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tv   Fox and Friends Saturday  FOX News  November 23, 2019 3:00am-7:00am PST

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♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ blame the band for the song ♪ blame the band for the party that went all night long ♪ but it ain't my fault he had a song about partying all night long. pete: it's not my fault. rachel: is that your pick? ♪ it ain't my fault pete: this is brothers osborne and all about how he did things wrong but he blames somebody else. it's not his fault. i have never done that before. ever. rachel: never. ed: people calling in.
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[buzzer] pete: actually always my fault. ed: the host is playing dj and we are glad to welcome rach chem campos-duffy. you had a baby. rachel: i'm good. sean is home. i pumped all week. pete: something i never thought of about. wow, planning ahead. ed: i will try to transition out of that you will get a chance to be the dj pick a song friends@foxnews.com. pete: pump the jukebox for us today on "fox & friends." we are so glad you are here. rachel: that's awesome, thanks. ed: week two of the impeachment public hearings have wrapped up. republicans believe the president is in a strong position and now maybe they are going on offense. lindsey graham late this week wrapped up, divided to write a letter to mike pompeo, the secretary of state, saying that he wants all kinds of documents, since the republicans run the senate, about joe biden, hunter biden, joe biden's contacts with the previous
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administration in ukraine while his son hunt was serving on the board of burisma and also what else was happening there to sort of put the focus on the bidens. pete: yeah. we have been reminding the house that elections have consequences. democrats have the gavel. schiff has decided how he wants to run his committee in a very one-sided fashion. if they were to decide to proceed in the house and move it over to the senate. now they are moving into republican territory. and lindsey graham who was an old buddy of joe biden and john mccain that group now a staunch ally of president trump is the chairman of the senate judiciary committee which gives him all the prerogative in the world to decide where that conversation goes and through this statement, ed, he is saying i want to know what the vice president was doing talking to the president of ukraine in early 2016 when there was an ongoing investigation into a company that his son was on the board of. i think we didn't get a chance to talk about it in the house maybe we talk about it in the senate. rachel: joe biden had a very
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interesting reaction to hearing about what lindsey graham wants to do. take a look. >> i am disappointed. quite frankly, i'm angered by the fact that he knows me. he knows my son. he knows there is nothing to do. this trump is now essentially holding power over him that even the ukrainians wouldn't yield to. ukrainians would not yield to, quote, investigate biden. there is nothing to investigate about biden or his son. lindsey is about to go down in a way i think he is going to regret in his whole life. lindsey, i guess, i'm just embarrassed by what you are doing for you. i mean, my lord. ed: that reaction from joe biden is he genuinely just upset at his former friend or is he worried about what lindsey graham may find? rachel: i look at it as if it was me. i would be go ahead, investigate me, investigating my son. you will see nothing is wrong. i also found it interesting because he said he will
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regret it. remember when the president sent some mean tweets during the hearing for the ambassador and the democrat said that was threatening the witness this sounds a little bit threatening, too. pete: it does. ed: thought this was a threat to a senator exactly what joe biden did. what you suggested. rudy giuliani gave me this letter. this is an exclusive to "fox & friends." he has now written this to linz is i graham and is saying there are at least three witnesses who have direct, non-say evidence in the ukraine about democrat criminal conspiracy with ukrainians to prevent donald j. trump from being president. these witnesses have oral, documentary, and recorded evidence of the biden's family involvement in bribery, money laundering and other possible crimes, giuliani alleges. they desire a i have. and it will be not be granted by ambassador bill taylor's embassy in kiev. what will will will will will he is say if you want witnesses to talk about impeachment i have witnesses in ukraine who want to talk and right now giuliani is
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claiming that the american embassy in ukraine is making sure those witnesses do not get visas to come to america to speak. rachel: how can they do that isn't donald trump in charge. ed: he runs the state department. pete: that's why he says bill taylor's embassy after bill taylor's performance. non-hearsay evidence. we heard a bunch of hearsay in the house committee. will it's muddy waters. you have a chance to talk to rudy giuliani. ed: we have it here first. noon eastern today, he hasn't done a lot of interviews lately. rudy giuliani exclusive with me 12 noon eastern. we ask him about this but also about a whole bunch of other stories out there. he may be under investigation himself. we will press him on all those issues that's coming up later today. pete: when joe biden says i'm el embarrassed by lindsey graham. i'm embarrassed you have leechesd on to this impeachment. have you given no rationality to your
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candidacy. caved at every stop. this is not the bipartisan moment of whatever yesteryear by gone area they were a part of. this is a closed ranks moment. and lindsey graham understands that they have come after this president and now he gets a chance in the senate. different kind of world for joe. rachel: here is something else that could be embarrassing. it looks like elizabeth warren is losing her lead. here is some clear politics poll. let's see, we have joe biden at 29.8%. bernie sanders 19.3%. elizabeth warren has slipped to 18.5% and it goes on and on until kamala harris is at 4%. pete: this came none friday. real clear politics. state polls and national polls. ed: she'd had been surging. pete: we all noticed that she had been moving along. even joe biden lost the lead to her briefly and he has now recaptured it. it comes after she has released this 53 trillion-dollar medicare for all plan, which she couldn't
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explain how to pay for without ultimately raising taxes on the middle class. then she walked it back. well, beared on my priorities i may wait until like the third year of my presidency to do this big plan. she wanted to be all in and then she backed off. ed: talking all tough to the public left. supports teacher's unions and then confronted about second her own kids to private school. >> i read your kid went to private school. >> she claimed when confronted i sent my kids to public school. we had her differently. so fox called her campaign. pete: did they answer? ed: they answered elizabeth's daughter went to public school, period. her son went to public school until fifth grade. elizabeth wants every kid to get a great education regardlesregardless where they .
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which is why her plan makes a historic investment in our public schools: i don't if you want to talk and say you are all about public schools and tell a voter my kids did not go to private school and in fact one of them did, tell the truth. rachel: absolutely. what it speaks to she has a history of telling little and big lies but also the hypocrisy of it. the woman who was just speaking the african-american woman says i want what your kids, which is a choice. i also have kids. some of who are in private school, some who are in public school. that's my decision. these kids do better here. and these kids do better there. that's what people want. and i think it shows a lot of hypocrisy. ed: why couldn't she be honest in that moment? rachel: because she can't. pete: good enough for me but not for thee. and she caved to the teacher's unions a long time ago. she used to be advocate for school choice and charter schools because she understood that's what you
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need in order to insent advise public schools to be better. now that she is all in she has to lie about it to cover her past. ed: we will be covering and this a lot of other issues including this fox news alert. at least 58 people arrested overnight during, yes, anti-police protests right here in new york city. rachel: the marv crowds flooding streets and blocking cars. pete: aishah hasnie is in the newsroom with more. >> the protests, the movement as it's called police started 5:30 last night in harlem with about hundred people carrying anti-police signs and shouting anti-cop chants. watch. >> [chanting hose streets? , our streets. shut down one subway stop and traffic on a bridge as you saw there as the crowd moved towards the bronx. nypd arrested at least 58
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people for disorderly conduct and obstruction charges. protesters were marching against what they consider overpolicing of the subway system after governor cuomo announced plans to add 500 police officers to patrol the subway and catch people who are using it without paying. just three weeks ago, a similar protest created chaos in brooklyn. no one was arrested during that march. by the way, state senator julia sal czar claims young protesters beat up by nypd officers last night. we have not yet been able to confirm that. pete, ed, rachel? pete: the subway are about subway fair jumping but they're called f the police. ed: not antipolice except the name is anti-police. pete: just a little bit. rachel: turning now with your headlines starting with a fox news alert. three people, including a juvenile shot outside a concert venue concert in utah. everyone is expected to
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survive. officers say someone in a moving car opened just minutes before the concert ended. no arrests have been made. police arrest a second suspect in the fatal shooting of a georgia deputy. accuse of tampering with evidence. coming hours after a suspected shooter alvin hester jr. was taken into custody. hesitate ter is accused of shooting narcotics investigator outside an augusta gas station this week. 37 officers have been shot and killed in the line of duty this year alone. president trump now warning against banning flavored vaping products. >> the one thing i see though, you watch prohibition, you look at, you know, with the alcohol, you look at cigarettes, you look at all, if you don't give it to them, it's going to come here illegally. , the president meeting with the vaping industry executives and public health advocates in the week of
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vaping deaths nationwide. he initially considered banning ecigarettes that critics say target teens. >> a dog adopts a litter of kittens she found on the side of the road. spotted the spray and soon discovered she was protecting the kittens. the officer took the furry friends out of cold into a rescue shelter where she continues to look over her new found family. that is so adorable. the pooch serenity is now up for adoption. those are your headlines. ed: that's a cute cuddly story, right, pete? pete: that's a headline? i'm still fired up about the vape thing. we live in a free country. prohibition never worked. the president is right. rachel: tell us what you really think. ed: meantime big story. next guest's son killed by illegal immigrant. this morning that illegal immigrant is out of jail. you've heard from that mother before. but her message about the
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murder is next. something you simply must hear. pete: remember kanye west's surprise performance at texas prison. why eighthists now have a problem with it. ♪ ♪ the amount of student loan debt i have i'm embarrassed to even say i felt like i was going to spend my whole adult life paying this off thanks to sofi, i can see the light at the end of the tunnel as of 12pm today, i am debt free ♪ we have no debt, we don't owe anybody anything, and it's fantastic ♪
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rachel: an angel mom son's killer deported to mexico. she is thanking trump and the administration. ronald desilva when he was murdered by previously deported illegal immigrant in 2002. agnes joins us now. welcome, agnes. >> thank you. rachel: tell us a little bit about your son ronald. >> my son was the perfect little child, caring, loving owe bead yengt. as an adult he was a little prankster, little jokester.
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he loved animals. he was a good friend. just a perfect son, beautiful smile. gave the best hugs ever. rachel: tell us what happened to him in 2002. >> ronald was standing on the driveway where he took some food for his children. he had two boy, 8 and 10 at the time. she hadn't gotten home so he was about to leave. and ronald noticed somebody coming behind him and said whose that? and his friend turned and this gang member fired a gun, who was for his friend. he was going to shoot his friend in the back but struck my son in the arm and he died in surgery. he literally bled to death. rachel: you were originally told he was going to be released. did you not know if he was going to be deported, correct? >> correct. this week has been the most overwhelming emotional roller coaster i have ever
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felt. first, hearing from ice saying that they are not going to be notified that he is going to be released. and i fought until the very end. i wasn't going to give up. because everybody feels threatened by having another family loan released back felon released back into community. i was filled with so much emotion. i felt like a plugged pipe filled with emotions. he had been taken by e enforcement removal officers. thank you to them and ice. he had been deported yesterday. they put him over the fence over to mexico where he belongs. and hopefully he will never come back to victimize somebody else. rachel: right. have you actually had the chance to meet with president trump multiple times to thank him for his positions and his positions on illegal immigration and deportations and working with ice. have you met with careful
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legislature's and specifically with governor newsom? >> never. in fact, i wrote him two letters in may asking him how my family can prepare and protect ourselves when felon is going to be released may 7 and may 15th. he never gave me the courtesy of answering any of the letters. president trump is the only one that cared, showed compassion and understanding. and in my 40 years, 49 yeerlsz living in the united states, i have only respected two presidents. ronald reagan and my president trump. he is the most compassion, caring, kind man. and i will tell you, i love him so much and respect him that if there would be a bullet coming his way, i would shield his body with mine to protect him so he can continue doing the great things he's doing for our nation. rachel: if you could speak to governor newsom, what would you tell him? >> i would tell him to end sanctuary state and this nonsense and start paying attention to citizens and
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start deporting illegal aliens and criminals. especially criminals who have already violated and created victims. we do not need them in our country. we do not need them anywhere to continue victimizing innocent people. because there is no coming back from this. this is permanent. there is no -- this is where i visit my son. this is where i hug him. now, this individual that murdered my son, his family is go over to mexico and see him and hug him. i will never see my son on this earth again. and this is not fair. rachel: agnes, i want to thank you so much for sharing your story. it's really painful. i admire you. you are still a momma bear and fighting for your son. it's truly admirable. thank you for joining us this morning and i'm so sorry for your loss. >> i wanted to thank you ice and ero and all the men and women who worked on my case and everybody from the bottom of my heart. thank you so much. rachel: thank you and god bless you. >> thank you. god bless you, too.
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rachel: remember kanye west's surprise performance at a texas prison? well atheists now have a problem with it. lawrence jones talked to kanye west and his critics about his critics and what faith means to him. his message is next. ♪ ♪ right my wrong ♪
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pete: welcome back. kemba walker leaving last night's game on a stretcher after a frightening collision in a game against denver nuggets. walker running into a teammate head first while chase ago loose ball. the team says he is out of the hospital. but still has concussion-like symptoms. and an attorney for anthem nearly collin kaepernick two teens look at signing him. held a private workout last week after refusing to participate in nfl showcase. kaepernick has not played in the league since 2016 when he sparked widespread protests. we will see if those two nirks are real. ed: actually pan out. in the meantime kanye west sharing new found faith. atheist group up in arms after the rapper performed for inmates at this texas prison. rachel: the freedom from religion foundation slamming the gospel performance
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saying this constitutional violation is particularly egrej just it imposed religion on inmates, literally a captive audience. pete: lawrence jones who spoke directly to kanye west last week. >> good morning. pete: there for the performance as well. not the one in prison but the one at joel osteen's church: they are taking issue with the fact that these prisoners didn't have a choice. they are a captive prison and they brought faith into a prison. >> they wanted. did they not see the photos of people like worshiping christ and happy and, look, my grandmother is actually the chaplain for the state's women's prison in texas. and, you know, they support any type of religion that you may have but it's funny that the only time there is attacks is when it's christians. muslims are free, which they should be, this is america. the jewish people are free to worship whoever they want to. but, when you are a christian, then they come under attack. look, these people were willing to worship.
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texas is known for its seminary program. a lot of people in prison become converts and they go to school and become pastors and texas correctional system is known for that. so you would think that people that were former criminals, no matter what they decided to choose, the people would be celebrating that. >that. rachel: also it's not that texas is a christian state. >> it is. rachel: african-american community is a very christian community. >> by the way a lot of people in the community love kanye and kanye has turned over this new leaf and he wanted to share his faith. all these people clearly worshiping christ. giving their life to christ. shouldn't would he be celebrating this as a country where you are a criminal, your life was jacked up and you decided, you know what? let me get some stability in my life and turn over a new leaf. this is anti christian rhetoric. ed: a lot of people have been inspired by kanye's message. you got a chance to speak to him while he was in texas. let's talk to him real
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quick. >> how do you handle this revolution of you coming to christ. have you always talked about christ but in this new way? >> now i have got the ultimate security guard. [laughter] , and that's god that's to secure my mind and my spirit. main thing people try 20 do is use comment, naysayers to throw you off your course and distract you. and we are keeping our eye on christ christ. he commented on your clothes. >> he comengted on my jacket. i love fashion. he said bro, your jacket is so fire. getting exclusive interview with kanye was great. but getting him to comment on my jacket was pretty cool. this is a guy who may have challenges with his faith. he may black slide but as a christian we all back slide. i think it's a beautiful story that kanye is now using his message for christ. rachel: lawrence, i once heard someone say the only requirement to be a
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christian is to be a sinner. >> news flash. this is why paid it all. rachel: if you don't need to be saved, you don't need to be a christian. ed: catch lawrence man of fashion and man on the street. you will see him on the channel throughout the week. rachel: i think you are fire, too. i had he had those shoes are something else. pete: thanks for being here. a game show contestant loads 10 grand because she uses the word and. >> football left and right. >> sally left, football, right. pete: now wheel of fortune fans are calling for a rule chain. ed: another controversy, the ig report on the russian probe. due out couple weeks finally and the media is, guess what, trying to down pray.
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ed: shot the morning. congratulate rachel and her baby. guess what jedediah welcomed hartley into the world last friday. going to make his weekend debut tomorrow. that's an exclusive right here. >> i can't wait to talk to her. i have been talking to her since baby and a little bit before. ed: giving her tips? rachel: she did a great job. look at that beautiful baby. pete: i have not given her any tips. i don't think she wants any from me. [laughter] beautiful bab baby boy. ed: you have 9. pete has seven. rachel: between us we have snowm. >> jason, highly anticipated ig report on alleged fisa abuse. president trump making this bold prediction on "fox & friends." >> you have a fisa report coming out which the word is it's historic.
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that's what the word is that's what i hear. and if it's historic, you are going to see something. this was spying on my campaign. something that has never been done in the history of our country. this was an overthrow attempt at the presidency. they tried to overthrow the presidency this is a disgrace. pete: the media is already jumping the gun and down playing its findings before the december 9th release. ainsley: here to react is chairman of house oversight committee and jason chaffetz. pete: and father of two. >> yes, i am. ed: all right, grandpa, what are we going to get? >> i don't think it's a coincidence that donald trump makes these comments less than 8 hours later. the "new york times" and "the washington post" almost simultaneously within the hour come out with a story trying to diminish what the president was saying. the inspector general has now, if the report is correct, will be making his fourth referral to the department of justice for potential criminal prosecution or enter agency
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disciplinary action. that means the director of the fbi, the deputy director of the fbi, the deputy assistant director of the fbi and now counsel within the fbi would be recommended for potential criminal prosecution or disciplinary action. that is as serious as it gets. rachel: what they are trying to say this person, smith i guess is his last name. >> clinesmith. rachel: clinesmith is a low level person. what are the chances that somebody this close to this heat is a low level attorney in the fbi? >> the allegation is as serious as it gets. that is doctoring documentation that then goes to a court. that is a felony. this is not some low level person. you have to have the highest level of security at the department of justice in order to be involved in this. this attorney was also involved in the clinton email scandal. this fisa abuse issue. he was also part of the mueller team or at least assigned to part of the team. so, the highest profile case is at the department of
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justice, this was the attorney working on those cases. so, this article tries to diminish him as some low level person who, you know, probably went rogue, but that's the person that they used and doctoring the documentation to spy on a presidential campaign. that's pretty serious. pete: could it be so big that it changes the conversation? we have seen how potentially the hearings in the house committee may end up boomer ranking against the democrats. does it get in this town and elsewhere to acknowledge what happened in 2016. that's a heavy lift. the idea that the mainstream media is going to pay attention to this. i highly doubt it. this is serious stuff. it is real. it is based on fact. horowitz was appointed by president obama, unanimously confirmed to the united states senate. he has taken a year and a half to do it. and it's just the precursor, if you will. to what mr. durnl is doing. the u.s. attorney who can then potentially prosecute people. i think a lot of people
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haven't seen jurve in washington, d.c. we'll haven't seen people in handcuffs. and clinesmith, is probably the leading candidate to do that. ed: john brennan, james comey, are they going to skate again. rachel: that's what everyone thinks. >> i'm worried that's the case. highest level at the fbi, department of justice. i do think brennan and clapper, the d&i and the cia will also be implicated in this report. lindsey graham will take this very seriously, when the report comes out on december 9th and 11th of december when you actually have the hearing hearing. s. ed: jason, appreciate it. jerry sandusky maintaining his innocence as he is resentenced on 45 counts of child sex abuse.
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>> mr. sandusky, you maintain your innocence? >> absolutely. this is the worst injustifiable in the history of american jurisprudence. it's awful. ed: sandusky got the same 30 to same 60 year term he got in 2012. new sentencing came after the high court ruled the mandatory sentences were miss applied. his appeal for a new trial was denied back in february. and, booted from buckingham, according to new reports prince andrew was forced to move out of his palace office just days after stepping down from his royal duties. this comes as the duke of york faces intense criticism for that interview in which he defended his friendship with convicted sex offender jeffrey epstein. the prince has been accused of sexual contact with an underaged girl which he denied. buckingham palace has not commented although rachel has been commenting. he would will talk about it later. she is all over that story. the cdc is warning people not to eat romaine lettuce. the agency says 40 people
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have been infected with e.coli in 16 different states. contaminated lettuce was harvested in california and has a use by date of october 29th to november 1st. so check out your fridge. pete: just don't eat lettuce. ed: fans are outraged after a wheel of fortune contestant lost almost 10 grand on a technicality. >> i would like to solve. >> say anything, don't add anything, go ahead. >> right, football, left, and sally. >> brian? >> i would like to solve the puzzle. sally, left, football, right. >> that's it. the contestant lost everything she had, including a trip to nashville because she audited the word and. the show says the rules are clear. contestants must only say words on the board. now fans are calling for the show to get rid of that formality and those are your headlines. >> i think the rule is good. pete: what if we had to
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follow rules of formality on this show? rachel: you would be fired. [laughter] ed: what do you think about the idea of pete following rules? rachel: rick. rick: i didn't understand any of it. pete: she said and. rick: i was trying sally, football. pete: it's the four words that were in the cross word puzzle. rick: is that a new thing? pete: it must be. you need to watch more wheel of fortune. rick: cool but not awfully cold anywhere across the lower 40. that's going to be the case for the coming week, which is good. we won't be having that big artic blast for anywhere the fourth of july -- fourth of july -- thanksgiving. pull off towards the east and make for a bad weekend, especially across the mid-atlantic and towards the northeast. this is one version of it down across the south. we will see this front move
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all the way through florida throughout the day on sunday. scattered showers quickly but eventually temps are going to drop behind this front. this is the second peels of it. northern side of it, a lot of rain toward the mid-atlantic. snow across interior sections. rain across the coast. that's a saturday even into sunday and out of here for the most part by monday. the weekend not that great. overall, east coast not looking that bad behind it. watch what happens. every for the week looks pretty good. then wednesday we start to see a big storm moving. worst travel parts wednesday and thursday. big mountain ♪ big rain across the lower elevations we desperately need that moisture but it's coming for you thanksgiving dale. all right, guys, back to you. get ready. stand up straight. pete: did you weather so long i was able to make a paper real quick. ed: like i said not following the rules. pete: didn't make it to you. cracking down on political ads. what does that mean for 2020. trump campaign strategic
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communications director weighs in. that's coming up next. ed: you don't see this every day, a banana mobile cruising down the road in the surprise gift the officer gave that driver you won't want to miss that ♪ banana ♪ b-a-n-an-n-a treat yourself to the perfect gift today, because the aussie 4-course won't last long! and try our everyday lunch combo starting at $7.99!
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only target based on age, gender and postal card but not political affiliation? why? >> clearly it's because democrats can't keep up with republicans. let's remember, every time president trump activates his full social media platform he communicates with a super bowl-sized audience. our party, our campaign, are light years ahead of the democrats in terms of data. even hillary clinton had to admit that and because the democrats can't keep up, they do what they always do, change the rules. pete: moirkmarcomarc. seems firms free country with political advocacy. because it's president trump and his re-election, they are now tightening the reigns restricting that advantage, is that truly what you believe this comes down to. >> absolutely. can you go back to the obama campaigns and their people were hailed as geniuses for
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the revolutionizing the way they used data. and now because president trump has taken it even to a higher level, they have got to change the rules. same thing with impeachment. when your article falls apart change the rules and keep trying to find something else. pete: marc, here is what google had to say about their new policy. we recognize that robust part of democracy no one can aused indicate every political claim. political ads on which we take action will be very limited. we will continue to do so for clear violations. so they're still going to weigh in. they get to define what a clear violation is. could that end up being slanted, too? >> , it will be slanted. here is the even bigger problem. they are not allowing us to use information that was voluntarily provided to us by people. people who signed up and said please communicate with me. we want to volunteer and help president trump. we can't use that information any longer to advertise and actually communicate with the people who said, yes, please, raise my hand, i want to support president trump.
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pete: they voluntarily opt in and there is still a restriction. it's confirmed. everyone is out against this president. but he finds a way to communicate anyway. marc, thank you very much for being with us this morning. >> good to be with you, pete. pete: on the road again, kelley blue book best buy for 2020 are on fox square coming up next. ♪ ♪ these days we're (horn honking) i hear you, sister. that's why i'm partnering with cigna to remind you to go in for your annual check-up. and be open with your doctor about anything you feel. physically, and emotionally. body and mind. little things can be a big deal. psoriasis, that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently.
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ed: every year kelley blue book announces its best buy cars and this year we are revealing the best in show right here on fox square and the man who knows all is executive publisher for kelley blue book. i never buy a car without going to kbb.com. >> that's good to hear. ed: i buy g.m. and american. kia, you say this car sun real. >> three row suv and packed with features starting price $32,000. that's amazing for a car of this size. suv i should say. >> all these standard safety equipment. high tech with it it's got emergency braking lane keeping assist. a lot of safety for 32,000. this particular one cost about mid 40's. 45.
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it has heated and cooltd seat. a large touch screen. ed: if you want to take a weekend trip this can be something for you. let's get over to hyundai. >> on the other end of the spectrum in terms of costing very little. this is $21,000 starting price. $21,000. what you get with this car again is a lot of standard equipment. and you get great gas mileage. get a 1.6 or 2-liter engine in this. get all-wheel drive. space efficiency in this car. looks small. a lot of room in here. ed: still have great warrants. >> 10 year 100,000-mile warrantees. ed: look at this car. if you wants a truck this looks like a monster. >> if you are looking for a meaty, you know, get the job done truck. ed: f-150 historically been a monster. >> best selling vehicle. ed: in the planet really. anything special about this model? >> this one comes with a range of engines, a range of configurations. you can get diesel get 30 miles per hour and 3.5 in the raptor make
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450-horsepower. lots of luxury options are available. still get a work truck for around $40,000 to get the job done. ed: talk about luxury, bmw. >> now, everyone knows these guys know how to make a car that drives well. also know how to make suv that drives with. x 5 won our best buy award at blue book drives so well. a lot of luxury features and a lot of technology you see. it drives great. this one starts at 58. you can get the costs up into the 80s if you go all out. well equipped one will get you $70,000. >> wrap it up with honda. >> one of the best selling cars in this country. you know the world has gone suv crazy. honda crv and compact. it's funny they call it compact because the amount of space in this car is unbelievable. ed: pack a lot of fun. >> look at the rear seat. the rear seat is loaded with space. doss this look like a compact suv.
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ed: looks like getting a lot for the money. >> honda introduced a hybrid version. haven't released fuel efficiency yet. ed: if you think of the backpack here i used to call as a kid. weekend trip get a lot in here. >> another best buy winner. we love this car. great resale value. all the things someone looking at kelley blue book should be thinking about. ed: kbb is the site. check it out: coming up. shocking new text messages revealed in the case of a college student accused of encouraging a boyfriend to take his own life. wow, the big bombshells just revealed in court. that's coming up. plus, can marriage counseling save america? a family therapist weighs in next hour ♪ goodness, gracious ♪ great balls of fire ♪ ♪ as a struggling actor,
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♪ a little bit of pig friday ♪ no beer on a friday night ♪ a pair of jeans that fit just right ♪ and the radio up ♪ ed: who picked this song. rachel: it's me. if you don't like this song you are not american. i'm sorry. pete: i had a chance to go to a zac brown concert. it's the best. rachel: it's the best song ever. pete: amazing. chicken friday. rachel: cold beer on a friday night jeans that fit just right. pete: we had cold beer on a friday night. me and my wife and you and sean on a upon to an. rachel: up in wisconsin. it doesn't get more american than that. ed: funny, i didn't get the
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invite. rachel: you were golfing. ed: we are happy to get you. rachel: next time come up to northern wisconsin. ed: jedediah will be on the program tomorrow making "fox & friends" debut. a lot of news to get, to hearing all week about impeachment, impeachment, impeachment. guess what, another big bombshell you are about to hear. it's that report about fisa abuse that we have been waiting for so long. some in the media are already spinning it's not such a big deal. pete: we hear a lot about. we have heard the word bombshell used a lot regarding the testimony from this week. but, when you look at how average folks have been reacting to this week, i also want to noted, there was a democrat presidential debate this week. it was almost a perfect incapsule labor relation. ed: there was. pete: everyone paying attention to wednesday. everyone is exhausted with it. if you are exhausted, you might get a shot in the arm if you support the president. this ig report coming out on december 9th, people that have seen it, there is
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different reviews, but the media, of course, down playing it, rachel. rachel: of course. here is what the "new york times" had to say. russia inquiry review is set to criticize fbi but rebuff claims of biased acts. "the washington post" says watchdog finds political bias did not taint top officials running fbi russia probe. ed: let me get this straight. we already heard one fbi official. we don't know if there is more. lone person but at least one fbi official basically changed documents. sort of fabricated evidence to. pete: sounds like a problem. ed: get fisa warrants to surveil carter page a trump campaign advisor. somehow that's not a big deal. rachel: right. they act like he is this low level attorney like this rogue employee. we find out, as jason chaffetz, who was just here earlier said, is he at the center of all of this. he is involved in very high level inquiries. you would have to have a very high level top cleerches. this isn't some secretary. ed: jason is a former
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republican chairman on the hill. pete: i thought you were going to say a former republican. >> not a coin kansas donald trump makes these comments less than eight hours later. 8 hours later come out with a story trying to diminish what the president was saying. the allegation sass serious as it gets. that is doctoring documentation that then goes to a court. that is a felony. this is not some low level person. you have to have the highest level of security at the department of justice in order to be involved in this. this attorney was also involved in the clinton email scandal. this fisa abuse issue. he was also part of the mueller team, or at least assigned to part of the team. ed: if this fbi guy was low level. i didn't mean to cut you off. who was he ultimately reporting to. a guy named andy mccabe and james comey. aren't they running the fbi in 2016. pete: i think they were. i would have to go back and check. flip the political affiliations of 2016, this was -- the headlines would be the exact opposite of what you just read, rachel.
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that's why the president on this program 56 minutes was the total interview. talked about the release of this inspector general report of what it means. listen. >> you have a fisa report coming out. which the word is it's historic. that's what i hear. and if it's historic, you are going to see something. and then perhaps even more importantly, you have durham coming out shortly thereafter. he is the u.s. attorney and he has already announced it's criminal. and we'll see what happens. >> mr. president. >> you have a lot of very, very bad people. and you know a lot of people say deep state. i don't like to use the word deep state. i just say they are really bad, sick people. pete: yeah. it's hard to imagine a more interesting, dangerous precarious mixture of you've got a senate. you've got things moving to the house judiciary committee. maybe moving over to the senate. then you have got a release of this ig report. have you also got political debates going on. you have a potential
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government shutdown looming which has been averted at some level. so much is going to happen. ed: you have a prosecutor in john durham. >> yes. ed: i shouldn't say waiting. i is looking at this report to see what is referred to him by the inspector general. john durham has been out there as a u.s. attorney looking for problems in the fbi and the justice department and could be moving forward on criminal prosecutions, rachel, at any time. so that is out there. sort of a ticking time bomb. rachel: absolutely. i think that people think that durham is actually going to be more scathing than the report that we're going to see coming out from horowitz. but i think most republicans and even independents are wondering is anything going to come out of this? i mean, we see these reports come out but we don't really see anyone get in trouble or anybody at the top who is directing this as you mentioned. how far does this go up? does it go all the way up to obama? israeli jarrett? susan rice? pete: joe biden another name in that chain of command. another guy who is
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interested in what may come of this carter page a former trump advisor who was surveilled. here is what he said on ingraham. >> we have known about this hoax for so long and all of the wrongdoing and unfortunately, it's just -- there has been no real action to address these issues. they were spying on all the people i was talking with during the donald trump campaign, during the trump transition. all of my interactions with various people. they swept up all of that they have this big many hundreds of pages of a report. and i have had zero ability to review any of it. meanwhile, all these same people who apparently are leaking, are having all kinds of input. so, it's, you know, it's just a complete disaster. rachel: worth noting that carter page is a military veteran. interesting how differently veterans are treated when they are on the trump side of the aisle versus when they're on the other side of
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the aisle. ed: regardless of political party when an american is spied upon, they are not supposed to be first of all. one fbi official doctors documents people of all political persuasions should be fired up and mad and upset and demanding answers, period. pete: i don't think we will. but as they -- as all of this is pursued in washington, d.c., big issues like illegal immigration, largely get ignored, except by the president who is still very focused on that. rachel, you had an interview with an angel mom because someone was deported who probably should have been. rachel: be a necessary begin bib gibboney. weigh was retraumatized this week because she thought he was going to be released. take a listen to what she had to say. >> this week has been the most overwhelming, emotional roller coaster i have ever felt. first, hearing from ice
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saying that they are not going to be notified that he is going to be released. and i fought until the very end, end sanctuary state end this nonsense and start paying attention to citizens and start deporting illegal aliens and criminals. especially criminals who have already violated and created victims. there is no coming back from this. this is permanent. there is no -- this is where i visit my son. ed: so very emotional. it looks like the system kind of worked here because the illegal immigrant who killed her son was released from prison, but then deported. rachel: but only because she has been out there fighting and she was screaming about it. and so she got the attention. but how many more people would get that opportunity? ed: we are going to ask mark morgan. he is the acting commissioner of the customs and border patrol. pete: if you don't have a public advocate shining a light. rachel: or a president willing to stand up for you
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by the way. pete: even better said. your son killed in 2002. you have been waiting. walks away. illegal not notifying the feds about it. rachel: known criminal, known gang member, and convicted killer and he was going to be released into the community had she not rereally squawked about it. good for her. she is a momma bear. her son was killed in 2002. she is still fighting. by the way a legal immigrants. she goes against this idea that the movement is anti-immigrant movement. ed: pete talking about issues breaking through. people care about at their kitchen tables. all these polls suggesting independent voters are yawning about the impeachment probe. something people have not been yawning. standing up and saying kanye west his message of spreading the goe gospel. he was at joel osteen's church last weekend and prison before that can you see how prisoners are inspired by this message. pete: sincerely motivating.
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can i say that as someone who, you know, bemoans what has happened in our culture for quite some time. you look at it and say hold on, wait, we got kanye west? i mean, he is sharing the gospel with young people who would otherwise never hear it? it's been a shot in the arm for me and a lot of people especially when you hear the sin variety. the freedom from religion foundation is complaining because he went -- kanye west went to a prison in harris county, texas, and gave a fifth-filled performance. ains. rachel: he said this is atheist group. it imposed religion on inmates, literally a captive audience. well, when we lawrence jones on earlier. and here's what he had to say about it. >> they support any type of religion that you may have. it's funny that the only time there is attacks is when it's christians. a lot of people in prison become converts and they
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become to school and become pastors and texas correctional system is known for that. have you all these people that are clearly worshiping christ, giving their life to christ. shouldn't would he be celebrating this as a country when you are a criminal, your life was jacked up, and you decided, you know what? let me get some stability in my life. turn over a new leaf. this is anti-christian rhetoric. ed: lawrence actually interviewed kanye at that church. rachel: his mom is a pastor to a womennens prison in texas. so, here kanye west giving hope to prisoners and i guess that's still legal in this country. pete: it is. a guy like chuck coal son who runs prison fellowship has for decades. long tradition. if kanye does it we have got to complain about it. rachel: we will turn to some headlines. a college student accused of accusing her boyfriend to kill himself. she has pleaded not guilty. she districted text messages -- she has
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disturbing text messages released in court from inyoung you to her boyfriend alexander urtula. you writing quote do everyone a favor and go explicative kill yourself. he jumped from a parking garage just hours before graduation. horrible story. and va fans and players are evacuated after a bomb scare. a suspicious package found utah jazeera arena minutes after they beat the warriors. the bomb squad rushing in to investigate as everyone was leaving. they say the package turned out to be a toolbox left under a table. scary. south bend mayor pete buttigieg the target of protests in his own city. >> what do we want? a green new deal. >> when do we want it? >> now. >> what do we want? >> a green new deal. >> protesters staging a sit-in at the 2020 hopeful south bend office to demand he do even more to fight climate change.
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the group's spokesman tweeting in part this is an emergency and pete needs to act like it. pete is laughing. we have another pete with me here. it's an emergency. pete: a state trooper knew he had to do something when he saw this car appealing appeag out. pulling over banana car. instead he donated $20. the driver uses unique car to give people in need. ed: get it, pealing out? >> got it. ed: michael bloomberg spending millions of dollars in ads. still mulling it. now it's time to cue some outrage from democrats. >> qualifiers should not be money. it should not put you at advantage over other candidates. >> i'm not going to be able to compete with the money of bloomberg or steyer. that is true. ed: professor brian brenberg
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is following the money. pete: he is rich and they are not. sees color for the first time and you won't want to miss his emotional reaction. we will show it to you. ♪ these days we're (horn honking) i hear you, sister. that's why i'm partnering with cigna to remind you to go in for your annual check-up. and be open with your doctor about anything you feel. physically, and emotionally. body and mind.
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more minerals are able to enter deep into the enamel's surface. the fact that you have an opportunity to repair what's already been damaged...it's amazing. i think my go-to toothpaste is going to be pronamel repair. pete: michael bloomberg launching a massive multi-million-dollar advertising. rivals are not holding back oon the. >> everyone thinks they can beat trump. >> your qualifier should not be money should not put you at advantage over other
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candidates. got to get money out of politics. >> i'm not going to be able to compete with the money of bloomberg or steyer, that is true. i literally believe people want something different than another wealthy person in the white house. pete: here to react is brian brenberg chair of a program in business and finance at the kings college. brian, good morning. >> good morning. pete: so they don't have billions, bloomberg does, is he bad for spending it? >> talking about we have got to get money out of politics. the reason booker and amy klobuchar don't like it they can't get money into politics. their democratic rivals can if you look at sanders and warren they raised a combined $85 million between april and september of this year. if you are in a mushy center spot klobuchar is in. bloomberg is going to push us out. this is the end of any bid we think we have. pete: a guy like bernie sanders says there shouldn't be any billionaires. so, plays into his rhetoric.
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>> exactly. reacting the same way. klobuchar knows this is the end. sanders loves. this this is how he raises his money. his fundraising hall is going to go up because of bloomberg. is he very happy to have another billionaire in the race. pete: we have seen the historic unemployment numbers. stock market breaking records. you still have a bernie sanders out there saying really, this is real. i'm going to fix the economy and make sure it works for everyone, not just the 1%. how is he saying that and does that resonate? >> it's so interesting. because i think to buy into a sanders or a warren at some level, you have to willfully disregard what you see around you. i mean, you have to willfully disregard the data that we get repeatedly on incomes rising, unemployment being low. on wages rising fastest at the bottom of the income stale scale. we have said this before. it's a little bit like a religion when it comes to buying in tout progressive socialist ideology. it's not really about what can you see around you. it's about what you want to
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believe to be true. the odd thing is and scary thing is it actually works for a significant portion of our population. they are willing to actually put their own money behind candidates who october jobs report added 128,000. unemployment rate 3 bone 6%. if you were to put your socialist head on for a second, what is the best argument you make in face of a head wind like that that your policies would be better? >> things are okay but they could be much better. the claim of the communist, socialist has always been it could be better if you just let us do it right. the problem is there has never been a right. it's always been a wrong. it's impoverished people. that's the end of the story. >> give me 52 trillion more and i can make. pete: i used a b it's a t. >> all t's now. pete: some say today's political climate is like marriage. >> it's my fault that you don't feel satisfied. >> everything is my fault? is that what you are saying? >> i'm not saying that.
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pete: so are skills from couple's therapy, are they the answer to bridging the political divide? a family therapist shares some techniques coming up next ♪ like a horse and carriage ♪ this, i tell you brother ♪ you can't have one without the other ♪ applebee's new sizzlin' entrées. now starting at $9.99. can you tell me the story again? every family has their own unique story. give your family the chance to discover theirs this holiday season, with ancestry. but how do i know if i'm i'm getting a good deal? i tell truecar my zip and which car i want and truecar shows the range of prices people in my area actually paid for the same car so i know if i'm getting a great price. this is how car buying was always meant to be.
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♪ ♪ ed: time for news by the numbers. first $350,000, that's how much jewelry was stolen will rapper's home. she and her boyfriend called police after finding out someone broke into their rental. no arrests have been made so far. next, 3.2 million. that's how many people are expected to travel through lax for thanksgiving. could be another record-breaking travel period for the los angeles airport during the two-weeks surrounding the holiday. finally, 8 85 feet. that's the height of the new christmas tree standing at the vatican stand tall beside a nativity scene. pete: i guess they can do it early there because they don't celebrate thanksgiving. ed: in trouble for doing it before thanksgiving? pete: this is an american holiday. the pope can do what he wants. a group of couples expected to work out problems while on vacation in the movie
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"couple's retreat." >> sometimes we forget how to do the easiest thing in the world which is just to talk to each other. >> so now everything is my fault. >> now you are saying everything is my fault? rachel: can a marriage counseling technique be used to help bring liberals and conservatives back together in this tension-filled political. ed: bring in family they therapist tom kersting, good morning. what's the answer? can you use some of these techniques for marriage counseling. >> i was amazed because it's very similar. i'm married 22 years. and my wife is always right. that's one strategy. >> techniques in reality. pete: what if your wife is a socialist. then you don't think she is right anymore. >> i know. pete: how do you handle that one? >> we get so caught up in who is right and who is wrong. >> we are righteous as human beings, we are craving to get the other person to understand us. reverse psychology technique tame your emotions hear what
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the other person is saying and be agreebleg. you don't have to 100 percent agree with. they let them speak and tame your emotions. rachel: this isn't all about married couples. get together for thanksgiving with family members. you haven't been with them for a while. ed: crazy uncle pete. rachel: siblings sometimes we revert to 15 when we are around our siblings. give us some of the exact tips that we can use when we are around the thanksgiving table? how do we start to depolarize, have conversations but not get in massive fights. >> one things to do is what i call zip it. we are so eager to speak and be heard and we interrupt what the other person's position is and also another strategy is to really -- what i tell people, united states your brain, not your emotions. once the emotions start to perk lay of the inside of us, we are now losing control. rachel: have you never been around hispanic people apparently. >> when you become present and mindful in the situation and take a breath of air and realize that your emotions are starting to elevate. tame that down a little bit.
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give the person in front of you have the respect and hear what they have to say. rachel: part of why i like this subject is because some people say just don't talk about politics. and i think that's fine. if we can't talk about politics with our family, how the public square, how sour politics in general as a nation ever going to become civil? >> i agree with you on that. we should be able to talk about anything without having an emotional frenzy over it. i think just the way our society is nowadays we are being fed. this. ed: you said do the hearing instead of fighting to be heard. >> that's another thing. one of the things, especially with couples, and with political polarization between people is that we want to be heard. we, it's meme meme. put yourself aside. listen to the other person, and let them be heard. pete: how do you resist the temptation? you are at the thanksgiving table. you got your liberal, you know, uncle or nephew or -- not nephew but cousin, and you are like wow, trump is your president, too. you get the reaction. you got to hold back if you
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really want it to work. >> you know what it is, too that i have learned? if you are trying to talk to somebody that is so rigid in their beliefs, we want them to understand and come on our side, it's not going to happen. just be proud of what your beliefs are and know what you believe is right for you. and don't go down the road of destruction. ed: what about you? are you going to wear your maga hat at the thanksgiving table? send us your comments on it. send us emails at friends@foxnews.com. pete: please send it's a fascinating topic. racism racism if you wear your maga hat at the thanksgiving table. send us a picture of that. that would be fun. pete: thanks, tom. rachel: great stuff. pete: week two of the inquisition hearing is over. ed: inquiry. >> two weeks of testimony, 12 witnesses and everything points in the same direction. >> if this were something we were asking the jury, they would come back in a heart
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beat with a guilty verdict. pete: we are unpacking a little bit of the bias coming up. >> plus they serve alongside our troops protecting them every day. our own emily compagno went to see how strong these dogs are i love this story. [screams] >> she apparently survived shares the eye opening experience with us. she is alive. ♪ she wanted to move someplace warm. but he wanted snow for the holidays. so we built a snow globe. i'll get that later. dylan! but the one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with homeowners insurance. what? switching and saving was really easy! i love you! what? sweetie! hands off the glass. ugh!!
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♪ ♪ nice song. pete: shot of the morning. evan and erin are known as the twin squad. the 5-year-olds are not old enough to join the brothers in blue. they have traveled to 33 precincts around the country to honor. ed: even have their mini nypd uniforms and squad car. they hope to be first responders when they grow up. although i feel they have already grown into it. they look pretty good in uniform. pete: pretty sweet to see that when others do not respect men and women in blue. pete: that's true. rachel: s who song i
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rachel: whose song is that? did you pick that. ed: no. pete: went with the cool. ed: military working dogs so side by side with our troops every single day protecting them. keeping them safe. rachel: some of these canine warriors train at fort dix, new jersey. pete: spent a lot of time there. don't want to go back. emily compagno went and firsthand training. >> i went back for you and had an absolute blast as you probably saw from the tease. i got pretty much the scare of my life. take a look, viewers. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> what is the main mission for the working dogs here at joint base. >> our main mission is law enforcement and security of the base. our dogs that are trained as
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explosive narcotic and patrol detective dogs. anybody who is committing offenses against the base, bringing contraband onto the base we'll be there to enhance the base's security: >> the training they go to at air force base in texas. 60 days of training. and 60 days of patrol training. basic stuff. go through a certification process and then they get released their their station. >> our dog teams are always training to better dog teams where they need to be. >> how strong is the sense of smell. >> 10,000 times stronger than humans. if you put a pinch of salt in the olympic size swimming pool the dog can pick it out. >> tell me about the bond. >> the bond you will build with these dogs is essential dog team. >> once you do it for a while, you feel it, you know, it you see it when it happens. >> when the sergeant gave his speech, he said, you know, as a handler you come in loving dogs but it grows on you to become an addiction. >> can you please try on the bite suit? >> of course.
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>> yes. ♪ ♪ >> so right now i am getting geared up, clearly, for what will be likely the highlight of my life, which is the demonstration, this is what is called a bite suit. thankfully, it's really heavy. >> i'm so excited, i can't wait. i'm getting a little nervous. >> run up with your arm just like this. the dog is going to hit. and then -- keep moving. >> oh, this hurts. be loud, be fun and we will be right there. >> screaming and pretend fear. [barking] >> get them. [screams]
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♪ >> how was that? >> i survived. >> the anticipation is frightening. like hearing him like literally chomping at the bit,-like whining in anticipation of sinking his teeth in my pink fleshy skin is snarling. i have to watch the dog as i running. it's like watching a needle as it goes into my skin. i couldn't do: i can't remember that second of impact. i just remember hitting the ground. that was kind of awesome. >> it's an adrenaline rush. >> you did really well. >> i did? rachel: you did. look at you. >> i survived, which is the best part. rachel: you really felt scared like when the dog is chasing after you it's the adrenaline. >> up until then i was only excited oh my gosh this is going to be great. when i saw him, like he is coming for me. that's for me. this is not a joke. then as my scream shattered glass around the base it was
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because he was so close to me. and when you were talking about the corography. i like basically blacked out in that second. it's frightening. also so exciting and it's incredible to see and witness the bond between those dogs and their handlers to hear the reverence these soldiers have for fellow soldiers for how honorable the entire process is, of course. >> taken down like al baghdadi. [laughter] pete: what if he decided to go for your neck? >> i thought about that after the fact. those dogs are trained to the nth degree. that's why i wasn't afraid at all of any other body part. i knew that dog was trained impeccablably by those handlers and he would do only what they told him to do. rachel: the suits work. >> thank god. ed: you are fearless. you are our friend. >> thanks for watching. pete: turning to headlines, 13-year-old boy in custody
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for threatening to shoot up middle school. seizing this ar-15 and hundred rounds of ammo in his family's home. they found a list of intended victims and a drawing of the school's layout. the threat coming just days after a deadly shooting at a high school in nearby santa clarita. and border agents arrest 16 people after smuggler cut a massive hole in a border fence. he then drove a truck through the gap entering california with 15 illegal immigrants inside. agents caught the smuggler after a brief chase. the local border chief says the incident highlighted the need for a new, stronger wall. acting cbp commissioner mark morgan will join us to update us on the crisis at the border. of course, if there was no wall they would have driven straight through. might have been part of the reason they were caught. we will talk to mark morgan about that. amazon is suing the pentagon over 10 billion-dollar cloud computing contract with microsoft. the project involves storing massive amounts of data on the cloud.
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amazon claims the government had unmistakable bias in taking mouth's offer instead. defense secretary mark esper says last month's deal was done fairly and without any undue political influence. we will see about that. and it might be the best thing you see all week. a colored blind student in minnesota sees color for the very first time. >> see what it does. [laughter] >> what do you think? pretty cool? come here, dude. pete: jonathan jones crying when he gets his first colorful look at the world around him. those special glasses were a gift from his principal who is also colorblind. the touching moment quickly and rightfully went viral. can you imagine? rachel: no. it's really emotional watching. i can't imagine. beautiful, beautiful. ed: that is really sweet. rick, i heard you were watching the video. >> almost made me cry.
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pete: there is a heart in there. we know it. we see it. good to see you, rick. rick: in color. guys, take a look at the weather map and show you what's going on. we have a really active week headed for us. you see the real cold artic we head down across the lower 48. most part. higher elevations the rockies all stays way up to the north which is where we would like it. that will be the case all week long. no real cold burst. one storm we are watching throughout the southeast. throughout the day today that continues to pull off to the east overnight. moves towards the northeast. a rainy sunday across the northeast and mid-atlantic. and then temperaturewise, here we are today 40's all the way up across parts of northern plains. 42 in fargo right now. [laughter] going to stay pretty nice across the southeast. sorry, guys, i just said farts and i couldn't stop laughing. i was trying to say parts
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and fargo and that comes out as farts. [laughter] pete: live television, rick. you know, it happens. rachel: i think representative swalwell -- ed: issue with that. pete: now you are crying at yourself. rick: exactly. pete: one of those mornings. stay tuned for what rick will say next. ed: who knows. ricweek two of the. we have hearings are over. media gives verdict already before there is even a vote. >> two weeks of testimony, 12 witnesses and everything points in the same direction. >> if this were something we were asking a jury, they would come back in a heater beat with a guilty verdict. ed: guilty they say already. our next guest calls out the bias. you would never guess who or what is behind the wheel of this car. stay tuned. ♪ ♪ i'm your 70lb st. bernard puppy,
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ithere's my career...'s more to me than hiv. my cause... and creating my dream home. i'm a work in progress. so much goes into who i am. hiv medicine is one part of it. prescription dovato is for adults who are starting hiv-1 treatment and who aren't resistant to either of the medicines dolutegravir or lamivudine. dovato has 2 medicines in 1 pill to help you reach and then stay undetectable. so your hiv can be controlled with fewer medicines while taking dovato. you can take dovato anytime of day with food or without.
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don't take dovato if you're allergic to any of its ingredients or if you take dofetilide. if you have hepatitis b, it can change during treatment with dovato and become harder to treat. your hepatitis b may get worse or become life-threatening if you stop taking dovato. so do not stop dovato without talking to your doctor. serious side effects can occur, including allergic reactions, liver problems, and liver failure. life-threatening side effects include lactic acid buildup and severe liver problems. if you have a rash and other symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop taking dovato and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have kidney or liver problems, including hepatitis b or c. don't use dovato if you plan to become pregnant or during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy since one of its ingredients may harm your unborn baby. your doctor should do a pregnancy test before starting dovato. use effective birth control while taking dovato. the most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, nausea, trouble sleeping, and tiredness. so much goes into who i am and hope to be. ask your doctor if starting hiv treatment with dovato is right for you.
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>> welcome back, a couple quick headlines for you. a dog in florida caught behind the wheel doing donuts in reverse, his owner left the car running with the pickup inside. so hpup inside. he went on hour long joy ride. his driving a little ruff you might say. do you like that? he hit a mailbox and a few garbage cans. wow, okay. it looks like florida has three cute car criminals. check this out. >> what are you all doing? [squeals] >> speeding. >> got a lawns for that truck there though. >> no. >> we don't need a license. we tell them we know how to drive. >> bye-bye. [laughter] >> they are running. >> officer clayton harris holding a play traffic stop with his two kids before the adorable duo sped away. the dog could have taught them how to bark the car.
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ed: pete, i'm just glad that car with the dog didn't roll over. pete: keep it going. ed: we can keep this going all day. the media is issuing their own verdict even before there is a vote. >> two weeks of testimony, 12 witnesses, and everything points in the same direction. >> if this were something that he would everywhere asking a jury, they would come back in a heart beat with a guilty verdict. >> leaving no question there was a pressure campaign against ukraine. >> directly implicating the president. >> the demolition of the republican talking points. there can be no question that republicans. >> ignoring the facts for favor. ed: the demolition. here with the media bias roundup from the week there was. independent women's forum and president of the district media group joins us now live. good to see you. >> good morning. ed: give us your quick reaction to all of the bias. >> well, are we really surprised that the same media outlets that pushed a russian collusion narrative two years now pushing a
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narrative that this is automatically a slam dunk for democrats? look, i there it is accurate to report that you did have witnesses who testified that said there was a quid pro quo. even some democrats are -- or excuse me some republicans are out there saying that that did take place. the reporting is to say that automatically that must mean there was criminal intent. that this was for a personal gain by donald trump. and that was not proven. so, i think when it comes to the reporting of this, it has been unfair to the president, we have to see how this political process really plays out. and the reality is, when it comes to the reporting of it, there may be many americans out there who are not happy how it's been -- how the spin is going. ed: no doubt about it. press had this story today about -- this week about the number of children in migrant detention and then they realized that actually the numbers were from the obama administration. so then they put out this tweet. afp withdrawing this story. the author of the report has clarified his figures do nly iny
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yation-related u.s. detention. but the total nun of children in migration-related u.s. detention in 2015. we will delete the story. beverly, they didn't realize, maybe, that barack obama was in charge when all those kids were in detention. >> apparently it's not news anymore because it was in the obama administration. look, did you have some outlets offer retractions that retractions rarely get the same amount of eyes on it as the original story. fortunately fox news is covering it today. but here's the other part. even reuters, one of those outlets that did print this story, they are not even putting a new story out there to say these are the numbers under the obama administration. the reality is, is that often something isn't news unless it's anti-trump. ed: right. it's like that photo of cages turned out to have been a photo from the obama administration. they didn't like to talk about that. beverly hallberg, thanks for coming. >> in thank you. ed: black friday less than one week away. you don't need to wait in line to get those deals? how about a beer machine for just 30 bucks?
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really? kurt irick is alreadytesting ite cyberguy. he has other deals just for "fox & friends" viewers. i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424.
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♪ rachel: we are less that be one week away from america's biggest shopping day of the year, black friday. rick: kurt the cyberguy is here with the deals to look out for. kurt: we scanned the ads. best buy is leading off with this one apple ipad, seventh generation 32 gigabyte. 10.2-inch retina display wifi poddle 249. you will save $80 when this comes out from best buy when they start hittings. it was originally 329. so it's going to be 249. the watch is a series 3. so not the newest and latest one, it's still a brand new watcher is advice 338-millimeter size. $129. it's never been that cheap. it's $70 off what already was reduced to 199. >> i love. this because it's hard to find things for teenage girls. and this is something they would really like. kurt: i'm sorry, guys like this, too. women are drawn to this but so are men. this is just the cleanest
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technology for cleaning your face. so, you get 650 uses between charges on these. it has t sonic vibrations that clean while you are doing -- so in a minute you will have like the cleanest skin. >> i'm like a bar of soap guy and i don't buy into this stuff until i actually use it. okay i could do. this. rachel: you have one for the mask. ed: teenagers may want this but they shouldn't have it. it goes to the adults. kurt: november 26th from 15 to 35% off. so november 26th. rachel: where at in. >> foreo.com. this is exclusive to us here at fox. this is the hopsy beer machine. it's free. 100 machines. pay 29.99. get this machine for free and get two glasses that they are charging 29.99 for. >> makes the beer really cool. >> go to hopsy dot beer/fox
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black friday. ed: kurt the cyberguy, thank you. in the meantime, joe biden lashing out at senator lindsey graham. the threat to the senator is next. ♪ yeah, and he wanted someone to help out with chores. so, we got jean-pierre. but one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with renters insurance. ♪ yeah, geico did make it easy to switch and save. ♪ oh no. there's a wall there now. that's too bad. visit geico.com and see how easy saving on renters insurance can be.
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♪ who will save your soul ♪ when it comes to the powers now ♪ ed: i love this song. rachel: i like it, too. ed: jewel. old one several years. rachel: it's aging all of us. ♪ pete: na na that jewel is great. come on, she is a 90's girl. ed: rachel hasn't been here recently. have you got to let him go. rachel: i think he might have been drinking some of
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that beer in the last segment. pete: nope. hands up. didn't drink. ed: we decided we are going to let someone in the audience 9:00 eastern pick the song. pete: can you always count on from ed henry. he is going to slow the mood down: you do. frank sinatra and now lisa. we have to pick it up a little after ed's music but good pick. ed: absolutely. rachel: good intro to joe biden's story. ed: he has been called sleepy joe by the president. now he is firing away at lindsey graham. here is what lindsey graham is up to. we have had two weeks now' open impeachment hearings. and republicans feel like there is still not impeachable offense. they are saying what happened to the witnesses that the republicans in the house wanted to call? they never got called like hunter biden, like burisma officials. board members and all the rest. so republicans on runs the senate. lindsey graham head of the senate judiciary. i want documents about lobbying by burisma phone
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calls that man on the left the former vice president joe biden he was running ukraine policy for barack obama while his son on the right there hunter biden was on the board making over $80,000 a month. pete: he said he knows nothing about it. he didn't really talk about it. ed: several phone calls back and forth between the then vice president and poor chen co-who was the president of ukraine within days of burisma being put under investigation. they want answers, lindsey graham does but joe biden is not happy about it. rachel: no, in fact, joe biden is latchin lashing out, ta look. >> i'm disappointed and quite frankly i'm angered by the fact. he knows me. he knows my son. he knows there is nothing to to do. trump is now essentially holding power over him. that even the ukrainians wouldn't yield to. ukrainians would not yield. to, quote, investigate biden. there is nothing to investigate about biden or his son. lindsey is about to go down in a way that i think he is going to regret his whole
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life. lindsey, i guess, i am just embarrassed what you are doing for you. i mean, my lord. pete: i have a feeling lindsey graham is going to get overwhelmingly reelected in the conservative state of south carolina in 2020 and sent back to the senate. of course they are former colleagues. they have been friends. that's publicly known. but in this moment i bet lindsey graham is pretty embarrassed to the extent that joe biden has caved to the mob and his own party running after impeachment and never thought, never anticipated from the beginning, well, if we pivot from the witch-hunt of russia and then we go to the ukraine, what if that actually exposes our so-called frontrunner in the middle of a campaign. on an issue that's much easier to understand. you watch these two weeks of hearings, you are learning about ukrainian foreign policy and all this other stuff. if all you have to understand is nepotism to understand what hunter biden benefited from being associated with joe biden. that's what is coming out. lindsey graham -- listen, the republicans control the senate. now it's their time to control the discussion.
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you had yours. welcome to the lindsey graham show. rachel: sounds like a veiled threat. maybe not so veiled. he is going to regret it. ed: he is going to go down. rachel: by the way, just juxtapose that with last week the week before last with the hearings with the ukrainian former ambassador when donald trump was mean tweeting in the middle of her hearing they said oh my god is he threatening her. this is far more direct. rudy giuliani put out a letter. we talked about earlier. in which he said it sounded like a bad scene from the godfather what joe biden was trying to do to lindsey graham. going to talk to rudy giuliani 12 noon eastern today in an exclusive. rudy giuliani used to run the city of new york, of course, as mayor. there have been these anti-police protests. they have been going on for weeks now. have you heard people saying this is not anti-police. they are just protesting subway fares here in new york city.
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signs say bleep the police tells you what they want to do. pete: looking at images of a protest that happened last night. they got a little rowdy. if you look at the signs. as ed had talked about. the protests are supposed to be about the fact that the nypd is now cooperating to enforce fare jumpers in the subway. turns out if you want to ride the subway pay the 2.25 or whatever it is to actually run it. rampant in the city that people jump the turn styles. there has been violence in the subways. and sort of uncontrolled scenes down there. so the nypd is stepping. in what you get is this massive reaction which shows this isn't about fare jumping at all. anti-police sentiment deep within many and many on the left. it's percolated into the conversation overall. you got a guy like bloomberg running for president who ran on stop and frisk supporting the police now apologizing group like this
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bleep the subway fares. anyway, speaking of bloomberg, he is now entering the race with a lot of money. ed: sort of unofficially. he hasn't officially gotten. in is he still mulling it. pete: when are you officially in that's an honest question. >> sooner or later he has to be. in the filing deadlines are coming up. that's why he first put a toe in the water. the alabama filing deadline coming up. either going to be on the ballot or not. but you could get on the ballot in some states and still not officially run. sort of continue to mull it. he is putting some of his money where his mouth is, right? rachel: if you are putting millions of dollars in, you are in, right? pete: $30 million, largest ad purchase in any presidential so the so much the president mad about it. because the president has said is he little mike. i'm thought worried about
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him. the democrats are actually mad they think bloomberg is trying to buy their primary and they ain't happy, watch. >> that's a lot of money. that's a lot of dough. money gives people a competitive advantage. >> anybody in america who has ever been involved in politics especially if they have a billion dollars thinks they can beat trump. >> your qualifier should not be money. it should not put you at advantage other candace. >> i'm not going to be able to compete with bloomberg or steyer i believe people want something different than another wealthy person in the white house. >> you have people vs. money, i will take people every single day. you cannot buy passion and that's going to be what's missing from his campaign. ed: andrew yang has been doing quite well by going to the people and making it a populist campaign and not being about money. amy klobuchar there from minnesota was talking about bloomberg and steyer and tom steyer another billionaire. he has been spending millions on online and tv ads. still at zero or 1% in
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places like iowa. the money doesn't matter. rachel: that's one. things that i loved about the 2016 election it proves that money wasn't the be all, end all. hillary clinton, outspent donald trump i don't know by how many fold. several fold. and donald trump still won. ed: he had a twitter account and he was driving the message. rachel: the passion, he is right about that. passion matters,. >> we didn't play a sound clip billionaires able to spend their own money in a race. it shows you how fractured the democratic primary is right now. we had a whole week of this impeachment inquisition on capitol hill. then on wednesday night they tried to have a debate. lowest rated one they had. there is still no frontrunner or winner from that. joe biden is still stumbling around. now you have bloomberg throwing his money in and andrew yang was right. you cannot buy passion. you cannot buy a rationale for a candidacy or excitement. and everyone is looking around saying why -- how is bloomberg the savior on the
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horizon. rachel: so boring. >> ed: brian brenberg was pointing out some of these moderates like amy klobuchar are worried that bloomberg is going to come in and take him out in that moderate lane which is already pretty muddled. watch. >> they are talking about we have got to get money out of politics. the reason that booker and klobuchar don't like that because they can't get money into politics. they can't raise any money. their democratic rivals, by the way, can. you can raise money if you are a democrat. just not if you are in these kind of mushy center spots that a klobuchar is in. they look at bloomberg and they say he is going to push us out. sanders loves. this this is how he raises his money. his fundraising hauling is going to go up because of bloomberg. is he very happy to have another billionaire in the race. pete: it has been interesting to see sanders. he had the heart attack. he has moved his way back into viability. rachel: he has passion. he is authentic lay socialist. authenticity counts. >> dnc dribbled out our fundraising wasn't so go and
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rnc outraised him. nobody focused on it because it was debate night and impeachment hearings all week. the d.c. is having money problems. pete: interesting. rachel: thanks. pete: maybe bloomberg should give to the dnc. rachel: turn now to your headlines. police arrest a suspect accused of fatally shooting a deputy. gunned down while on augusta georgia earlier this week. 37 officers have been shot and killed in the line of duty just this year booted from buckingham, according to a new router, prince andrew has been forced to move out of his palace office. stepping down royal duties. this comes as the duke of york faces intense criticism for an interview in which he defended his friendship with convicted sex offender jeffrey epstein. the prince has also denied accusations of sexual contact with a teenager. buckingham palace has not commented.
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upcoming work about justice kavanaugh being slammed. "the washington post" editor is releasing supreme ambition. brett kavanaugh and the conservative takeover. among her claims, she says the former supreme court justice anthony kennedy suggested president trump consider kavanaugh for the high court. but sources say that is false. and kennedy never gave unsolicited advice about the supreme court candidate. "the washington post" declined to comment. thanksgiving is around the corner, turns out most people can only survive a few hours of family time during the holidays. >> totally awesome. and tank tank tank and tank tank. move yourself on the drum. that is such a great scene in that movie. that's awesome. rachel: what's the name of that movie again? the break-up. it's a great movie. motel 6 survey finds it takes less than four hours before the average american
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needs to escape their relatives. one in four people also report hiding in their relatives' home to get some alone time. pete: 100 percent. rachel: motel 6 is saying hey if you really need a break, get a room for cheap at motel 6. pete: problem is it all lingers there is the meal and then there is the hanging. rachel: a cappella singing. ed: more than one in four must be hiding. pete: definitely. let us know about that email. do you hide from your family on thanksgiving. friends@foxnews.com. cutting through old fencing. border patrol busted them. isn't this proof we need a new border wall? acting cbp commissioner mark morgan is on deck. ed: removing red and blue cars to try to keep the try -- g red and blue cards to keep the holidays pc free.
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pete: welcome back. border patrol agents busting 16 illegal immigrants after a smuggler cut a huge portion of old border wall allowing them to cross into california. rachel: this comes as the trump administration is working to build new border wall along the u.s. border. joining us now with an update on that progress is acting cbp commissioner mark morgan. mark, thanks for joining us this morning. >> you bet. rachel: there is a lot of questions about it. is the wall actually getting built? >> it absolutely is. right now, rachel, we built
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over 85 miles of brand new wall. and, pete, you know, a few minutes ago, you absolutely said it correctly. you put it in two pillars. there is areas where there is no new wall vehicle and bad people rolling across. other areas where it's ineffective and they can cut through it and go through. every mile that we build this new wall we are absolutely giving the men and women of border patrol a fighting chance continue to crease their capacity to impede deny and interdict bad things and bad people coming into this country. pete: common sense. if there was no wall there at all they would have spread. 85 miles per hour. previously 76 reported. you are saying since we talked to you last the number has increased. >> the army corps of engineer is expediting the process every single day and they're building more miles of wall each week. we are still on track, we hope, you know, to get between 400 and 450 miles of new wall by the end of 2020. pete: absolutely. well, mark, i have to ask you about a second story.
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rachel did an interview with a wonderful woman whose son was killed by illegal immigrant. convicted of murder and sent to prison. recently he was released from prison and was deported by ice but almost didn't happen because it was a sanctuary jurisdiction. without the mother fighting for the rights of her son, who she will never have back on this earth, he wouldn't have been deported. talk to us by which the process of someone like that could actually slip through the cracks and be released? >> first of all, thank you so much for "fox & friends" to continue to talk about this. this mother, what an incredibly strong woman and strong mother for what she did. this is what the american people need to understand. this is happening in sanctuary cities every single day. this man killed her son, murdered her son. and because of sanctuary laws, sanctuary cities, this individual was going to be released into this city. they will not work with ice to allow them to do their job and remove this person that's here illegally that
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killed an american citizen. that is outrageous. that is incredulous. we should all be standing up pushing back saying this is wrong. our cities are less safe because of these laws. i absolutely comengsded this woman incredibly strong. rachel: powerful story, joe biden was confronted by protesters recently over the deportations that were done under the obama administration. take a look at what his reaction was to those protesters. [shouting] >> 3 million people deported and separated from their families. >> you should vote for trump. you should vote for trump. pete: so the answer is if you are talking about deportations and you are serious about it, just vote for trump because i'm not. >> look, i'm not gonna comment from the law enforcement perspective. i'm not going to comment on, you know, anything that a political individual says at this point.
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but what i will say is that what's happened on southwest border is a crisis. and it's not just about those who are coming to this country illegally. it's also the national security crisis. you had tom homan on here yesterday. he talked about that specifically. he was spot on. this country has been inundated and flooded with drugs, every single day that are killing american citizens every single day. 68,000 people last year. this is absolutely not only humanitarian crisis, but an national security crisis that we need to stop. rachel: mark, the protester was saying more people were deported under obama than trump. i think some trump supporter fers might want to know why that's the case, why aren't there more people being deported under trump when this is sort of his pivotal issue? >> that's a great point. what happened is the demographics and broken asylum laws, the broken legal framework, what happened is we saw an intake of family units settlement agreement we had to let them
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here into the united states never to be heard of again. again. pete: thanks. >> thanks; pete: how jussie smollett is going after the windy city once again. don't go anywhere. ♪oh there's no place like home for the holidays.♪ ♪'cause no matter how far away you roam.♪ ♪when you pine for the sunshine of a friendly gaze.♪ ♪for the holidays you can't beat home sweet home.♪ the united states postal service goes the extra mile to bring your holidays home. pi've had nineteen surgeries.l i'm 100% permanently disabled from the military and after i went in to aspen dental it was just like night and day. they told me they were gonna take some x-rays,
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♪ rachel: we are back with a fox news alert. tensions high in hong kong as the city gears up for its first election after months of a pro-dome crazy protest. this as campus siege has protesters held up for nearly a week inside of a university nears an end. jonathan huntington is live in hong kong ahead of the high stakes election. jonathan? >> rachel, these district council elections are not for powerful positions in themselves. they will send a very powerful message as to what the people of hong kong think of the 5-month-old pro-democracy protest. as the sun set over hong kong today on the last evening before voting gets underway, there was an eerie sense of calm. almost as if the entire city is holding its breath. pro-democracy activists believe they will do very well in these elections.
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listen here. >> we will have a far more better turnout than four years ago with solidarity and unity and how international allies around the world stand with hong kong. hong consciousists never walk along. i believe [inaudible] will stand with protesters. >> last minute campaigning was going on throughout the day today on the streets of hong kong. those lawmakers here who support beijing say that voters should say no to violence by voting for establishment candidates. i asked one of those pro-beijing lawmakers, regina if that meant essentially casting a vote in favor of china's central government. here's her answer. >> support order and stability in hong kong, you know. although there has been a lot of media coverage
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sympathetic to the protesters, there's a lot of anger on the part of the silent majority about the destruction these protesters are doing to our city. >> now, every single member of hong kong's 31,000 strong riot police force will be on duty on sunday when the polling stations open. it will be very interesting, rachel, to see what kind of effect that has on voter turnout. it will be a very tense day for sure. rachel? rachel: indeed it will. thank you so much, jonathan. pete: thank you, rachel. ed: jussie smollett back in the spotlight now suing the city of chicago. he is suing them for militias prosecution which he says caused him humiliation and extreme distress. lawyers for the actor filing a counterclaim to the city's lawsuit seeking $100,000 for the investigation into the hoax. does he have a case? let's ask former prosecutor
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and criminal defense attorney robert beonky, you are expert on militias prosecution whermaliciousprosec. how can jussie smollett, who caused this hoax, claim that somehow the prosecution was malicious. >> is he put in a hard an rock d hard case. they filed the case against him. because kim foxx sealed the record. the mayor and chief want their money back. evidence filed a counterclaim in response to that he has no case here. under illinois law to have a malicious prosecution you have to show that they actually misrepresented or falsified something to the prosecutor that led to the charges and, ed, this cases was presented by kim foxx to the grand jury, the good citizens of cook county, and they came out with an 18-count indictment and to the shock of a person like me who ran a prosecutorial agency, out of nowhere it's dismissed. the record is sealed. the mayor is thrown under under the bus and police chief thrown under the bus.
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because she did that, she opened the door to smollett filing this claim although it's never going to work. these did nothing that was false or misrepresented. ed: city wanted to recoup the money cost of fake where maga went after him. >> see the fact because of the suit the city filed. here is my warning as a defense lawyer now, that represents people that are high profile capacities that are being charged in a civil case. is he now subjecting himself to a deposition where no holds bar they can ask him any question they want, so mr. smollett, be careful. you may wind up back in handcuffs after those depositions. i'm just saying. ed: wow, that's very interesting. we reached out to smollett's attorney. have not heard back yet whether this may boomerang and backfire on him. we reached out to the city of chicago; really amazes that he, smollett thinks this was malicious by the prosecution when he made it
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up. robert bianchi, thank you. >> you got it. ed: susan rice is now defending joe biden and his family ties to ukraine. we'll discuss her defense of the former v.p. next. ♪ manipulate my decision ♪ baby, there's nothing holding me back ♪ ♪
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pete: as house democrats wrap up their public impeachment inquiry -- i meant hearings. former national security advisor susan rice is sharing her main takeaways and defending joe biden. she says a new op-ed and i quote: when vice president biden threatened to hold back economic assistance unless a corrupt ukrainian prosecutor was removed, he was acting in support of bipartisan, american european and international monetary fund policy to cush official corruption in ukraine. mr. biden did it openly, transparently and not, as mr. trump has falsely claimed, to protect his son hunter: thank you all for being here this morning. >> thanks for having us. pete: let me start with you. what do you say to susan rice? >> i think democrats are delewding themselves if they think joe biden is not
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implicated in all of this. i think the impeachment hearings have been incredible bad for the biden family because, you know, as opposed to the arguments they are try to make about president trump and his actions on ukraine, as the arguments about joe biden and his son are much easier to understand, i think, for the public. it's really easy to understand sort of this old swamp culture where, you know, sons of vice presidents made a bunch of money off of foreign governments simply because of who their dad was. and so i think that this has given joe biden a really bad look. if democrats want to falsely claim that this doesn't really affect them or any kind of inquiry into this matter is a false one, i think that they are under estimating how much the public might care about this. pete: robert, we will get to you in a second, i promise. joseph, this entire week, this entire argument, in what direction is it moving as far as people perceiving it. >> it's going backwards. backwards into time. first we started off with democrats saying we have a quid pro quo. and then by the time we got to monday they were talking
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about bribery. by the time we got to friday they were talking about obstruction of justice. basically democrats can't pick an argument they want, which stems from the fact that they said before trump even took the oath of office, that they wanted to impeach this man. they wanted to get him out of office. they had another individual who said words that we can't repeat on television about what they wanted to do to him. so, look, democrats really can't talk about this in the framework of justice. this is not about justice. this is about trying to win the election in 2020 because they realize the candidates they put up can't do it. pete: robert, do you think the democrats and joe biden specifically anticipated this kind of scrutiny when they went down the road of ukraine after they weren't able to get anything on russia? >> well, one against three this morning. pete: we will give you a time. >> usually it's a little even. usually 1 against 4. i think g.o.p. talking points. we have to look at the impeachment inquiry for what it was. we had foreign service people that were nonpartisan come in. fiona hill and ambassador
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taylor. i know you have a lot of respect for someone like ambassador taylor former vietnam vet. to say listen to them, i think that they are speaking truth to power. we may not like from the left or the right what came out of this, but it's clear that there was a real impeachment inquiry. i think we need to hear what happened what ambassador bolton has to say or possibly what secretary pence has to say. with respect to joe biden. i mean, listen, this has been debunked. i don't know how many times with conspiracy theories. my view as a family guy, we go down slippery slopes and we start bringing in the family. pete: you have a guy like lindsey graham who is a friend of joe biden. >> would not want to bring in his family. and i have a loft respect. pete: family has been brought into a lot of things. if you have a guy like lindsey graham a long-time friend of joe biden who is now the chair of the senate judiciary committee saying we have real questions about conversations joe biden had. so, you could dig into the details or you can say has this done damage to the perceived democrat frontrunner that nepotism is at play here.
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>> pete, two things to unpack there one, lindsey graham has changed his tune. we can put a lot of things he said about a lot of different people. with respect to vice president biden, i actually think this week with the impeachment inquiry actually helped him, because that's what the polls are showing because they want civility, okay, back in what's going on in this country and joe is a decent man. pete: was adam schiff a show of civility? >> we have democrats clearly watching different hearings from the rest of america. just to be very clear right here, democrats said that ambassador sondland was going to place a smoking gun in the hands of the pump. he clearly said at 10:34 a.m. eastern time that president trump never told him specifically that he was going to be the one that was actually going to engage in any quid pro quo. he specifically said that he, on his own behest, because he wanted to, quote, unquote, clear a logjam beings that he took it upon himself to engage in a quid pro quo and pull aside unprompted with ukraine.
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we have headlines on networks that we won't mention that have actually acted as if somehow there was some type of egregious activity that was literally placed at the feet of president trump. it didn't happen. so, result 3459ly, right now, what we need to be talking about is the fact that democrats basically decided to engage in the ukrainian witch-hunt, that landed at the foot of not president trump, but at the feet of their nominee, their frontrunner, actually joe biden who now basically has been cannibalized by this incredibly, incredibly partisan witch-hunt led to democrats don't know what they are going to do. pete: alexandria we will get to you, we will pretend like we are one big tv family right now for three or four minutes. obviously not a lot of agreement at this table between you, robert, and a couple of republicans. but, interest is uno, you know the game uno, card game? >> i now know it. pete: have you played it. >> i now know of it. pete: new game out that has removed the blue and red cards because they want to keep thanksgiving politics
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free. nonpartisan. so, alexandria, are we at the place where gimmicks could help repair the differences that we have seen on display here with our television family? >> you know, one would hope that at thanksgiving ander holidays we could refrain from politics for just a moment. that's maybe beyond expectation at this point. look, i think that we are in a highly polarized time. i think the advent of social media and, you know, and 24/7 news media has made it difficult for people to sort of let go and unplug. i think if a game wants to try to help us do that i'm not opposed. pete: robert, can uno heal us? >> uno is not going to heal us. it's a fun gimmicky idea. sports and films we like. unfortunately sports, media and thought third lane is now politics it's s. not going to move away from the thanksgiving table. people are going to bring
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them up. we wake up to it, we go to sleep to it. it would be nice if we were just talking about sports and tv and family stuff, but we are not going to. pete: ain't going to happen. and we are watching oftentimes two very different stories of the same event. it will be interesting to watch this whole process, if it moves to the senate to be controlled by republicans. i think you will have an entirely different discussion that's happened so far. robert, alexandra and thanks for coming. >> thanks. ed: vice president mike pence has made an unannounced president in iraq. met with troops ahead of thanksgiving air base about 100 miles west of baghdad. this coming into our newsroom comes at protests aimed at changing the country's political system have shaken the region. the vice president trying to stabilize that government. first visit as vice president of the country. less than 2 4urs hours after a rocket was fired at the green zone where the u.s. embassy is in iraq. gives you an idea of the stakes on the ground there. vice president there visiting u.s. troops.
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in the meantime, a federal judge has awarded an american journalist and his family nearly $180 million in a lawsuit against iran. jason rezaian was held hostage in the country for more than 500 days. as iranian officials tried convincing the u.s. to release iranian prisoners. the judge agreed that the reporter for "the washington post" was tortured and denied sleep or medical care. it's unclear how or if that money will actually be paid. and an attorney for anthem northeasterly sometimes quarterback colin kaepernick says two things are allegedly looking closely at signing him. he held a private workout you will remember last week after refusing to participate in nfl showcase. kaepernick has not played in a league since 2016 when he sparked some protests over. those are your headlines. rachel? rachel: thank you, ed. california craziness, taxpayers are paying millions of dollars for the state to resist the trump
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administration. we're going to have more on that next. stay with us. ♪ ♪ 're all stressed. (honk!) i hear you sister. that's why i'm partnering with cigna to remind you to go in for your annual check-up, and be open with your doctor about anything you feel - physically and emotionally. but now cigna has a plan that can help everyone see stress differently. just find a period of time to unwind. a location to de-stress. an activity to enjoy. or the name of someone to talk to. to create a plan that works for you, visit cigna.com/mystressplan. cigna. together, all the way.
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so you can... retire better. costs taxpayers 21 million bucks. here to discuss "washington times" opinion editor the one and only charlie hurt. good morning, charles. >> good morning, ed. ed: turns out no free lunch learned this lesson in california all the free benefits they want to give out. now these lawsuits against the president many of which get knocked down are costing taxpayers a a lot of money. >> they sure do cost a lot of money. of course a lot of them do get knocked down as you point out. and underscores this thing that we are seeing more and more with democrats these days. they real will h really would rr
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posture than legislate. not just in california. when you look at what is going on here in congress with this crazy impeachment pursuit, the house democrats have -- they have issued more subpoenas against -- in order to pin something on donald trump than they have passed legislation that has gone on to become laws. and to my mind, itunder core scores just how much they would rather make a point, make a political point than actually get anything done. and you have perfectly good legislation that would pass the house, pass the senate, like the canada, mexico trade deal. ed: um-huh. >> democrats refuse to bring it up because they would rather spend all this time talking about impeachment. ed: they say they will eventually get to it now nancy pelosi is saying maybe usmca won't come up until 2020. the trump travel ban, they filed a lawsuit protecting daca and status for people
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here protecting sanctuary cities. fighting family separations at the border, and plans to construct the border wall. now, wouldn't democrats say at least in some of those cases like the travel ban that they had principled disputes with the administration. >> sure. ed: even if the president didn't like it. >> absolutely. you know, that's obviously the intent of the courts. but, when you look at the number of these cases, and some of the cases, you know, whether they are arguing in some places about whether a courthouse can be a sanctuary, where ice cannot go and arrest an illegal, you know, that goes way beyond principle into simply trying to make a bruit political point that i think wouldn't even float in regular democratic circles, much less general elections. ed: david basara told our affiliate i don't wake up fight with the administration. i would like to put that through "the washington post" pinocchio test.
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a lot of them do. >> we are seeing it play out in the house of representatives these days. ed: no doubt about it. charlie hurt, thanks for coming in this weekend. >> you bet, ed. ed: we are gearing up for the holidays. that includes lesson on fire safety. live demo with some hero first responders. that is next. i'm your 70lb st. bernard puppy, and my lack of impulse control, is about to become your problem. ahh no, come on. i saw you eating poop earlier. hey! my focus is on the road, and that's saving me cash with drivewise. who's the dummy now? whoof! whoof! so get allstate where good drivers save 40% for avoiding mayhem, like me. sorry! he's a baby!
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pete: as families get to work on decorating their homes for christmas, what many don't realize is how quickly a christmas tree can become a deadly fire hazard. rick: our next guest knows the tragedy too well. in 2015 she lost six family members including her brother when the christmas tree caught fire. rachel: fire safety advocate with voices joins us now. along with chief ray sprinkler association. welcome to you both. >> thank you, thank you. >> share your story and why you so fashion that the about. this i'm passionate because i lost family in the fire actually started by electrical fire which egg nighted the christmas tree. pete: sort of like what we are looking at right here. >> exactly. it will go so quickly. the thing that i realize and i want people to know howfsz far is i didn't realize it
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at the time. my family didn't realize how fast fire was. bottom line was, smoke detectors went off 3:29 in the morning. by 3:31 flames were shooting through the roof of the home. >> it happens that fast. what are we looking at. >> now we have the fire with fire sprinklers one room without. so there the fire sprinkler is already activated. the temperature here in this room is still contained, whereas this is going, you know, see the flash over? so fire is fast with synthetic materials with the modern codes. pete: over 1,000 degrees. >> it's 1100 degrees. okay. go ahead guys, hit it. we can't thank the fdny enough here. they will hit this fire. rachel: i can feel that heat. this fire is out. that, we know, you don't have time. rachel: it's insane. chief, i have -- we tut our own tree. we do a lye tree.
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what are the tips are you have for live trees? >> have you got to keep them watered. do it for don program. rachel: the lights? >> tree unattended, turn the tree off. unplug something better than just turning them off. it's just safer. >> is there a place where you can go to get all the tips that you guys have around how to keep safety around the holidays? [cheers] >> thank you, guys. fire advocates.org. >> exactly, thank you. >> it gives you an idea why you need sprinklers in your home. the room on the right within seconds it was put out. now, the room on the left, once the firefighters were there, it was put out quickly it. could take five minutes, 10 minutes. >> they don't all go off. you will notice in the other room. those rooms are still perfectly fine. the room right next to it. rick: is it possible to retrofit your home with sprinklers? >> it is possible. but new construction is what we advocate but it is
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possible to retrofit. retrofit high rise residential that's one of the big things we push as well. pete: cher, chief, thank you so much. we want to thank the fdny, too. their still putting it out over. >> there we couldn't have done it without fdny. pete: amazing. rick: we are thinking but and your family this holiday: a lot of other news to get. to say you hear the noise out here. the long awaited ig report on possible fisa abuse isn't even out yet. some in the media already trying to down play it. rachel: and the iconic victoria's secret fashion show canceled. can anything survive today's cancel culture? >> you are, you are. ♪ ♪ when everything i'll ever do ♪ i do for you ♪
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>> the weekend. >> so glad you're here. >> we are a lot of breath. >> for the weekend, that could have been our karaoke song for this christmas but i don't think the christmas party is at karaoke places. this year we saying karaoke working for the weekend. you are invited this year. all of you are invited. you are a busy woman. >> the inspector general of the justice department has been busy for a long time. we been anticipating when will this report about fisa abuse,
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and it looks like we have a date, december 9th. the president has been saying this will be a big deal, so his critics trying to downplay it. what is leaked out so far as at least one fbi official, we don't know there's more but at least one fbi official doctored some documents to make sure carter page could be surveilled by the us government back in the obama administration and that sounds like a big deal. >> carter page says once they surveilled me they can survey of everybody in his orbit. >> that's a big part of the allegation. how why did he go, how high did the knowledge go. the president of the united states was on our program yesterday for 15 minutes and part of what he talked about his this ig report coming out. >> you have a fisa report coming out which the word is it is historic. that is what i hear. if it is historic you will see something and perhaps even more importantly you have their am
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coming out shortly thereafter, he is the us attorney and he has announced it is criminal and we will see what happens. you have a lot of very bad people. a lot of people say deep state. i don't a deep state. they are bad sick people. >> sitting where he is, this is front and center in the inquisition we saw in the last couple weeks, the recognition, you feel like institutions of our government reused against you from the beginning and get to the bottom of that is central -- >> no way the fbi would do stuff like this. >> webinars in government, using tools we use to get bad guys, terrorists against him and his campaign but already the new york times downplaying and other outlets downplaying this fbi agent or fbi attorney who is caught up in this investigation saying he is just a low-level
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guy and by the way even though he did this they wouldn't of got away with this anyway. >> to criticize the fbi with robust claims of bias at the washington post, watchdog find political bias did not taint top officials running fbi's russia probe. got to wait for the facts to see if that is what it is but even if it is one official two officials at a low-level, mid-level, whatever level it is and they doctored documents to get surveillance how did that not show bias. >> the media in this town can use the word bombshell for what they saw over the last week, bias was not in the headlines if this were to have been a democrat president surveilled by a republican. instead this is what we learned about the mainstream media the last couple years, what they omit and what they include is how they assert their own bias.
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if they actually did cover it they would have to reeducate their viewers who never heard of this in the first place. they didn't report on it. >> we have matt whitaker, former acting us attorney general, says he hopes the ig report is going to restore confidence in the doj and fbi. here's what he had to say. >> it will be one of the more consequential inspector general reports we have seen in the last two decades. i think it is going to hopefully begin the process of a restoration of confidence in the department of justice and the fbi that has been lost through the mueller investigation and this carter page fisa situation and i hope they lay out as many facts as possible as to how we got here because there are so many open questions. obviously some conspiracy theories but i know the president has an briefed on a by william barr. i would expect this president
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saying this is going to be a big deal that it is a big deal. >> doesn't go all the way up to james comey and the fbi leadership and does it go to the obama white house and people like joe biden who happens to still be in the lead. he's been a shaky front runner in the 2020 democratic sweepstakes but if you look at the real clear politics polling average biden is holding firm and looks like elizabeth warren who had been surging is losing steam. >> that's the big take away from the latest real clear politics average which aggregates averages of polls across the country and notable that bernie sanders has passed elizabeth warren into second place. and was even in front of joe biden. to see the fact that she is sliding could be a reflection of many things that ultimately what has changed since then? release that massive $53 trillion medicare for all plan,
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couldn't explain how to pay for it and when asked if it is a priority, probably won't do it until my third year which is an attempt to back away from a bad policy. i'm struck by how fluid this field is on the democratic side. there may be a front runner in joe biden but there really isn't. >> no one is watching the debates. >> sanders and warren are in the same lane and taking from each other. how long will that happen and does that allow someone else to sneak in too? >> an interesting moment with elizabeth warren, she was confronted by pro-school choice activist who talked to her about you send your kids to private school, i want my kids to have the same opportunity. >> with a private school. >> he said my kids went to public school, she wants that, we called the warren campaign and they told us elizabeth's daughter went to public school,
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period so that backs up what she claimed but then they go on to say her son went to public school until fifth-grade meaning after fifth grade he went to private school. elizabeth, they say wants every kid to get a great education regardless of where they live which is why her plan makes historic investment in our public schools. i had that emphasis because they're trying to highlight public schools are great, so amazing but -- >> when they get a choice. >> i don't care where kids went to school but as you point out and as that activist was pointing out if she has a choice as a senator who has more money and means to send them to whatever school she wants why do others not have the same right. >> president obama was guilty of the same hypocrisy, send kids to a private school, the most expensive private school in the country at the same time shutting down scholarship opportunities and charter school opportunities for kids who don't have the same access or ability
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to get out of that working schools but you talked about the flip in the polls, these little lies, she tells little and big lies that a reflection of her inauthenticity. love bernie or not he is authentic and passionate and people are starting to double think what warren -- >> she did lie, you know precisely where your kids went to school and what type of school it is and everyone gets a choice, it is true but not actually. i don't know much about them but why can't my kids in the industry get the same choices as everyone else. >> very important, another one, fox news alert. mike pence made an unannounced visit to iraq this morning. >> the vp landrigan and airbase west of baghdad.
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>> live in washington, details about the latebreaking trip. >> mike pence arrived at 3:30 a.m. eastern time, 11:30 a.m. local almost a year after donald trump's surprise visit, the same way he went to iraq the day after christmas last year. it has become a tradition for the president and vice president to visit a war zone during the holidays, this comes days before thanksgiving. pence wanted to thank the troops deployed to iraq to make sure isis stays on the ground and keep an eye on neighboring iran. the concept of donald trump decided to keep roughly 500 us troops in northeast syria. the president wants out of what he calls endless wars, the pentagon has deployed 14,000 troops to the middle east since may, roughly half the board warships. the reinforcements were ordered after attack on merchant shipping and the shootdown of the us drone all blamed on iran. as a reminder of the ongoing tensions the aircraft carrier uss abraham lincoln into the
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persian gulf the first time since arriving in the region in may. additional us troops order to saudi arabia in october along with a detachment of b-1 bombers was another squadron of f 35 fighter jets recently arrived as well. hours before mike pence arrived in iraq france's defense minister criticize the trump administration for disengaging in the middle east and claim the recent attacks by iran went, quote, unanswered leading to the massive drone cruise missile strike on those two saudi oil facilities in september. also speaking the head of us forces in the middle east, general frank mckenzie warning iran could strike again. ran was on display this week when the new york times used hundreds of secret iranian intelligence cables outlining efforts of its equivalent of the cia to flip iraqi spies working in the us over to iran outing some cia informants in the process. mike pence's trip to iraq comes two month after shadowing the
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iranian general, pence is in iraq to thank us troops for serving over the holidays. >> troops love that and appreciate that. 24 hours ago there was a rocket fired in the green zone where the us embassy is supposed to be a safe zone but here we are many years after the iraq war. >> little-known facts, then colonel lindsey graham visited in 2012. >> so you know what it feels like. we will turn to your headlines overnight, 58 people were arrested during anti-police demonstrations in new york city. hundreds of protesters from the group blank the police flooding the streets and blocking roadways, this comes as new york's governor cuomo announces plans to add 500 police officers to patrol the subway system and
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crackdown on fare evasion. multiple police cars were vandalized, the nypd says protesters were arrested for blocking traffic and disorderly conduct. of former college student accused of encouraging her boyfriend to kill himself has pleaded not guilty. disturbing texts released in court to her boyfriend writing, quote, do everyone a favor and go expletive your self. the 22-year-old eventually jumped to his death from parking garage just hours before graduation. it is open season for wisconsin, state wildlife officials are encouraging hunters to keep an eye out for feral pigs and shoot or report them, any that you see. the pigs are considered a nuisance as they can dig up dirt while looking for food. there is no limit or time restriction on hard hunting and hunters won't even have to check if it is a regular or runaway pig.
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shoot away. those are your headlines. >> always wanted to go wild hog hunting. got to do it. anything, shoot on sight. >> might be a good time for you to come up to it. you are, you could come shoot pigs too. >> i want to see that. >> be like john kerry. >> what is that? >> not dick cheney. democrats are heading home for thanksgiving and now they have to face their constituents for focusing on impeachment and not the issues people care about. congressman michael walsh joins us on that live next. >> a colorblind boy sees, for the first time and you are not going to want to miss his emotional reaction that we will show you straight ahead. here's record-breaking news for veterans.
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hi dad. no. edon't try to get up. hi, i'm julie, a right at home caregiver. and if i'd been caring for tom's dad, i would have noticed some dizziness that could lead to balance issues. that's because i'm trained to report any changes in behavior, no matter how small, so tom could have peace of mind. we'll be right there. we have to go. hey, tom. you should try right at home. they're great for us. the right care. right at home.
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>> mike pence making an unannounced visit to iraq and meeting with troops ahead. the president and first lady visited dover airbase to honor the remains of two returning army officers killed in afghanistan. >> what do these visits mean to the troops overseas. green beret and former commerce michael walsh joins us to discuss. what does this mean to them? >> to see their commander-in-chief in the middle of the night, those remains, those bodies, that is, dignified transfer. they come in usually 2:00 or 3:00 am, not just a quick visit. at dover air force base, it is spending time with the families because it is the families that suffer.
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the reality is when we are over there, downrange, we love what we are doing, we are defending our country, putting our training in place, we love the men and women to the left and right but the families at home have to suffer in silence. they don't get the thank yous, the metals and everything else and for the president to get out there and spend time with them in their toughest most brutal moment. do you see anything on mainstream media about it? 0. now you have the vice president out there in the war zone, just fantastic and means the world to them. i was talking backstage about when president bush came out, the vice president, it means you are not forgotten and your commander-in-chief and the vice president have you front and center. >> you talk about the families. families also get the message that are men and women out there aren't forgotten. >> they get all bad choices. you don't come home or come home not quite the same as when we
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left and that is why in congress one of the biggest things we have been pushing is better benefits for goldstar families and take care of the families, that is a strategic issue as well, we are 18 years into these wars. i argue we are in a generational war with extremism and if the family start breaking our volunteer for start to breaking. >> the president and vice president are focused on the troops. we have all been seeing what washington dc is focused on. >> from afghanistan to the swamp. >> you and others are going to go back and face constituents. how are the voters reacting to what you have seen? >> they are frustrated. the floridians i talked to, this is across the spectrum, they are saying what happened to prescription drugs, what happened to the transportation and infrastructure, what happens to immigration reform, what happened to all those things that affect my life and people are frustrated because we are rolling into election season, 11 months away, let's settle this at the ballot box, this is partisanship and politics at its
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absolute worst and by the way we were just talking about our troops, we still don't today have a defense bill passed, a new authorization for the first time in 58 years. >> independent voters saying they don't care about impeachment and it appears to be turning against. >> when they hear continuing resolution that keeps the lights on but for the defense department it is nothing new. no new planes, no new ships, no new investments in artificial intelligence, you can't -- the chinese are not operating on continuing resolutions, they are not stuck, they are doubling and tripling their budget. i was just in panama and they bought at both sides of the panama canal. >> thank your service and happy thanksgiving. >> coldplay refusing to go on tour not because their music is old but because of climate change. is this taking a too far? part of your culture shock roundup coming up next. ♪
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great presentation, tim. could you email me the part about geico making it easy to switch and save hundreds? oh yeah, sure. um. you don't know my name, do you? (laughs nervously) of course i know your name. i just get you mixed up with the other guy. what's his name? what's your name? switch to geico®. you could save 15% or more on car insurance. could you just tell me? i want this to be over.
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>> some quick headlines, donald trump warning against banning flavored vaping product.
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>> the one thing i see, you watch prohibition, the alcohol, if you don't give it to them it will come here illegally. >> the president meeting with vaping industry execs and public health advocates in the wake of dozens of vaping deaths nationwide and this copy of the president's book the art of the deal tells the future. inside the front cover not a graph from 1987, calling himself the, quote, future president. the book sold for $1500 at an online auction. more than book signed by harry truman, fdr, jimmy carter and bill clinton. i wish i had known. it is official, the victoria's secret fashion show, the move after the runway show brought in the lowest ratings since it first aired in 1985. >> the lingerie company
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declining, and relatable models. is this cancel culture taking its toll. >> what are they doing. how women's bodies, this didn't work so well for gillette. giving victoria's secret credit, viewership is steadily declined, product sales steadily declined because these millennial don't mind victoria's secret to be sexy. >> the market is women. they don't enjoy women - it is a rack business model.
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>> men have -- >> i don't like watching that and i don't want my husband to watch it because his expectations are too high. >> a little bit of trouble for saying he wanted a certain model, transform a larger model so there is a backlash combined with millennials, very pc, very woke and this is not a part of their shopping east coast. they need to evolve if they want to stay relevant. >> they decided to put a hold on the tour over climate change. >> america is a land of conviction. chris martin and his crooners standing behind their belief system. to me it is a breath of fresh air because often times we see them banging their first about climate change and they from their buns on a mega yacht and speeding around in a ferrari.
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they are doing what they say they believe in. it makes some beautiful music. if you wants to go in an eco-from the solar power recording studio and makes music and some hits i'm all for it. he better -- i don't want to see him at apple and moses and gwyneth on a private jet. he better be on a bus or commercial flight, a boat powered by wind. >> we shall keep you posted. >> canadians may no longer call their youngest hockey players. wes to comply with pc culture. i never knew where that came from but it is what you call - >> the little guy. >> i delved deeper into this. this is and pc cancel culture. they have another category called bantam. the word midget is no longer acceptable and as a culture it is good to evolve. in this case it is okay.
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>> we are talking he we, not the midget. >> there going from youth category to an american system. this is stark contrast to new york and california, when you, female word dog of the word you are handcuffed in front of the paddy wagon in the wrong he, she, or they are straight off to jail. it is ridiculous. that is a little more pain. >> no one is labeling someone, the correct term if you're a little shorter, that is not a reason the category is being used in hockey. >> people in california saying this is less confusing to say this is 6 through 8. >> confusing bantam - >> the numbers, busy moms. world has generally gone too pc and wordsmithy but in this
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situation -- >> my voice will always be a little peewee. >> delete remain let us have dozens report getting sick. what do you need to do. >> helping to protect our troops every day. to experience their training firsthand. makes things easy. traveling lighter. taking a shortcut. woooo! taking a breather. rewarded! learn more at the explorer card dot com. it nice?ce. this is the most-awarded minivan three years in a row. the van just talked. sales guy, give 'em the employee price, then gimme your foot. hands-free sliding doors, stow 'n go seats, man, y'all getting a hook up and y'all don't even work here. pacificaaaaa!
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>> your shot of the morning putting the sins been on a stalking straw for this christmas. >> a silver mantel holder wants a split. >> my son been loves ranch dressing. i hope he is not watching because he is getting that. >> they protect them and keep them safe. >> some of these canine warriors at the joint base maguire in new jersey.
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>> we went to a firsthand look at canine training. she is here to tell us all about it. it was an incredible day. i can't wait to show viewers, take a look. ♪ >> what is the main mission for the working dogs? >> law enforcement and security. explosive narcotic and patrol detector dogs, anyone committing offenses is bringing contraband onto the base. the training they go through, they get 60 days of detection training and 60 days of patrol training learning basic stuff and then go through a certification process. >> the better our dogs train.
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how strong is a god's sense of smell. >> between 1000, 10,000 times stronger. if you put a pinch of salt in an olympic swimming pool. >> tell me about what you're going to build with these dogs, essential to your success. >> once you do it for a while you feel that and now it and see when it happens. >> as a handler you come in loving dogs but combat addiction. >>, try on the bite suit. >> we are cleared up, this is the bite suit.
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it is really heavy. i'm so excited i can't wait. make it fun for the god. we will be right there. >> in pretend gear. [screaming] >> i'm surprised. >> the anticipation is frightening. i hear him chomping at the bit, whining in anticipation. it is gnarly. to watch the dog, that is watching and needless it goes to
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my skin. i just remember hitting the ground. that was kind of awesome. i did? >> you look really scared. >> i was terrified but as terrified as i was my faith in those handlers was really paramount. those guys are incredible and i knew they were technically trained, the bond between the handlers and the dogs are unbreakable and they are an incredible asset. >> they are a combat multiplier, they do things we can't do, intimidate in ways we cannot, and when we did this earlier, our baghdad - >> incredible to see in person their speed. it is indescribable.
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it takes half a second, they are trained to detect narcotics, explosives and patrol which is the kind you see, three kind of training. >> now you know how abu bakr al-baghdadi felt. >> he was terrified. >> so uncomfortable. >> something on your head. >> you went down. people were like i only thought of it after. i knew the dog would only go for my arms. >> just watching it. we have a cold, not really cold, the rain moving in and storm, this is a storm across the southeast will continue to pull off to the east rapidly. behind it across the river
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valley and then across the southeast. this is the future radar of the southern sector of the storm throughout the day, this front goes through south florida, cools things down behind it, some quick showers on sunday. worst conditions on the northern side throughout the day today into tomorrow, rainy overnight in the mid-atlantic to the northeast, rough storm. behind that things are looking good. thanksgiving troubles at home i hear. a new study saying it takes four hours for the average american to get sick of their relatives. i'm surprised it takes that long during the holidays. three hours and 54 minutes. when americans are like timeouts, done with uncle joe. >> had gone down? is getting worse and worse? >> that is an interesting setting. >> now it is four hours, it goes
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down to three hours. >> trump's name comes up, everyone -- >> that might be the average american but i disagree. i honestly love every moment with my family. i can't wait for thanksgiving. >> never a moment you are like stop, i got to go, you are not one of the 75% of people who watches tv? >> maybe that i am the youngest and i'm used to the teasing and everything -- >> and back to -- >> we are -- >> our viewers -- three hours and 54 minutes. i'm looking for a safe room, have motel 6 which did the study, leave the light on. >> email from marcia, my family disagrees about light or dark meat about all 5 generations share religious and family
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values and love for the states, football. >> my family, everybody's different, every political persuasion, religious persuasion and tolerance to get along. >> that is a great example of the country. we had a segment on people getting along. >> what about locked in the living room for 12 hours. >> he knows - >> foxnews.com, continue the conversation. joe biden unleashing on lindsey graham. >> lindsay is about to go down in a way i think he will regret his whole life. lindsay, i just - i'm just embarrassed by what you are doing. >> and has said that to me before. >> we are spending thanksgiving. when you shop with wayfair,
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>> we are back with quick headlines, the cdc warning people not to eat romain lettuce as they expand the multistate salad recall. people have been infected with e. coli in 6 states. the contaminated lettuce was harvested in california and as a use by date from october 29th to november 1st. got to see this was a colorblind student in minnesota sees color for the very first time. [laughter] >> come here. >> donald jones breaking down in tears when he gets his first colorful look at the world around him. those glasses were a gift from his principal who is also colorblind. awesome story.
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>> let's hope the latest company turns over a new leaf. as democrats continue their impeachment push against the president lindsey graham requesting documents from the state department guarding hunter biden and ukraine. that gets strong reaction from joe biden. >> lindsay is about to go down in a way i think he is going to regret his whole life. lindsay, i just -- i am just embarrassed by what you are doing. >> you to react fox news contributor gerard murdoch. these two used to be friends with john mccain. the biden point of view is he has completely flipped. lindsey graham i would suppose is saying there are fair questions about hunter biden's business deals. >> you recall ambassador yavanovitch said in her briefing, one of the questions was how the response to a
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question about hunter biden and burisma, they took it seriously enough to prepare her for senate confirmation hearings, let's get those records and decide why they put the question in. it is not a crazy question. >> every one of the witnesses was asked about conflict of interest and they said they had questions was not that there was wrongdoing but they had questions. you have a new op-ed. wire democrats ignoring ukraine denial of pressure from the president did you talk about that op-ed? seems to me the president has said this again and again that even the ukrainian president is saying i was not under pressure. the democratic push back is what is the ukrainian president going to say? he needs this status from the president so maybe he is hiding how he feels. >> i outline 11 different instances ukrainian officials said we didn't see blackmailer feel pressure or feel extorted,
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we saw no connection with various meetings and so on. they didn't know security assistance had been delayed. they want to stay on trump's good side but they are smart enough to know if trump is not reelected they don't want to upset president sanders or president warren so there was no connection and point to these statements, we answered that, no further comments. rather than dig the hole deeper with 11 different statements from the foreign minister, the president. >> he is the president who actually sent lethal aid to ukraine which democrats say they want. >> they complain about a 55 day pause from the time it was supposed to get there and looking for possible corruption. under obama between the time the russians rolled in and obama left, 1066 days. a big difference. they got the lethal aid and blue up russian tanks as opposed to blankets and pillows. rob: the obama administration --
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contradict and coming in. comforting but not helpful. check it out, foxnews.com has the editorial. mike pence, the current vice president surprising our troops overseas ahead of thanksgiving. his message for the holidays coming up and we are cooking up our own turkey on fox. healthy tricks from the executive chef. ♪ i am a sole man ♪ i was so and up ♪ these days, we're all stressed. (honk!) i hear you sister. that's why i'm partnering with cigna to remind you to go in for your annual check-up, and be open with your doctor about anything you feel - physically and emotionally. but now cigna has a plan that can help everyone see stress differently. just find a period of time to unwind. a location to de-stress. an activity to enjoy. or the name of someone to talk to. to create a plan that works for you, visit cigna.com/mystressplan.
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>> everything skipping table every american will be grateful for our armed forces and particularly for those who have been on this front. >> we are hearing from mike pence for the first time as he surprises troops in iraq 100 miles west of baghdad and people upset about the slow pace of reforms. we will stay on tap throughout the day. >> we are 5 days from thanks giving day and this morning we are ripping up the deconstructed turkey dinner with america's oldest restaurant. >> dell monaco's executive chef, billy olivea.
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>> you have something historic? >> we have an in-house, you want to come to the restaurant, book him for a party or dinner for two and he will tell you the story of dell monaco. >> america's first restaurant. this is a big timesaver for people. >> we removed the breasts, the legs, you can see we have one here that we just tied up. a little salt and pepper, do some butter on top and it has time to talk. the white meat and dark meat a little bit differently. >> with the stuffing here. >> the leftover stuffing, they crisped up in a pan. >> the recipe is going to be online and all of a sudden we make this.
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>> what is the top line. >> in a pan. >> plenty of butter, chestnuts, a lot of bacon, italian sausage. >> give us the historical recipes. >> eggs benedict, dell monaco stake. tablecloth, printed venues, the first restaurant to hire women, first to allow women to congregate. there is a lot of history there. >> check it out. more "fox and friends" just moments away.
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>> rudy giuliani at noon eastern. back at work in two hours. >> it was great having you. >> i will be back here tomorrow. neil: investigating the investigators a former fbi lawyer said to be under, investigation for altering documents tied to the surveillance of a trump campaign aide. it comes as we await the release of the report on the origins of the russia probe itself. good morning, i am neil cavuto. you are watching cavuto live. mark meredith, where the president says the report will be the story.

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