, i can't believe it. leland: can you believe that the president is having to go down
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and campaign in mississippi in the governor's race? >> i think it shows where we are at as a republican party and -- leland: which is where? >> we are not working hard enough and i think we need to work harder and we need to fix where we are going -- leland: okay, the messaging. >> i'm talking about our ground game. i was going back to virginia, i apologize. we need to have a stronger ground game, we need people to get enthused and i don't see as much as in the past, looking in the past few days, that's what we have been working onto get enthusiasm up. leland: couple days before the election is not the time to be working on it? >> 2.9% unemployment in virginia would be enthusiastic for the policies going on, little bit confusing, the republicans why we are not more excited and i am doing the best we can. leland: good to see you, kristin. >> tens of thousands of runners are taking to the streets of new york for the city's annual
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marathon, jacqui heinrich out near the runners' route with more. >> hey, kristin, a million spectators are gathering to watch the marathon that crosses all 5 boroughs and after isis leader was killed police are trying to keep it safe, we will tell you what they are doing le. the delicious taste of glucerna gives you the sweetness you crave while helping you manage your blood sugar. glucerna. everyday progress. with truecar, to sell just enter your license plate and see your car's value in real time. sports package and low mileage? nice. within minutes, you'll have a true cash offer, and you can head to a dealership and get paid, today, right now.
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♪ ♪ >> over 1 million people right now lining the streets of forks for one of the world's largest marathons, jacqui heinrich live along the runners route, security is huge issue, how is law enforcement work to go keep everybody safe? >> well, kristin, this is an enormous event now in 49th year and after u.s. military took top 2 isis figure heads, the mile course runs through all 5 boroughs, despite potential calls for retaliation the event is secured, since 9/11 no fewer than 39 plots since the city and since past spring there's been 40 propaganda posters, but the counterterrorism measure for this race were already in place
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even before the deaths of abu bakr al-baghdadi. >> this is a high-security event for us in the first place, we bring our a game, we bring our a team, so the developments for abu bakr al-baghdadi would obviously affect isis in that they have to readjust but not going to affect us in we were at highest levels? >> blocker vehicles, thousands of police are in position on and near marathon in and out of uniform and bomb-sniffing dogs without heavy weapon and also be escorting ferries and controlling water ways, the fbi says the most difficult to detect is lone wolf, it's important that if you see something, say something.
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>> we have teams out there doing detection, plain-clothes hostile surveillance officers will be deployed, we will have our detection boats in the water, bomb squad. >> nationwide there's been more than 850 domestic terror investigations leading to 90 arrests last year and the fbi and homeland security are also working to keep this event secured, kristin. >> jacqui heinrich, thank you, the other big news here today we had the world series -- leland: may never be washed again. >> i got to touch it, kissed it. leland: fox news sunday, i don't think chris wallace kissed it but he was with it in a couple of minutes, see you. >> bye. s
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chris: i'm chris wallace. it's one year til election day, and a bitter fight over the impeachment of president trump divides the country and congress. ♪ >> the resolution is adopted without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid upon the table. >> democrats are trying to impeach the president because they are scared they cannot defeat him at the ballot box. chris: a party-line vote sets the stage for open hearings on impeachment and gives house intelligence committee chair adam schiff broad powers. >> i do not take any pleasure in the events that have made this process necessary. >> you can't impeach the president who did nothing wrong. chris: we'll discuss

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