tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 30, 2020 3:00am-6:00am PST
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jillian: i have cut my hand doing that before very slightly this someone bound for the super bowl. we will both be live somewhere else on tomorrow morning's show. jillian: i like it. have a good deal. have a good day. "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ we like it loud ♪ we like it ♪ the party won't be ready. steve: rob just mentioned that he and jillian will be somewhere else tomorrow as will we starting tomorrow. when you tune in to "fox & friends" the world's number one cable morning news show we will be wearing different outfits. we will be in the subtropics of miami for the super bowl where the chiefs will take on the 49ers. i'm from kansas city. ainsley: when you look at that picture we know where jillian will end up but we don't know where rob is going to be. brian: co-host. ainsley: going down with us is he going to iowa because the first caucus next week are they going to do the
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show at the same time? brian: we should work on that. i have got to work on the schedule. ainsley: it's a tease. you. steve: like much of the last two weeks a split screen show he will be in iowa and she will be in florida. brian: if you don't behave you will be in iowa, too. brian: as far as outfits all i will tell you something tight. steve: should be light instead of tight because it's warmer down there. brian: cold in the morning. steve: going to be in the 50's. speaking of mornings, the "new york post" has come out, as we have shown you their headlines, this is from the op-ed page and they summarized the bottom line we're going to go ahead and take a look at the graphic. the bottom line of impeachment day nine what fresh hell? so we heard a lot of questions and answers and today is going to be day two. the republicans believe, according to a number of news outlets, that they have the votes to block the witnesses. it looks like mitch mcconnell sat down with a face to face with lisa
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murkowski. she was tight-lipped when she left. she would not talk about it. everybody wants to hear the final day of questions then they will have a vote tomorrow whether or not there are going to be witnesses and then, perhaps, either to acquit the president or something else. don't know. ainsley: senator alexander said i'm not going to vote to call witnesses. mitt romney is going to. looking at mur cow is i to see how she will vote. brian: cory gardner. steve: senate said nope, i don't need witnesses. brian: cory gardner is going to do it. what's fascinating about the 8 hours yesterday and 8 hours today. i was not clear that they could ask themselves questions. first of off, i look great today can you read that out loud. production value to questions use the story further. they used it to pontificate about things they already told us 9,000 times. one of the most intriguing things was when you had mitt romney basically ask when did the president first get concerned about aid to the ukraine? he wanted to find out if it lined up directly with joe
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biden declaring i'm running for president if there was an overlap there our times had you adam schiff making things up like, for example, bribery. steve: as a charge. brian: it's not even a charge. one time i watched adam schiff say donald trump wanted to do this to please russia so he could build a moscow tower? what are you even talking about. it's farcical. if you don't have anything to say relevant you should be told to sit down. steve: why would they change what they have been doing all along. brian: because there are rules. steve: there are rules. you have the chief justice. in a moment we will tell you about an extraordinary ruling he made regarding the whistleblower. nonetheless, a lot of back and forth all day long. all 8 hours of it. if you missed it, we have summarized. here are some of the highlights. >> if president trump had more than one motive for his alleged conduct, such as the pursuit of personal political advantage, how should the senate consider more than one motive in its
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assessment of article 1? >> so once you are in to mixed-motive land, it's clear that their case fails there can't possibly be an impeachable offense at all. >> is it true that sean miss go, abigail grace and alleged whistleblower were employed by or detailed to the national security council during the same time period between january 20, 2017 and the present? >> we have no knowledge of that other than what's in those public reports and i don't want to get into speculating about that. >> if president obama had evidence that mitt romney's son was being paid $1 million per year by a corrupt russian company and mitt romney had acted to benefit that company, would obama have authority to ask that that potential corruption be investigated? >> the hypothetical is a bit off because it presumes that in that hypothetical that president obama was acting
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corruptly or there was evidence he was acting corruptly with respect to his son. brian: that is not a good answer, adam. you might want to retract that. ainsley: chief roberts asked what happened here they got to submit their questions both sides they got to read them out loud. they each got five minutes. five minute time limit on each answer. a total of 16 hours of questioning. it started yesterday. it will continue today. brian: just real quick. here is alan dershowitz. he is just talking in the big picture. he is getting criticism about how where he stands mainly because he is not standing on the left. listen. >> if a president does something which he believes will help him get elected in the public interest, that cannot be the kind of quid pro quo that results in impeachment. anything the house wants to do to impeach is impeachable. that's what's happened today. that places the house of
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representatives above the law. we have heard much no one is above the law. the house of representatives is not above the law. steve: damning words. yesterday at one point the president did send out -- did you know he is on twitter? he sent out a tweet that said game over. what he was doing was linking to a video taken by it was broadcast from radio free europe radio liberty in august of 2019. it's where john bolton actually talks about the phone call. and we are going to play a little bit of it. but it also talks apparently he says there was no quid pro quo. and he talks about how the united states would like to get rid of corruption and things like that. nonetheless, the president said game over after he saw this video. >> i will be meeting president zelensky. he and president trump have already spoken twice. the president called to congratulate president zelensky on his election and then on his success in the
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parliamentary election they were very warm and cordial calls. we are hoping that they will be able to meet in warsaw and have a few minutes together. ainsley: that's interesting. completely contradicts his forthcoming book. steve: which is so secret they can't publish it. brian: january 23rd. that is a different take on the meeting. they were supposed to meet in warsaw. they had this problem a natural disaster was looming so the president sent the vice president there. this could have all ended if they just met in warsaw but wasn't to be. so john bolton had a different take there. i don't like the idea of people making john bolton out to be a liar. he has sat on this couch before. he's not a liar. they have a differing of opinion. but, questioning his credibility, i don't think. ainsley: you are saying maybe the "new york times," maybe whoever reported that read the report and got something out of it that john bolton didn't say. brian: he could answer a question but not answer a question completely and not be a liar. but january 23rd, evidently, the white house in looking at his book sent a letter
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back to him and said mr. bolton, essentially, you got top secret things in this -- these passages. so you have got to take them out. it's typical. i'm glad you are letting us vet it because you have got to take this out. next thing you know these excerpts are out in the public mainstream because the "new york times" got a look at them. that's an interesting scenario to this john bolton's public letter yesterday. steve: in addition, because there is top secret stuff, did the "new york times" get access to the top what the nsc says is top secret stuff because the white house has said that they will work with him to fix the book. but he's on the fast track. you know, his website went live on amazon. a lot of people in the white house feel this was a naked play to sell books. nonetheless, there have secret stuff in there and they cannot publish it. going back to the part where the president said "game over" there were two video soundbites. one was mr. bolton talking about corruption. and we're going to have the
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longer soundbite later. but, also, fox news actually, found a soundbite of adam schiff. keep in mind, right now adam schiff is all about getting john bolton to testify in front of the senate because he's got a really good story. but you know what? as you look back to 2005, once upon a time, adam schiff didn't think john bolton was that credible. watch. >> particularly, given the history, where we have had the politicization of intelligence over wmd, why we would pick someone who the very same issue has been raised repeatedly and that is john bolton's politicization of the intelligence he got on cuba and on other issues why we would want someone with that lack of credibility i can't understand. brian: if you pick john bolton, the republicans going to answer with at least hunter and joe biden. say jay sekulow looked at adam schiff and you adam schiff pull you out. have these motions and extend it for weeks.
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around john bolton and lev parnas was out there with his ankle bracelet. he was out there trying to sell himself. ainsley: took the train to capitol hill. took the train to d.c. walked over to capitol hill went in to get his ticket that chuck schumer left at the ticket counter for him so he could go into the impeachment hearing. you can't have electronics inside the senate chambers so he wasn't able to go. brian: gave all these interviews implicating ron johnson and lindsey graham. handed over his phone that had a bunch of web sites that are porn and sex related. ainsley: do you know how many times we go to the way back machine? steve: i love that way back machine. ainsley: always proves democrats force something and change their mind because they hate this something so much. think about immigration. remember when they all voted for border security a long time ago and then the president comes into office, he wants to build the wall and border security. all of a sudden they are against it. steve: i was talking to somebody about this particular video and they said, you know, adam schiff, you know, when you look at
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that video, essentially hated john bolton until he needed him and now he loves him. it's just one of those things that happens in washington. something else that happenings in washington, they think about the big picture, marc thiessen did last night. i believe right here on the channel and he thinks that what is being played out on television screens all across america is having not only the american public see what's going on but finally the senate is realizing what is happening. >> the senate is waking up to the fact that they have been set up by the house. so, tom cotton asked the question of pat philbin today most important moment so far of the questioning he asked did the house ever try to litigate executive privilege? and philbin said no they didn't not only did they not do it they blocked the u.s. district court for the district of columbidistrict of m ruling on executive. they passed an article of impeachment obstruction of
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congress because he went to the courts. nancy pelosi held the articles of impeachment in order to force the senate to decide to have witnesses. so this was a plan from the very beginning to try to put the senate in a jam over witnesses. brian: i think one thing is pretty clear is that the best sales point that mitch mcconnell has to not have witnesses is chuck schumer and adam schiff. because they are looking to play this out, elongate this entire process, continuing to change the rules. their end game is to extend this game. and instead of saying well we want to get to the truth. it's pretty obvious, they want to play this out and they will never be satisfied. that's why i think mitch mcconnell won over cory gardner and perhaps won over lisa murkowski. i don't know if mitt romney is winnable. steve: one other note talk more extensively about it. one point in one of the question cards rand paul put the name of the whistleblower. and they had a side bar. and john roberts said essentially according to the reports on it, apparently
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roberts initially tried to block even general questions about the whistleblower. and then the republicans were talking about we're going to rebuke you and he changed his mind and he just examined out that particular name. sounds like rand paul is going to try to do it again today. because he feels the identity of the whistleblower should be public knowledge. brian: all right. here is jillian. hey, jillian? no? jillian: i don't think so, but you are going somewhere else. steve: we have todd piro coming up next because in less than two hours the deadly coronavirus could be declared a global emergency as fears spread overnight. brian: it's not jillian yet. todd, what's the latest. todd: this is serious stuff. the world health organization will meet to determine whether the coronavirus is a emergency. breaks to 19 countries. monitor the outbreak with cases growing by more than 1,000 per day. this virus killing at least 170 people and infecting more than 7700 others. the philippines confirming its first case just moments
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ago. five cases confirmed in the u.s. health officials stressing as of now though no need to panic. >> we do think that the risk for the general communities in the united states from this infection is very low. the way we want to keep it that way is by doing our basic public health functions. >> this outbreak originated at a seafood market in wuhan, china, nearly 200 americans returning from the epicenter of the coronavirus under three day you volunteer quarantine. tested first landing in alaska. then in california. if no symptoms show up, they can then travel home and be monitored for the next two weeks. some 800 americans though still believed to be trapped in wuhan this as delta is now joining american and united suspending some flights to the region. steve, ainsley and brian, back to you. steve: all right, todd, thank you very much. i saw some images of the
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extraordinary measures that people in china are taking, including taking great big water bottles, a 10-gallon thing, cutting out the bottom and wearing that across when they are out and about. brian: pledge ago fraternity. ainsley: "new york post" says americans are stuck there amid the coronavirus outbreak say the city is like a twilight zone episode. steve: it is. brian: coming up at 7:15 more on the person leading the vaccine anthony fauci: keep in mind, a lot of people think corona has something to do with the beer. jillian: nothing to do with the beer. brian: still drink beer. jillian: people do need to take this seriously. keep updated on that front. overnight kobe bryant honored with a moment of silence in the first game at the staples center since his death. a los angeles kings paying tribute before their game against the tampa bay
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lightning. heart broken widow speaking for the first time. vanessa bryant writing on instagram quote there are not enough words to describe our pain right now. why wake up each day trying to push because kobe and our baby girl gigi are shining on us to light the way. bryant also creating the mamba on three front to raise money for the crash victims' families. the man accused of killing his estranged wife is in dire condition after a suicide attempt. flotus dual low's attorney says the situation is grim and he may never recover from carbon monoxide poisoning. he was found in the garage of his connecticut home after failing to appear at a bond hearing. police searching his home on a warrant as a judge orders his rearrest if he recovers. he has pleaded not guilty to killing jennifer dulos. today president trump is visiting a manufacturing plant in michigan. he is expected to celebrate the historic usmca signing potentially creating 600,000 jobs in the u.s.
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>> there has never been anything like it. this is a colossal victory for farmers, ranchers, factory workers and american workers. in all 50 states. jillian: the president is also holding a rally in des moines tonight ahead of the iowa caucuses. and the big game is almost here. san francisco 49ers will take on the kansas city chiefs in highly anticipate you had super bowl matchup this sunday and ticket prices are at record highs. according to seat geek the average resale ticket price is nearly $7,000. that's $2,000 more than last year's tickets. rapper kanye west will be in miami ahead of the game holding his famous sunday service hours before kickoff. the super bowl is this sunday only on fox. steve: and we will be there sunday morning. ainsley: that is crazy. you could buy the largest tv
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they sell at the store. steve: it's free on fox. straight ahead on this thursday, authorities uncovering the longest smuggling tunnel found on the southern border. you won't believe what they found inside, brian. brian: one new york magazine is not feeling the bern. where they're calling sanders' potential nomination a quote an act of insanity ♪ going to let it burn, burn, burn ♪ going to let it burn, burn, burn ♪ we going to let it burn, burn, burn ♪ ♪
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bern. new york magazine claiming, quote: running bernie sanders against trump would be an act of insanity. the magazine calling out his, quote: long history of radical associations. sanders' campaign for the socialist workers party and praised communist regimes. to nominate sanders would be insane. really? here to join success former bernie sanders staffer tezlyn figaro who joins us from houston. good morning. >> good morning. steve: i don't remember new york magazine having these criticisms back in 2016. what's going on? >> your memory serves you correctly. per democrat establishment usual politics, too little too late, the bottom line is if it is insane with him running against trump just as insane all the alleged moderates stole his policies. they had no issue with that they took his message and embraced it and allowed him to grow. this is just bottom line the establishment in fear now because they have given him a ride, i would say, during
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the debates. they haven't challenged him on anything. they haven't really vetted him fully. they see that his popularity has grown. while biden was playing nice and getting along with everyone and never attacking senator sanders on any of his leftist policies, now they see that sanders actually has a shot to win iowa and new hampshire. this is simply just a panic. steve: you know, peter doocy, who used to live upstairs in my house and who has been covering iowa for the last it seems like year, he tells me that the biggest, most enthusiastic rallies on the democratic side are bernie sanders. and joe biden, while the establishment may say he's the only electable candidate on the democratic side, bernie is the one with the enthusiasm. >> absolutely. for the last three years, four years, they have been organizing all around the country. our revolution was typically with senator turner at the helm has visited every state. almost twice in the last four years while everyone else was thinking about running. they were actually organizing. and nerve building that momentum. people want to dream big.
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i'm not a socialist. i tell people that all the time. he has been able to send a message that big structural change is necessary. we all know without a democratic house and senate none of his policies will be passed. let's be honest about that. he has been able to create a vision and moderates have not been about a good job of selling their message on why their message is better than bernie sanders. they took the easy way out. copied their message. tried to pretend they are progressive when they're not and now paying the cops sequence for it. steve: new york magazine called them out on some of the agenda items getting rid of private health insurance. we have heard a number of the democrats say that. banning fracking. letting prisoners vote. decriminalizes the border. giving free healthcare to illegals. all the democrats said that at that first debate. and, of course, eliminating ice. but you are right, at the beginning of the cycle, so many of the democrats sounded just like bernie sanders and now they are saying vote for him, you are crazy, because they feel he can't win or it's just that
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joe biden people who are saying joe biden is the only guy who can win. >> yeah. a little bit of both. they see that joe biden's candidacy is not panning out the way they expected. he has been challenged on his past record as well as senator warren ohio thought has done a great job up until the last couple of debates where she actually got challenged do you support medicare for all or do you not. just simply crumbling and bernie looks like their only hope that may not fare well against trump let's be honest about it. this is a problem the democrats will have to face. steve: democrats in iowa are going to caucus on monday night. see how many people stand in bernie's corner. tezlyn, thank you. always a pleasure. >> thank you, steve. steve: you bet. four years in the making and tomorrow britain finally says goodbye to the european union, the brexit. >> i know you want to ban our national flags but we are going to waive you goodbye. >> if you disobey the rules, you get cut off.
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nigel farage weighs in next ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm way too good at goodbyes ♪ yeah, and now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com yeah, and now business here hold this. follow that spud. [ tires screech ] the big idaho potato truck is touring america telling folks about idaho potatoes. and i want it back. what is it with you and that truck?
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york states bail reform law. 750,000 envelopes of heroin and fentanyl found inside the bronx apartment. all six men are due back in court next month. psychedelic mushrooms are decriminalizeized in santa cruz, california. voting on a resolution making them a low priority for drug investigations and arrests. oakland and denver decriminalized psychedelic mushrooms last year. so brian, eat your fungus. brian: thank you, i will. meanwhile, four years in the making and tomorrow, get this tomorrow, the u.k. will officially leaf the european union. here is a look back at how history unfolded. shock waves being if he would around the world. >> the sun has risen on an independent united kingdom. >> british prime minister david cameron says he will be resigning. >> her majesty the queen has asked me to form a new government. >> it is the worst parliamentary defeat in british history and it's a clear sign that there is absolutely no support now
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for her current of brexit. >> it is in the best interest of the country for a new prime minister to lead. >> boris johnson expected to be chosen as the new british prime minister. brian: pushing lawmakers to ratify this brexit agreement once and for all. steve: polls are now open. >> boris johnson is duly elected. [cheers] >> we will get brexit done on time by the 31st of january. >> say this is it, the final chapter, the end of the road. we are going to waive you goodbye. brian: here to react right now this historic day is a man you just saw waving the british flag in parliament responsible for all of, this brexit founder nigel farage. what could you be thinking right now and for those watching in america is this it? really it? >> what do i think? i started campaigning 27 years ago for us to leave the european union. and i thought for much of
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that time i might become the patron saint of lost causes. but, you know what? it caught on. and it is happening. the big historic break happens tomorrow night at 11:00 u.k. time. it is the biggest, constitutional change, positional change for us in the world for perhaps 500 years. so this is a really, really big deal. the conservative party under mrs. may made a complete mess of the whole thing. i came back into it. won the european elections last spring, got us a resign and boris has come in and saying all the right things. the break happens tomorrow. after that there will be negotiations on a future trade deal. i have no doubt that the eu will try and keep us tied to their rule book. and boris needs to be really strong in the next phase. but, be in no doubt about one thing, tomorrow night we pass the point of no return. we are leaving. we are becoming an independent country.
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we have won. brian: it really helps. because we know theresa may didn't want this to begin it so her heart wasn't in it, perhaps which is why it wasn't done and you have a charismatic leader now how pushed and prodded who did exactly what you wanted. called for new elections, got himself a majority and went ahead and did it. you say italy, denmark and poland could likely be next to leave? >> yes, i do. denmark not dissimilar to the u.k. in many ways. they are a lot smaller but ever since they first joined been nervous about the loss of sovereignty. italy finds herself stuck in a currency called the euro, which may be good for germany but it's no good for the mediterranean at all. i think when the next financial downturn or financial crisis comes italy will be asking itself serious questions. poland, 30 years ago they were living under the soviets being told what they can and can't do. now they have brussels telling them how she should appoint court judges. what they should do with social legislation on gay marriage and much else.
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don't tell the polish what to do. they have had enough of that. brian: absolutely. and allies too in different ventures. sod that boris johnson famously gets along well with the president. we asked them, you guys, not to go subscribe to huawei. it is going to sacrifice our intelligence, 5 g with huawei is a no go and did you it anyway. not you but boris johnson signing on with china anyway. what's happening with that? >> this is not just america by the way, australia, you know, who are very close economic links with china in 2012 said no we don't want huawei part of our cyber and digital infrastructure. i will tell you the truth. if you look at the u.k. advisory board of huawei, it is full of senior former civil servants. big businessmen. we even have david cameron, a former prime minister who has now interlock ter between the u.k. and chinese government.
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our political class are in the pay of china. establishment wanted this to happen. and boris has gone with the establishment. he risks intelligence sharing with america, australia, canada, and new zealand. and i really worry what this means for a future trade deal with the u.s.a. i'm concerned. i think it is an absolutely awful decision. brian: right. that's why ourselves is going there to get them to reverse it. not a good sign. maybe he believes that president trump is not popular with the british people and doesn't want to be pushed around and boris johnson wants to show his independent streak. however, the downside is too real, too great to let this be played by politicians. final thought? >> yeah, look, why take the risk? there are other providers. samsung, nokia, erickson. these are all people we can work with on our new 5 g network. we do not need the chinese to be involved in this and the argument they are a bit cheaper. i will tell you what, what price is security? that's the risk we are taking. brian: nigel, you changed
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the world and certainly changed the brit' future. big day for you and thank you for sharing it with us. brian: democrats and the president's lawyers have had their say. now it's up to the senate to decide if hear from witnesses in the impeachment trial and go on for weeks. judge napolitano is here and promised to walk slowly with a little bit of a flare in our direction. hillary clinton ducking the question. the familiar stunt she is pulling over tulsi gabbard's 50-million-dollar defamation suit exclamation suit, go to commercial ♪ oh, yeah. ♪ - [spokeswoman] meet the ninja foodi pressure cooker,
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enbrel fda approved for over 20 years. ♪ >> and if this were a criminal trial in recorder court and mr. schiff had done what he just did on the floor here and started talking about crimes of bribery and extortion that were not in the indictment, it would have been an automatic mistrial. brian: bring in fox news senior judicial analyst host of liberty file. judge, he is right, isn't he? >> well, normally a conversation like this does the allegation implicate crimes would be heard in the courtroom out of the presence of the jury. and then the judge, in this case chief justice roberts would decide whether or not it does implicate crimes? so one way to look at this is by accusing him of abusing his power, by asking for a favor from president slenkzelensky, the democrats wil argue the president committed several crimes, he
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solicited aid from a foreign government. he refused to perform a governmental duty until a thing of value arrived. one is the crime of solicitation. the other is a crime of bribery. the republican also say on the other hand, wait a minute, you are accusing the president of the united states of a crime, you better be specific. you better say what this is the dershowitz argument, you better say what the crime was and they intentionally used vague language either to be delicate and respectful to the president or because they wanted to give themselves the opportunity to push whatever buttons. brian brian it's not in the impeachment articles. you can't bring up something that's not in the impeachment articles. ainsley: what happened adam schiff said it's extortion, it's briberiry. the president's legal team says that's not fair you never put that in the articles. you know this you are a lawyer. >> this would not happen in front of a jury in a criminal case. it absolutely would be a mistrial if it were stated in front of a jury in a criminal case. but this is a different kind of jury. where they each get to accuse the other side of all kinds of things. arguably, the house judiciary committee report
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is part of the charges against the president. and that includes all these things that congressman schiff was mentioning yesterday. steve: one other thing and we mentioned a little bit we will talk later about it is apparently tuesday, not on television, john roberts, the chief justice, squared off against rand paul. rand paul wanted to ask a question and would name the whistleblower. and apparently there is back and forth. the republicans are going to rebuke john roberts and eventually he went -- because they were going to be all references to the whistleblower generally in the intelligence community, ultimately, they did not allow the question. and now rand paul says he is coming back again today has not been recognized. >> i am volunteering to arbitrate this dispute since they are both friends of mine. however, the chief justice knows he has to recognize senator paul as a senator when he wants to say something. senator paul knows the speech and debate clause of the constitution absolutely protects him from whatever he says on the floor of the. steve: he can maim the
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whistleblower. >> he probably okay he shouldn't do so if the chief justice has overruled it and the senate has not overruled the chief justice. ainsley: how did the whistleblower, other people have used the name. >> yes. steve: rand paul has used it on the radio. ainsley: does it matter? >> i guess the chief is enforcing a level of decorum. if the senate wants to enact a rule by 51 votes that the whistleblower's name will be revealed that will be the law of the case and the chief justice will not are interfere. steve: doesn't want name out. brian: things you are hearing about this person's background shows an agenda. it shows an operation that's been taking place over the course of a couple of years. and he is still there. >> i think you are right. the democrats would say look, there is a body of evidence that we discovered that it's independent of him, macy what we have charged the president with. >> when is this going to end? brian: hopefully tomorrow. steve: friday, maybe. >> unless we have seen the mustached one then it's a new ballgame.
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ainsley: john bolton. steve: geraldo? geraldo is here on friday he is the mustached man. >> thank you, enjoy miami. steve: enjoy the judge over on fox nation with judicial file. all right. it is now 14 minutes before the top of the hour. judge: where is jillian? steve: she always is when you ask that question. jillian: look at the camera straight ahead. brian: there you go. now you can see her. jillian: u.s. authorities discover the longest smuggling tunnel ever found along the southwest border. it begins near tee within ana, mexico, extending nearly three quarters of a mile into california. it's about five and a half feet tall and 2 feet wide featuring a rail system, ventilation and electricity. >> as efforts to strengthen security on our southern border increase, mexican cartels are forced of underground to smuggle deadly drugs and other contraband into the united states. jillian: no arrests have been made in connection with with the tunnel. the fbi arrestst three church leaders in a massive
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human trafficking raid. agents searching the philippined based church in california. officials say worship leaders brought people to the u.s. forces them solicit donations for the church. workers say the funds were actually spent on the church leaders lavish lifestyle. the suspects are due in court today. hillary clinton appears to be dodging tulsi gabbard's 50-million-dollar lawsuit over these comments. >> she is a favorite of the russians because she is also a russian asset. yeah, she is a russian asset. jillian: the congresswoman's lawyer brian dunn telling the "new york post" they tried to serve clinton twice but turned away by secret service agents. dunn says he can't believe clinton would be, quote, so intimidated. hillary's team did not comment on the post report. teacher brought to tears after getting a gift from his students. watch this. >> you are going to make me
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cry. [laughter] the nebraska student surprising their teacher with new sneakers after his old ones were stolen. the students pitching in more than 100 bucks to buy him a new pair. that's cute. steve: i watched the whole thing. it just pulls at your heart strings. kids are so kind. ainsley: kids stole his sneakers. brian: i was only allowed to wear sneakers when i had gym. steve: why? brian: that's the way we did it at my house. wear them tuesday and thursdays when you have gym besides that shoes. i did not carry anything with me i was ready to play gym. ainsley: stolen at some point. brian: unless they wrestled me to the ground and took them off my feet. steve: so you had a locker. ainsley: sneakers tennis shoes. >> sneakers. ainsley: order a pepsi it's still a coke. it's same with tennis shoes. we call every pair of shoes
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tennis shoes. sneakers is a northern things. brian: bless your jimmy conners. let me tell you what is coming up next. impeachment in washington home district continues to spiral out of control and constituents are sick of it. dr. drew is one of them. he has a plan to fix it. it's next. ainsley: and blues in the golden state. californians fleeing for texas in droves. so could texas eventually turn blue? our next guest says don't bet on it. ♪ shake, rattle and roll ♪ you never do nothing to save your doggone soul ♪ ♪ the future. shouldn't your toothpaste do the same for your mouth? future proof your whole mouth with new crest pro/active defense. its active defense technology neutralizes bacteria to shield against potential issues. crest.
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ainsley: everything is bigger in texas apparently residents in california especially agree, over 86,000 californians have packed their bags and moved down to texas, at least in 2018. that's a rise of 37% from a year earlier. so, could texas flip blue? our next guest, in a fox news op-ed, says don't belt on it. here to explain chuck devore a former california state assemblyman who left california for texas. hey, chuck, good to see you again. >> good to see you, ainsley. ainsley: the author chuck
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devore will texas palestinian because of blue state migrants? don't bet on it. why don't you think it will flip. >> this is a constant fear in any conservative state. you see it in texas. you see it in florida. and so what we did at the texas public policy foundation just two weeks ago we surveyed 800 registered voters in texas and we asked were you born in texas or did you move here. then we asked did you vote for president trump or did you vote for hillary clinton? trump won texas by 9 points in 2016. we found that among natives, he was supported by plus 7. but if you moved to texas, you supported trump by plus 12. so we are seeing a conservative migration, mostly to texas and, in fact, i figured about 6% of the votes in the 2020 election in texas, about 6% will be people who moved to texas just since the last presidential election and about 1% of the votes will be new californians that came in to texas, who
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frankly don't want to replicate what they left in california, right? the high taxes, the heavy regulations, the bad lawsuit climate. that's why they came to texas. it's a middle class migration. you have a lot of entrepreneurs. a lot of people who are grateful that there was a texas to which to flee to. ainsley: why do you think that that number was bigger for the people who are moving to texas than the natives? is it because usually you think of texas a conservative state and maybe just conservatives want to be there? what's the reason for that? >> yeah. i think there is some selection bias. in other words, if you are a liberal, if you are a progressive in california, you are happy with the way california is governed. ainsley: that's true. >> you are going to stay in california. there is some interesting polls out of california though that says that if you are a conservative, the number one reason why you are thinking about moving out of california isn't the high taxes, although you are concerned about that. it's not the high cost of housing, although you are concerned about that. it's the political climate.
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conservatives in california are tired of being pariahs, they want to go to a place where they will be welcomed. texas is one of those places. so they're moving to texas. ainsley: chuck, it's happening here too. i was at a lunch be four around the table considering it. brother already gone down to florida. in new york most people go down there east coast. thank you so much, chuck. >> absolutely. ainsley: okay. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. his op-ed is on foxnews.com if you want to check it out. senator mike braun, joe sizeman and dana loesch as well as dr. drew pinsky. plus stuart varney. there he is. only pay for what you need... only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪ moon light ♪ take me down like i'm a domino ♪ every second is a highlight ♪ when we. brian: we told that you fox had a great set-up. that is our set that we will be broadcasting live the next three weeks. we might not leave. if you show us that set, we are going to stay. three weeks. ainsley: three days. steve: it's a little cloudy in south beach. we will have some sunshine when you join us tomorrow morning starting at 6:00 a.m. right there along collins avenue in south beach. come on out if if you are in
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the neighborhood. steve: my bag is right there. ainsley: mine is in my office. brian: when we get off the plane will the music play. ainsley: welcome to miami will play. brian: great roster and guests. be there friday, saturday and sunday. and until the game starts. and then we we might play. steve: on monday, the iowa caucuses happen. ainsley: i know. steve: state of the union. busy five days. ainsley: and then new hampshire. it's moving. the super bowl kicks it off. little boy online says he wants the super bowl moved to saturday. what do you think? brian: i would be in favor. and because the whole country takes off on monday. and it hurts us. it let's the french and european union catch up with us. [laughter] we need to work on monday. steve: i don't know what you are reading they are nowhere close to us. ainsley: call it super bowl saturday? steve: change the logo. super bowl sunday for alit alit
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ration purposes. >> ainsley: no need to change the monogram. steve: there could be a vote on acquittal or removal tomorrow. >> the witness: the witness war, steve. steve: believe they have the move to block witnesses the vote came yesterday. core gardner toughest fight for re-election. he made it very clear yesterday he is not interested in witnesses. also lisa murkowski from the great state of alaska sat down with mitch mcconnell behind closed doors. she was tight-lipped when she came out. she said well, let's see how it all goes. really good chance there will be no witnesses. brian: we just have to wait to see if there is another bombshell. one thing pretty clear. theying trying to get lev parnas. throwing out things ron johnson is involved and lindsey graham is involved. take my phone by the way i'm also soliciting hookers but look past that. he shows up. then you have the john bolton situation where evidently a letter was
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written, eliot engel came out and said john bolton reached out to me and said look at how the ambassador to the ukraine was fired. there is something there. you get to the bottom of why she was fired. so, bolton is working behind the scenes for some reason and now we find out about the book came out and now that we find out would appear in the "new york times" was top secret information. it was vetted out of the book and it was released out. ainsley: thinking about john bolton or talking about john bolton, the president tweeted yesterday he said game over. he posted interview of an interview that john bolton had given back in august supporting the president and saying the call with the president of ukraine zelensky was warm, both of the calls were warm and they were cordial. the president called to congratulate the president of ukraine. he never mentioned quid pro quos then. now the book comes out. it's interesting that now he is saying that there was, allegedly, according to the "new york times." steve: the way the "new york times" wrote the story there were no direct quotes and no
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sources. buff you have got to wonder whether or not somehow they got a copy the book which at this point the white house, to brian's point, they sent a letter out on the 23rd of january that said top secret stuff in here. you cannot publish it as it is. we will work with you. meanwhile, the trump defense and the house managers worked with the chief justice john roberts. he essentially was game show host yesterday. he was in the big chair. and he would ask a question and then they would ping-pong between minority and majority on the questions. both sides got five minutes. if you missed a little, you missed a lot. here are some of the more notable edges changes. watch. >> words he talked about it wrong talked about if the fbi or department of justice was starting a political investigation of the -- of someone's political opponent. and i'm thinking to myself but isn't that exactly what
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happened? >> multiple witnesses who were called in the house by the house democrats testified that the united states policy towards ukraine got stronger under the trump administration in part largely because of that lethal aid. >> the issue is not whether a scrim required. the issue is whether abuse of power is a permissible constitutional criteria and the answer from the history is clearly unequivocally no. brian: also pretty clear a couple days ago the headline was mitch mcconnell doesn't have the votes. read the story he doesn't have it yet. 's it's not as if five or six people stood up and said i want to vote for witnesses. so, then you look at it, cory gardner came into line. it seems by some of the questions that susan collins and murkowski could potentially come into line. it also seems as though mitt romney is firmly out of line but you can lose a few. if you have 51 votes there would be no witnesses. that means this thing could end
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on friday. ainsley: it could. if you don't have enough republicans in favor of calling extra witnesses. this will end on friday and we hopefully won't talk about this again. steve: right. ainsley: but, there are some senators on the democratic side, according to josh hawley who say they are reportedly considering a vote to acquit president trump. watch this. >> what they are telling you is they don't have a case. the democrats' case just fell apart with the questions we heard tonight. in recess here. adam schiff has said on the floor this case is all about bribery, it's about extortion. that's what's goings on here. the house didn't charge bribery or extortion. they didn't allege any of that in their articles of impeachment. i mean, it leaves you wondering why are we here exactly? they don't even know. the democrats are sensing that i wouldn't be surprised if we picked up some votes. steve: also, there is some heat on mitt romney, i was listening to sean hannity yesterday and i'm looking at his website and it talks a little bit about how there was a poll taken in utah and
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it shows -- this is a quote from hannity.com. the majority of utah republican voters opposed new witnesses in impeachment trial, less likely to support romney. this is his home state for re-election if romney votes for witnesses. brian: 65% of utah residents want the president exsomener rated. and mitt romney has four more years to win him over. he is not feeling any political pressure. meanwhile, there is something else that happened pretty extraordinary yesterday. usmca signed. bipartisan. robert lighthizer was able to get canada and mexico to agree that we need a better deal. one that actually includes the internet in it. the 1980s we were dramatically different country with three different economies. canada is having some trouble passing. this let's listen to the moment when it became official. the president likes to sign things and then show you what he signed. >> we are finally endings the nafta nightmare and signing into law the brand
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new u.s.-mexico-canada agreement. very special. [applause] >> . the usmca is the most fairest trade agreement ever achieved. there has never been anything like this. colossal victory for farmer, factory workers, and american workers in all 50 states you could almost say beyond. steve: gigantic win for the president so says stuart varney from varney and company on fox business. >> gigantic. 600,000 new jobs in america. increase our g.d.p. by approximately half percentage point going forward. it's good for everybody, especially farmers and industrial workers. steve: stuart, if it's so good why did the democrats drag their feet for so long? >> because they didn't want to give president trump a win. president trump renegotiated the old nafta, came up with a new usmca.
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in 2018. the democrats spent the entire 2019 holding it up, refusing to put it in for a vote, supposedly negotiating little fine points here and there. and finally gave way a few weeks ago and allowed a vote because speaker pelosi didn't want to be seen as pushing everything else outside just going forward with impeachment. ainsley: brian mentioned there were concerns in canada. mexico is on board. >> canadian farmer also face some stiff competition from american farmers. let me give you a quick example of this. steve: competition is good. >> yes, it is, yes. not if you want to hold on to your superior position you don't want to do that at the moment or under the old nafta, american wheat from kansas and north dakota, when it went to canada it was classified only as animal feed. tawas part of the old deal. steve: couldn't make bread out of it. >> that's right. under the new deal it's high quality wheat available for
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bread and pasta like anybody else. brian: tariffs on all dairy products should be going away. >> canada has a couple of issues with this, but they are on board. they are going to sign it. brian: nancy pelosi did make an impact. she did demand more regulations out of richard trumka the afl-cio it? >> was marginal, brian. they made incremental changes. it was the fundamental deal that the president trump organized. brian: he said -- here is nancy pelosi said give me some criticism. >> the president is having the signing today is because of what we did as house democrats. >> and because of the work of the house democrats under the leadership of richie neil with his task force and made tremendous differences in what was proposed originally and what the president will be signing today. >> i would contest the idea that they made tremendous differences. i will contest that. ainsley: did every network play those soundbites? >> of course. what do you expect.
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brian: i want to say something. i hope this is our future where we are debating who got the better of a deal? ainsley: that's true. brian: rather than talking about deals that don't get done and who is wrong. i love this conversation. >> okay. i love the bipartisan deal. and it was accepted bipartisan in the house, bipartisan in the senate. went through. it's a good deal. steve: stuart, don't forget the fact that the reason she had the vote for usmca in the same vote sequence was to get people who were a little squishy whether or not they were going to vote for impeachment on board said vote for this and then i will give you that. >> used it as leverage. that's not a clean deal. ainsley: what does this mean for the average american family. >> i can't put a dollar on it. i will say it will add to our current prosperity. steve: great. >> it will expand our economy. expand the number of jobs available. especially farmers. farmers do well out of this. brian: the midwest wanted this. they want the midwest if they want this elections. so they could not rationalize holding it up any more.
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stuart, i expect you to talk more about this on your show from 9 to noon. >> you expect that of me, do you? i can come up with something for you. brian: okay. >> and the other million viewers. brian: i love your new logo. >> thank you very much. steve: stuart, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: it is 7:12 and jillian has got some news for us now. jillian: that's right. good morning to you and to you at home as well. begin with this. overnight kobe bryant honored with a moment of silence in the first game at the staples center since his death. the los angeles kings paying tribute before they game. heart broken widow speaking out for the first time. vanessa bryant writing on instagram quote there aren't enough words to describe our pain right now. we wake up each day trying to keep pushing because kobe and our baby girl gigi are shining on us to light the way. bryant also creating the mamba on three fund to raise money for the crash victim's families. a suspicious high rise fire injures at least 13 people
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including a three-month-old baby. family and tenants trapped as flames pour out of a residential building in los angeles. one man seen clinging to a ledge with flames burning just feet away. look at that luckily he was able to inch himself closer to firefighters. furious residents say not one fire alarm went off. >> not one fire alarm. there is no sprinklers in the building. there wasn't a single noise if people hadn't run down the hallway people would still be asleep. >> helicopters making daring rescues hoisting 15 people to safety. the cause is currently under investigation. take a look at this. pilot and passenger miraculously escape after their plane plunges into the ocean. video shows the plane crashing into waters into australia. people on nearby beach watching in horror. two men managed to swim all the way to shore. they are expected to be okay. what caused the crash is under investigation. and if you can imagine, security stepping up with
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just three days to go until the super bowl. homeland security, the fbi and hundreds of local police officers will be watching from the ground, the seas and the skies. >> here we are now 1st and 10 at the goal line. ready to score and ready to win. and winning for us is to provide a safe and happy super bowl environment. jillian: dhs says there is no specific threats to the game but they are prepared for anything. you can watch the chiefs vs. the 49ers this sunday only on fox and don't forget "fox & friends" will be live in miami for the super bowl starting tomorrow morning. a look at your headlines. send it back to you. steve: that's right. not only the big game, jillian it's a national security event. that's why there are all the cops and all the security people. ainsley: we are grateful to all of them for keeping us safe. steve: we are indeed. jillian, thank you. as the coronavirus spreads and affects 1,000 people per day in china, the white house is stepping up to prevent it to from spreading into the united states.
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dr. anthony faur c, a member of the president's task force we will hear from him coming up next. ainsley: heart-warming thank you worth $6 million still ahead ♪ ♪ what a day could b to be alive ♪ hooks me up. getting more for getting away. traveling lighter. getting settled. rewarded. learn more at the explorer card dot com. when i needed to jumpstart sales. build attendance for an event. help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage, and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com apresident trump arrives for a vo: briefing gon. by top military leaders. trump explodes. attacks the war heroes in the room as losers, and a bunch of dopes and babies.
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many in the room have risked their lives for our country. soldiers, heroes, attacked by an erratic and out of control president. arrogance, ignorance, chaos. enough. america needs a steady leader who will honor those who served. mike: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. at walgreens, we love smart savers. like movie savers. tee-time savers.
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arizonallergy and infectious disease. yesterday i was talking with my friends about this. it is here in america. we have five confirmed cases, right? >> right. ainsley: can you tell us where they are located? >> they came in from seattle, washington, two in california, one in chicago, and one in arizona. there were five cases. they have all been identified. they have all been isolated and now the cdc is doing what we call contact tracing. namely examining and contacting the individuals with whom they came in contact to make sure there is no further spread. thankfully, up to this point, there is no secondary spread from any of those travel-related cases. that could change but the somewhat encouraging news is that as of essentially just a little while ago, we have not had any secondary cases. ainsley: that's great news. dr. fauci, yesterday we were talking about the plane moving americans. estimated 1,000 americans in that city in china and you
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moved 200 plus here to america. there were reports that they were going to be held for three days and then they were going to be released if they were okay. is that the case because we had some doctors that have been on our show saying that they need to be watched for weeks, maybe a month. what's the truth there? >> well, what the cdc is going to be doing is getting these individuals and not only get eting a history of what the level of risk. i mean, all of them are not at low risk because they have been in the epicenter in wuhan. but they are either medium or high risk. the people who are high risk will get a further examination. the people who are at lower risk will get a swab from their nose where they will do a diagnostic test. if that's negative, they will then be able to go. but they have instructions if they have any symptoms or any fever then they will know exactly what to do with it. they will not be kept the entire 15 days those individuals. ainsley: are we safe to fly? many of us are going on
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trips. we are all going to the super bowl. is that safe? >> yes, of course. i'm glad you asked me that question. right now the risk to americans is really low. we are keeping an eye on this and if that changes we will be very transparent about making the american people know. you should not be afraid at all of getting on a plane and going to the super bowl. remember, there are five travel-related cases. this is a different story. if you were telling me would i like to go to china or wuhan or whatever i would say be careful about that. if you want to fly to the super bowl, have fun. it's not a risk. ainsley: and very also heard that more people die of the flu than they do. this are we making this a bigger deal than it is or is it extremely serious. >> it's different. really not comparable the flu, although it does kill a lot of people every even season, everywhere from 20 to 30,000 up to 79,000 individuals with hundreds of thousands of hospitalizations, it's something you have experience with and generally you know where
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it's going. there is still a lot of unknowns about this new virus. it could really explode into something much bigger. i hope it doesn't. we're preparing ourselves for that but, right now, you are right. the risk of getting into a real problem with inflew zoo is much greater than the risk of this virus in the united states that's for sure. ainsley: we are out of time. real quickly what about the vaccine? are we okay there or do we have to wait another year? >> no. we started work on it going into early human trials. not going to have a vaccine we can really use for at least a year. ainsley: thank you very much. >> good to be with you. ainsley: adam schiff called out by constituents saying is he spending too much time focusing on. we can and not enough time fixing california's homeless crisis. one of congressman schiff's constituents dr. drew joins us. ♪ rescue me ♪
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ad thanking the vets who saved his dog's life at the university of wisconsin tv ad on the super bowl. next 90 years old the age of this super bowl grounds keeper george thoma has worked 54 super bowls. ainsley: looks great. steve: used to work in kansas city. i have met that guy. brian: everyone knows him. steve: turns 91 on sunday when the chiefs takes on the 49ers. he is a legend. finally $22,000, that's how much pizza hut will donate to the first twins born after the kickoff. money going to go toward education fund. their parents will receive free pizza and tickets. ainsley: brian's radio producer alison. brian: get the tickets. can you induce her. brian: i can stress her out. steve: is she interesting twins. brian: boy and girls. ainsley: first set of twins after kickoff? steve: that is some of your news by the numbers. not all the news. brian: go to the as adam
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court washington house impeachment case some of his constituents get to work solving problems in his own california district like the homelessness crisis. ainsley: our next guest lives in that area he has a prescription to solve the problems plaguing adam schiff's district. steve: dr. drew pinsky has lived in schiff's district for 30 years. he joins us on the couch. >> good morning. steve: you electrified the world a couple weeks ago when you put out an insinuation that you might actually challenge adam schiff for his congressional seat. >> objective test on fake news. i was on a podcast adam carolla's podcast. we do a podcast every day i talked about how morally moved i was by the situation and people have been at me to kind of run for office. i started thinking jeesh i think i live in schiff's district. he is asleep at the wheel here i should run against him. that's all i said. then somebody from the hill came aknocking so i did an interview with the hill.
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i don't do print because people distort everything you say. this woman dutifully transcribed everything i said. i said i'm categorically not running. every other news outlet said is he running fake news works. ainsley: off the table for now. >> for now my family came down me like a ton of bricks. steve: a pay cut. >> my wife commented on that. if this continues, i am so morally brian brian i know. >> we are losing 3 people every day i don't do something, three more people are dead in the county of los angeles. steve: homelessness. >> homelessness loses three a day. my god if coronavirus were killing three people a day in our county, do you not think people would be an n. absolute outrage and panic? for some reason this mental health crisis that is homelessness because people have mental illness and living in our streets somehow we step over them and they die right in front of us. brian: his or her are the numbers. homelessness are up 16.4% from 2018 to 2019.
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53% of all unsheltered people in the u.s. are in california, more than 42,000 unsheltered people in l.a. >> that's a low number. brian: really? >> at least 60,000. brian: conventional thought is america has abandoned their poor and nowhere to live. >> no. they have abandoned the mentally ill. these are my patients dying on the street. i know the population i have served them for 30 years. steve: it's not a housing problem. >> for god's sake we absorbed 1.5 million undocumented workers. none of them are on the street. they found housing. where's the housing problem? ainsley: do you want us astins to help? are you pleading for the government to help? what can we do. >> i have a five part plan that is simple. there is a bill in the senate committees right now in the state of california and sacramento. just up there yelling about it called sb 640. expand the definition of gravely disabled. so immediately family with resources and a bed to put their loved one go get them, bring them off the street and treat them with a change
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in the definition. we are living under the shadow of the excesses of psychiatry from the 1950s. it's almost 100 years ago we need to create modern laws for our current state of brain science. steve: i have read your five point plan it is terrific. i bet it's at dr. drew pinsky.com? >> there and california glove.com. i will tweet it out immediately after the show. brian: government responding to you. is the governor responding to you. >> are you kidding? steve: what about adam schiff though go back to adam schiff. >> i want him to live the imd. >> medicaid does not pay for the treatment of chronically medical ill. ainsley: families cannot afford. >> they have the resources. the laws prevent us from doing anything. if they create -- first of all, forget housing. just environments of care for the ill. if we create enough environments of care they will be empty. we have no ability to move people, to motivate them in because the laws prevent us prop 47, law of the century
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legalizes drug use in california. the so-called short act modified with sb 640. so we can expand gravely disabled. these prevent us from doing anything. it's not a housing problem. brian: bring this up before you go. i feel bad for these people they have problems. what they are cooking the homelessness people doing what are they doing to the environment by living on the street. >> last time i was here you was i was talking about that rodent bloom and when i saw that oh my god we are going to have a typhus epidemic and we did. what follows typhus per sin i can't, the plague. and we have the exsacramento ext going into the river. bypasses sewage treatment plant and goes directly into the ocean. where is safe the bay? where are the environmentalists sea mammal die off locally from the excrement being untreated and going directly into our ocean. the city the size of pasadena. directly into the ocean.
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it's an insanity that i can't understand. i wake up. steve: solvable. >> easily. brian: san francisco is no walk in the park either. nancy pelosi sits on capitol hill and vilifies donald trump. just look at your own backyard. >> please, please, please. steve: dr. drew, thank you. if you ever do run for congress. >> i might i'm not doing it now. categorically not running now maybe some day. steve: that means he can running. >> thank you. brian: for the record, you are not mad at me i'm just passionate. >> i'm mad at our government they are letting people die. brian: you pulled your hand away when i went to shake your hand. not too close. steve: dr. drew has a good couch side manner. brian: not too close. spend too much time with him you get a bill. >> how dare you. brian: how dare you. one gun rights away another state working to protect the second amendment. we will tell you where next. steve: counting down to
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super bowl sunday on fox. that's the stadium. pete hegseth is live in miami at our location. pete, is it too early to ask for a piña colada? pete: never in miami, guys. never. blue skies, palm trees, ocean breeze. this is where "fox & friends" will be for the next three days. you guys got to get here and get out of new york city. we will give you a behind the scenes look at this awesome "fox & friends" that i'm standing on the 20-yard line and you don't even know it. ♪ shake that ♪ ♪ all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn?
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brian: pete hegseth wonder what was going on after he left that diner. i think i have some answers. ainsley: is he all over the place. steve: he is indeed. he joins us from our set that we are going to start manning just about 24 hours from right now. pete, tell us a little bit about what it's like in south beach on collins avenue right now. pete: you guys are late. i'm telling you and you are missing out. i will tell you the couch is beautiful. the weather is amazing. ainsley, don't worry, it's not cold. it's nice and warm down here. you are gonna love it. i got in yesterday. i had to do some reconnaissance to make sure the set is all ready for you guys. that's my job. i went out to talk to the folks. lincoln drive a lot of folks out shopping and enjoying night life in miami. we asked them about the big game. i tried to ask them about impeachment. they weren't interested. listen. ♪ ♪ ♪ pete: there is a big game coming up on sunday. >> yeah. pete: are you going to be watching. >> absolutely. pete: who is going to take the game on sunday who are you pulling for. >> 49ers. >> kansas city chiefs. >> go chiefs.
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>> i'm pulling for the 4ers. >> are you from kansas city. >> we are. pete: it has been 50 years. >> is that what it is? a little while. >> are you going to beat the 9ers here. >> yes. 9ers? >> you think most americans pay more attention to the super bowl or to impeachment? >> probably to the super bowl followin. >> are you following the impeachment. >> i'm not following impeachment. stay out of politics right now. pete: if he goes to my right hand it's the kansas city chiefs. if he goes to my left hand it's the 49ers. if he went to "fox & friends" who are you pulling for? >> chiefs. >> 4ers. to be honest with you it doesn't really matter too much to me. i'm a viking fan. pete: pete. pete: there was one vikings fan and we made fans very, very quickly.
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i almost felt wrong asking about impeachment. that's how chill miami is no one wanted to talk about it. it was all about the big game. ainsley: that's why everyone wants to move to we can escape. pete: that's right. steve: even in iowa where the caucuses are monday so it's going to be a split screen weekend, nobody is talking about impeachment there either. pete: i know. we couldn't find a single. they looked at me sideways like you -- what? look around at the weather. you want to talk about impeachment? i asked if you know one of the managers of the house democrats? not a single person. adam schiff? anything? no. that's the way it should be in miami. brian: can you do us a favor? i don't want to get to the set and not know where to go. auto could you show us where we are going to be sitting and what we're cooking? give us a tour. pete: consider this orientation where you sit, brian, right here no divot for me yet. brian: please stand. pete: brand new couch. the couch you will feel at home. brand new, better than we have in new york actually i have got to say. when you walk off the set,
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the first thing you will see is the ocean, the beach. we are right on the beach. brian: makes so much noise. pete: it's actually quite quiet, calm, brian. brian: really? pete: i wore flip-flops because if you want to you can walk around on the beach. it's miami, nice and warm. we have our own field out here. i expect hit drills. no soccer on this field. not at least for these couple of days. brian: it's not natural turf? is it field turf? pete: artificial felt, brian. artificial felt. steve: it's a tv gridiron. pete: i expect to use it. i don't have a football today. it feels wrong standing on the field with a football. end zone all our friends on the fox channel. one of the most beautiful bsmedz in miami. people don't get up very early in miami though. i don't anticipate too many people. ainsley: how is the traffic? are there a lot of people out there already? pete: a lot of people already? nah not really. this street will be blocked
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off tomorrow. the fox morning show for the sports channel is here. lots of fox folks we have seen a lot of runs. they like to do that in miami. a modified living room. this is what a living room looks like in miami. ainsley: adirondack deck chairs. pete: might do a few segment here. pile of stand. i was told it's not just for me to play. in apparently we are making a sculpture. and i recommend that it be of brian kilmeade. brian: another one? ainsley: something patriotic, i say. pete: something patriotic? you guys get to vote. steve: it can be anything. this is america. ainsley: brian already has a bust of himself. brian: i do. ainsley: from the patriot awards, remember? pete: oh, i remember that brian, you are out, ainsley is too. steve: my desk is behind you, the hammock. pete: this is where i will
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end it. this is where i will be watching you guys. only one or two segments in the morning you are doing the heavy lifting on the couch. steve: what a facility. look at pete. pete: i don't know if i can do it. pete: for orientation purposes have you figured out where the news cafe is because they have the best coffee on collins. pete: news cafe? no. i did see where all the shows have set up spot for the show. "fox & friends" doesn't have one. i don't know how we got short. steve: we come in first so we can take anything you want. brian: out of luck. pete: take it by force. if you are there early just take it. this will be a fun couple of days, guys. get here. brian: now you have gel all our your hands, pete. pete: how did you know? ainsley: are you getting any more tattoos while you are there? pete: maybe i haven't thought. brian: neck is wide open. pete: neck is open and my
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hand. brian: wide show? steve: entire studio crew to get a picture of a guy on a whom mock. thanks so much. looks like so much fun. starts tomorrow 6:00 a.m. join us for the next three days. brian: it's work. ainsley: pays to go to miami. steve: it's great. meanwhile, back to the news and impeachment. and adam schiff, once again, denying he had -- knows anything about the identity of the whistleblower or ties to him who, of course, is at the heart of the whole impeachment push. he started it, the whistleblower. >> i don't know hot whistleblower is. i haven't met them or communicated with them in any way. steve: somebody listening to all of that was senator mike braun of indiana. he joins us next ♪ ♪ as a struggling actor,
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florida police issuing amber alert suspected abductor when the infant's mother, great grandmother all found dead. it' as he killed himself. the baby, though, was nowhere to be found. >> one individual told us that he saw a blonde woman sitting in the truck. and i sit here and pray to god that that is true and that she has the baby. we are praying for is that he handed the baby off to somebody. >> anyone with information should call 911. a second amendment sanctuary is coming to utah. voting unanimously to protect their guns, it's the first law of its kind to protect. calling it a constitutional right. the county says their law came after virginia's legislature passed a stricter gun laws. brian? brian: republican senators turning up the heat on adam schiff. still claiming he doesn't know the identity of the whistleblower. >> i don't know hot
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whistleblower is. i haven't met them or communicated with them in any way. committee staff did not write the complaint or coach the whistleblower what to put in the complaint. the conspiracy theory, which i think was outlined earlier that the whistleblower colluded with the intel committee staff to hatch an impeachment inquiry is a complete and total fiction. steve: all right. here with reaction indiana senator mike braun who was in the room for the first round of questioning yesterday he joins us live from capitol hill. senator, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: i know that -- i don't think any republicans believe adam schiff that regarding his connection to the whistleblower. but, yesterday, your colleague, rand paul, was quite frustrated because he would like to be recognized but the chief justice so far has not done it. he would like to be recognized on the senate floor. it sounds like he wants to talk about the whistleblower and, perhaps use that whistleblower's name. >> a couple topics are hot ones, the whistleblower,
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whenever the guy dens come uthe bidens come upso deeply int was going on in ukraine. you have the ability as any senator to stand up, depending on how hard you're going to try to get recognition. and since the chief justice is the presiding officer, he does control that dynamic. all i can tell you is rand knows the system more than anyone. and whether he will push hard on that or not it at least is highlighting that the whistleblower in its origination in the cabal of individuals that were involved with it, you know, would be up for discussion when you are trying to remove a president. that's where i'm at. ainsley: so if these four republicans vote for more witnesses and the democrats get their way, this continues on for a long time. >> it does. ainsley: if three republicans vote for more opinions witnesses, what does that mean? is that 50/50 is that a tie. >> that's tricky, too. there there is a question of
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how much sway the presiding officer would have over that dynamic. dynamic. steve: roberts. ainsley: does that chief roberts makes the decision. >> could. you could override the presiding officer. we're getting into territory uncharted here. ironic we're getting down to two, three, or four being kind of the magic numbers. all i can tell you as we have gone on with the trial, the talk they dislike the most is what comes from professor dershowitz. the whole dynamic changed where it got more defensive on the prosecution side. when he was coming at the articles as being ill founded. and then started talking about quid pro quo in that even if it happened as bolton contends, that doesn't get close to rising to an impeachable offense. and there's going to be a lot of discussion on that.
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and when the other side comes back with would you address what the prior question was, you know you have hit a hot button. brian: usmca got signed yesterday in the rose garden. what's it going to meet for your state? what changes? >> we are the largest manufacturing state per capita in the country. agriculture is so important. and speaker pelosi has been playing footy with this thing for six months. that was a pen that was worth receiving. you know, the pens that were handed out at impeachment, i think, are, you know, a metaphor for where we are at in this country. it's a big deal. it will hype up the growth and g.d.p. over so many jobs created. it is just good across the board. we need to get back to that as well as tackling healthcare and other issues. hoosiers are interested in that as well. steve: sure. you know the reason nancy pelosi didn't bring it up until everybody voted on
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impeachment is she didn't want to give donald trump a win. >> exactly. sadly, that's where we are at. but it's resonating across the country that the agenda is working. and when you look at the crazy talk on the other side, whether it's coming from bernie or joe biden, you know, it is going to be an easy argument for our president to make. he is doing a great job. ainsley: senator braun, thank you so much from the great state of indiana where the farmers are happy this morning. >> you bet. ainsley: four days out from iowa caucus and joe biden makes a comment like. this whomever i pick is two things, one is capable of immediately of being president because i'm an old guy. ainsley: he is an old guy. what else did he say that's making headlines this morning? brian: don't vote for me. help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage, and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com
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i get twenty five. this is a pretty good deal to me we should probably- sfx [blender] smoothies ready. awesome. ebates is now rakuten, sign up today and get cash back on everything you buy. ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: there it is, perfect song. steve: will smith singing welcome to miami because we will be there live. ainsley: are you saying it was your idea? when did you tell them? steve: in the last hour. ainsley: did you hear me saying?
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steve: no. he was in our studio once upon a time. ainsley: nice guy, did you talk to him? steve: we said welcome to studio d. brian: relax, be yourself. >> i don't remember it quite that way. ainsley: i bet you made him famous too. senate is gearing up for a battle, a war over witnesses. steve: welcome to washington, it all follows 16 hours of questions and answers between senators and house impeachment managers, we've only done 8 hours. brian: live from capitol hill as number of republicans are ready to vote for acquitle, doug, will they get their shot tomorrow? >> well, we will see, exciting day here, the big question remains will witnesses be called. the general back and forth as we know that the house managers definitely don't want to see
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john bolton take the stand here or present himself before the senate, that while the president's defense and many republicans in the senate say, no, the house passed up on that opportunity was their job to do the investigation, the senate does not do investigations. the president's counsel opened up possibility that if the house managers want to call john bolton they'll call their own, as many as 17 of them, whistleblower, hunter biden, the inspector general, intelligence community and on and on, a process that can drag on for months, here is jay sekulow andd adam schiff responding to it. >> i want to ask this question and just plan it as a thought, is that going to be the new norm for impeachment? >> you can't have a fair trial without witnesses and you
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shouldn't presume that when the house impeaches the senate trials from now will be witness free. >> now, republicans are should we say mildly confident or marginally confident that they have all the votes to defeat a motion, 3 waivers republicans, lisa murkowski of alaska and mitt romney or utah and lisa collins on maine, all 3 have gone public saying they are willing to consider witnesses. that remains to be seen what they're going to do, now f all 3 do vote for impeachment witnesses, that would put it at 50-50 tie assuming all democrats voting for witnesses and 50-50 tie would impeach the motion for impeachment witnesses, we will watch the 3 republicans and does not get in the potential that democrats may be wavering, joe
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manchin, doug collins of alabama, the q&a continues. steve: thank you very much, i'm sure doug collins was watching. he is not calling for witnesses. ainsley: put up collins. sorry about that. brian with doug, doug jones, the senator from alabama. ainsley: lots of different dougs. steve: time for doug collins. what we heard in adam schiff is narrative from the democrats and they are doing it effectively and it's not going to be fair unless they call four witnesses and yesterday the president's team made it very clear because one to have questions was didn't the house, wasn't it their
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obligation to call witnesses then, couldn't they have called john bolton. brian: 17. steve: they went ahead and with drew the subpoena for john bolton and use the argument it's an obstruction of congress and that became one of the articles because otherwise had they gone to the courts they would have said executive privilege. , sorry. ainsley: that's what's so interesting about this, the house had an opportunity to vote for impeachment. it goes to the senate, the trial that we are seeing, the senators are the jury. exactly. they should have done in the house if they wanted it and adam schiff, republicans are complaining because he's threwing new information that wasn't in articles of impeachment, he's saying bribery, extortion, that was never in articles of impeachment, republicans are saying this would be a mistrial. brian alan dershowitz is in his almost, he talked about philosophically, there's a huge
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problem with the democrats' case. >> if the president does something which he believes will help him get him elected in the public interest, that cannot be the kind of quid pro quo that results in impeachment. anything the house wants to do to impeach is impeachable, that's what's happened today, that places the house of representatives above the law, we've heard much about no one is above the law, the house of representatives is not above the law. steve: the house of representatives not above the law. ainsley: constitutional lawyer, voted for bill clinton and teaches at harvard. brian: lost all his friends. steve: when i represented oji lost some but now -- brian: worst than defending oj. steve: bomb bombshell that john bolton hat a book and apparently
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somebody at new york times got the general idea of what was in it and all the calls for him to be the star witness for the democrats, but in the last 48 hours a couple of clips have surfaced, one revolving around john bolton and the other around adam schiff, first of all, john bolton in some video that was broadcast in 2019, right before he was going to talk to president zelensky but after the president did the phone call essentially he talks about how the president wanted to crack down on corruption which seems odd given what he's saying now, watch this. >> i will be meeting president zelensky, he and president trump have spoken twice, the president called to congratulate on election and on success in the parliamentary election, they were very warm and cordial
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calls, we are hoping that they'll be able to meet in warsaw and have a few minutes together because the success of ukraine maintaining its freedom, its system of representative government, free-market economy, free of corruption and dealings with the problems of the crimea are high priorities as well. ainsley: either he's trying to sell books or "the new york times" didn't get it right, we will see. brian: adam schiff wants to see him now, says bolton will be believed but hasn't always felt that way, when he was on cnn, you weren't watching, we taped it , 2005 is the year, listen to adam schiff talk about john bolton. >> particularly given the history where we have had the politicization of intelligence over wmd, why we would pick someone who the very same issue
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has been raised repeatedly and that's john bolton's politicization on cuba and other issues, why would we want someone with that lack of credibility, i can't understand. steve: he had a lack of credibility. ainsley: not incredible then but now should be a witness. steve: john bolton 2 weeks after he left the white house he urged elliot ingell to investigate the firing of marie yovanovitch, ambassador to ukraine, he implied that there was something a little fishy about it and mr. ingell revealed that conversation yesterday. brian: one thing is clear, ambassador bolton like many others were not happy that rudy giuliani was running investigations in the ukraine and undermining in his view that the state department normal channels in which they communicate with ukrainian embassy and everything else, so
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rudy and bolton are now at it, if you watch rudy has been calling him out basically calling him and rudy gave lev parnas and tapings which provided a lot of unrest for the president of the united states. steve: well, sounds like the president of the united states wanted personal attorney rudy giuliani to do opposition research which is completely legal and he went over there and now here we are. ainsley: well, lev parnas has a device on ankle, he went to capitol hill, washington, d.c., exactly, you're not allowed to have one of those ankle bracelets because you can't take electronics in senate chambers, people are wondering is he going to be able to see impeachment hearings because he has that. brian: try today blow the president from afar that president knew everything. ainsley: schumer left him the
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ticket. brian: iowa polls are out, joe biden has to feel god about this, it's a lot closer, polls have sanders out in front, this poll mammoth has joe up by sanders, all close to call, mayor pete after being on top has been down around in the teens and followed by elizabeth warren, amy klobuchar, andrew yang, ybeth -- joe biden wants e andrew yank and when it comes they can't win, those people are asked do you want to flip your votes, biden wants those candidates to tell their voters to vote for him. ainsley: 4 days ago. steve: threshold is 15%, if you don't have 15% those people in the room they get to go caucus for somebody else. brian: they said no. ainsley: joe biden was on the campaign trail and this is what he said, listen.
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>> for me it has to be demonstrated whomever i pick is two things, one is capable of being president because i'm an old guy, okay, i'm in good health, but you never know. ainsley: he said it 2 days ago, he's saying i'm old but in good health. steve: insinuation is that he has wisdom, right? isn't that what he's saying? brian: joe biden off script is a disaster, admitting that he may be too old to have the job for 4 years, that's a little bizarre. i'm not sure that's in the campaign ads. steve: you look at the polls and joe biden is the favorite of a lot of people. brian: vote for me, i'm old. jillian: let's start off with this story, the world health organization is meeting to decide whether the deadly coronavirus is a global emergency, the white house assembling a task force to
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monitor by cases growing one thousand per day, the virus killing at least 170 people and infecting more than 7700, 5 cases now confirmed in the u.s., a member of the task force dr. anthony joined us earlier saying that there's no need to panic. >> the risk to americans is really low, we are keeping an eye on this and if that changes we will be very transparent about making the american people know but you should not be afraid at all. >> nearly 200 americans are under a voluntary 3-day quarantine after returning from wuhan, china, if no symptoms show up they can be monitored for next 2 weeks. tunnel begins near tijuana, méxico, extending 3 quarters of a mile in california, 5 and a half feet tall and 2 feet wide featuring rail system, ventilation and elevator, no arrests have been made in
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connection with the tunnel. today congress will vote on measures that could limit president trump's war powers against iran, one measure would prohibit funds for military attacks without congressional approval, the other would repeal a 2002 authorization for military force in iraq, the white house has threatened to veto both, the strike killing iran top general this month. probably not the best weather for a cruise. close call, high winds violently batter a crew ship, nearly smashing into a pier in norway, luckily it just misses, there were passengers on board but not clear exactly how many there were, that is not crew ship weather. ainsley: all made a lot of money producing the tv show. it all worked out.
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brian: back then in gilligan's island no one got residuals. did you know that? >> no. ainsley: i told you she was young. >> 3-hour two, they never got off but had radio and they kept their money somehow. i'm not sure how. still ahead a judge called menace to society but thanks to new york's bail reform law the suspected robber convicted drug dealer allow today walk free, guess what, people, no one knows where he is right now, the outraged police commissioner joins us because he caught off his ankle bracelet, don't get any ideas, lev.
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brian: you need to hear the story and you're not going to like it, district law ignoring the new measure and ordering the accused two-time bank robber with history of drug charges be held on bail, defendant menace to society, that's okay, under the new rules is different, the suspect later freed after higher court said we have a new rule now, overturned the judge's ruling, there's no bail, he promptly cut off his ankle monitor and is now on the loose, arguably trying to treat drug habit. commissioner, this is unbelievable. how do you explain this?
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how do you make sense of this? >> you can't make sense of it, it doesn't make sense, bail reform was meant to be fair for all and not take away discretion from judges looking at criminal history, this guy should have stayed in jail, he should not be out. brian: this isn't his first bank heist, who is this guy? >> a history of drugs, arrests, sales, possessions, we arrested him for bank robberies, when we arrest him, we get him in front of district court judge, he decides and kudos for him for trying and turns around and says hey, we will hold him on bail, the higher court judge -- >> because of the new rule. >> because of new rule says we have to let him out and put ankle bracelet which we have 40 people we monitor. brian: you get an alert because he cuts it off. >> the judge is right he's a
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menace to society. brian: let's take a look at the rules that no longer required to held in prison, third-degree assault, burglary and stocking, you do that and we will put ankle bracelet. something else, you have 15 days of discovery, tell me about this. >> 15 days to turn over all your evidence for defense counsel to go prepare for his case, in that 15 days if we don't start to turn everything over and make the time period the cases get dismissed. not only are they getting out but setting up for failure if we don't get anything out in 15 days they will start dismissing cases. brian: you have to get the tape, put together the case and if you don't do it in 15 days, the case drops? >> everything that we to obtain we have to turn it over within 15 days. brian: that's done, no bail, you have to assemble the case and do
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this retroactively. how are you supposed to do at fast speed and past cases? >> everybody is frustrated. the probation department, we are all trying to do what's right in the criminal justice system but almost preparing us to fail, we are swimming upstream and nobody is helping. brian: we need politicians, well-intended, we need to adjust it. any help on the way? >> common sense decisions that have to be made, move quicker and make the decisions. brian: commissioner, keep coming here around underlying the problem, hopefully someone will get the message and at least other states won't emulate this. >> thank you. brian: straight ahead, in new documentary supreme court judge clarence thomas addressing 1991 confirmation battle and the senator who led it, joe biden. >> you have to sit there and look attentively at people you know have no idea what they're
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♪ ♪ ainsley: quick headlines for you, box office could take multimillion dollar hit because of coronavirus, according to hollywood reporter worldwide revenues could drops to $2 billion, deadly outbreak forcing nearly 700,000 screens in china to shut down due to cities going on lockdown, but here in the u.s. americans are living longer, cdc report that is live expectancy is up by one month, first increase in 4 years, experts say it's due to less people dying from cancer and drug overdoses. steve. steve: all right, thanks, ainsley, poverty to supreme court, new documentary that comes out nationwide, supreme court justice clarence thomas addresses 1991 confirmation battle and the senator who led it, joe biden. >> one of the things you do in hearings is you have to sit
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there and look attentively at people you know have no idea what they're talking about and it was fine, i understood what he was trying to do, i didn't really appreciate it. steve: well, created equal, it's the same to have documentary, clarence thomas in his own words hits theaters tomorrow. joining us right flow discuss is the fill's director michael and former clerk to justice clarence thomas carrie, good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> michael, let's start, what was he talking about in that sound bite? >> well, joe biden was asking justice thomas questions about natural law but in the complexities of the natural law debate justice thomas really felt it was just a way to get him to talk about abortion and that -- steve: a got-you moment. >> he hoped to trick him into saying something about natural law that would imply what he thought about abortion and they would use that to block confirmation. steve: ultimately what did he
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say about cincinnati. >> he said nothing. steve: he knew what game they were playing. >> it was sort of replay confirmation process and when that didn't work it was only later that they then tried anita hill revelation. steve: sure. michael what is so extraordinary about the film is you have got, justice thomas talking to the camera along with his wife in a way we've never heard him speak before. >> that's exactly right, people haven't heard from him and it's a really powerful story going from poverty in the segregated south and with many twists and turns, gaining and losing his faith, black radical, coming back to conservative and powerful story and best to hear it directly from him. >> you mentioned faith, here he is on that topic. >> we are supposed to be revolutionary, anybody kind of in your face.
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lashing out at every single thing. if you take anger out of my heart i will never heed again and that was the beginning of slow return of where i started. steve: he really had a different set of essentially rules regarding him, right? >> well, that's right. people were able to use racist talking about clarence thomas that they couldn't for anybody else, we have cartoons where he's shoe shine boy, kkk robes or justice thomas says exactly what you just said, steve, you could not say that about a liberal african-american and not being accused of racism. steve: you have seen the movie. >> it's amazing, i've seen it 3 times, at the beginning of black history month to have inspiring story about one of the most prominent black americans today.
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i just think it's exciting because as a clerk we got to hear the stories from the justice himself and most america hasn't heard that, getting that perspective on a justice who doesn't speak a lot publicly is great opportunity, you should go to the movie, if you have a young person, take them along, seeing the real-world he grew up from jim crow on, important lesson for today. steve: carrie, one of the things you took away from the film that you had not realized from clarence thomas? >> i had heard a lot of the stories, there was stuff i was hearing for the first time particularly about his youth and really getting to see the images, you know, i read his autobiography but seeing amazing film of what it looked like, incredible poverty they had walking through sewage sometimes to get out their front door that was really impressive and you see how -- how he came from that
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and then somehow had to make his way in a world that really didn't accept him and even still, you know, with joe biden and the attacks later on, still doesn't accept him because he is a man who want the same for himself, they assume that every other african american is going to share. steve: so glad we can get your point of view as former clerk to justice thomas, michael, congratulations. >> i hope people will go, justicethomas-movie.com to find out where it's playing in their area but if not they can sign up and if it's enough we can make it happen in their area. steve: michael, author of created equal and carrie, thanks very much. meanwhile elizabeth warren wants to make it a crime to spread lies on line but dana loesch wants to know about the senators on trouble with the truth, dana explains coming up next.
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war than any place else. don, one of the great tech guys is downstairs and told me all about it, i went up there and gave you a little glimpse just north of west point what it was like where george washington lived, watch. brian: george washington headquarters, that's his headquarters, it was farmhouse that he took over, very similar today as when washington was on the inside, he wanted to stop the british from taking the hudson and wanted to protect west point. inside the house shaped america as it is today. yeah, we bring inside there, a lot of people can't get to up state new york, we brought you there, as special enticement to join fox nation, fastest-growing nations in the country, sam houston alamo avengers.
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we will sign the book. steve: fantastic not only become a member of fox nation. ainsley: you get a book. steve: top books of the year. ainsley: what if people have signed up to fox nation? >> what you can do is resell it on ebay or give it to somebody that means a lot to you. ainsley: i know that guy, i know that author. brian: that's okay. [laughter] ainsley: i'm so proud of you, in fact, i go and put your book in front of all the others. brian: all right, thank you very much. as long as is in front of greg garrett's i'm fine. steve: go to fox nation.com to see how it all works, if you sign up you get up a book.
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brian: we have series, waiting for you to click. steve: that's right. meanwhile dana loesch, radio host, host of the dana show, good morning. >> good morning. steve: we we wanted to get your point of view because you're a big free speech advocate, yesterday elizabeth warren released a plan that would impose civil penalties of those guilty of spreading this disinformation online, this troubles you, doesn't it? >> yeah. it does trouble me and thank you all for having me on this morning, it does trouble me because i guess we are just eliminating ancestry from this equation, i know she had said a lot about facebook and i know she and other democrats are infuriated at mark zuckerberg because there are things to criticize facebook about in terms of choices that they make on information and content this area of refusing to bend a knee
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to their demands and not allowing any kind of political advertising on facebook, this isn't one of them and that's what she's really angry about and so on her website she has like a word where she guess on and on about russian bots, fake social media accounts as if anyone has decision made, i'm sure it's happened to you all, you see somebody, some crazy anonymous person ranting on facebook and you decide, you know this person is really persuasive, i'm going to change my mind, it never happens but what she talks about when he mention it is civil and criminal penalties are we seriously going to start arresting someone because you don't like what they're posting online, you don't like their content? you're going to arrest them over means and then one other quick point, who is going to be the arbiter of this? who gets to determine what is true and what is false, because what if someone supports abortion and they don't like brian, one of your posts about
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march for life, they don't like your posts about supporting pro-life measures or you, ainsley, this whole thing is so biased and it's dangerous and so i can't believe she's actually not facing a lot more criticism over this but i think this is where the democrat party is. brian: just for the record, the reason why facebook worked for president trump is because he paid, he strategized, he figured who his voting base, how do i get to them and brad put together a plan in which he bought ads and got message out. not falsifying anything. >> literally a business. apparently warren doesn't get this. ainsley: you fight against the red flag laws because who is going to decide who is a red flag and who is not. >> exactly. that's a great point, ainsley, who is going to determine whether or not what you just posted is true, like, for instance, if you say that there are two genders and someone else
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says no, i totally disagree, this person is spreading misinformation, we will charge them with a crime because they are saying something that we don't like because they have turned science into something subjective, they have turned truth into something that's subjective. brian: she has history and wrestling with the truth on a daily basis, view on private schools when she sends to school there, ancestry. >> claim that she was the first breast feeding mother to take the new jersey bar, she lies about literally everything including things that you do not need to lie for. it's weird. brian: desperate. steve: she's running for president and she got publicity yesterday. >> that's it right there. steve: dana loesch, thank you very much, see you next time. >> thank you, dana. hand it over to jillian for more
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headlines. jillian: good morning, it's deadline day for mother and stepfather to turn over two missing kids, found in hawaii last week, a judge in idaho gave them 5 days to bring the children to court, joshua have been missing since september, grandparents arriving in idaho hoping for safe return. >> i'm not even in a sense mad at her, the only thing i care about is the two grand kid. jillian: the couple can face contempt charges if the kids aren't returned. a shocking attack caught on camera inside a target store, now this all started over a parking space, look at, this surveillance video shows a than black sweatshirt walking up to a wheelchair bound man in california, disabled man had confronted him outside after his wife illegally parked in handicap spot, moments later the man grabbed the wheelchair, rolled him away and flipped him
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on to the floor, look at this, he was later arrested and charged with assault. walks away after, wow. >> well, achievement out of this control, astronaut kristina breaking record, when she returns to earth, 308 aboard international space station, old record was 286, when she's back she can't wait to swim in the gulf of mexico key -- and eat salsa and chips. steve: cheeseburger with bacon. ainsley: cheese would be good. cheeseburger, pizza. you're italian. meatballs. steve: he's not a big fan of meat. impossible burger is delicious. brian: my mom makes turkey
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meatballs. steve: meatball is terrific. ainsley: they are in your cook book. steve: they are, indeed. getting ready for the big game sunday. brian: quarterback joins us next, i sense he's wearing his ring and i am right, kansas city-san francisco, he will break down the matchup, he actually looks younger, i resent him time. (vo) so verizon has plans to mix and match starting at $35. and up to $700 off the latest iphone. the network more people rely on, gives you more.
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wthat's why xfinity hasu made taking your internetself. and tv with you a breeze. really? yup. you can transfer your service online in about a minute. you can do that? yeah. and with two-hour service appointment windows, it's all on your schedule. awesome. so while moving may still come with its share of headaches... no kidding. we're doing all we can to make moving simple, easy, awesome. go to xfinity.com/moving to get started.
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>> good morning; everyone, i'm sandra smith, leading republicans and democrats in the house will each be holding their weekly news conferences, leadership on both sides will be holding news conferences on impeachment, we will be listening to all of that, also an update of coronavirus and spread of deadly disease, we will have that for you and the hhs secretary alex azar and the latest on 2020 as we work our way just days from the iowa caucus, big 3 hours coming up, david perdue top of the hour join ed and me live from america's news room in moments. ♪ ♪ ainsley: we are just a few days, actually a few hours away from being down there, a few
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days from super bowl liv here on fox, live in miami starting tomorrow morning. brian: still in prime of his career, ill not surprise if comeback is looming. joe, former mvp of the super bowl. [laughter] brian: we've been down to miami before covering this, i guaranty you this, this would be a great game, do you? >> i agree, it's going to be terrific football game, so many wonderful different contrasting aspects of it, andy reid, the veteran, wide open offense, kyle shanahan, so i think this game has got so many wonderful offense versus defense, offense live line versus defensive line, speed versus technique, all aspects of the football game, i think it'll be a close football game and exciting football game. ainsley: so if you don't pull for either one of the teams, pete hegseth was in the diner
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and guy said he really doesn't care who wins because he's a viking fan, what are the pros for each team, i like kansas city because -- steve: they are going win. ainsley: steve is from that area, i like 49ers because of their stories, what do you think? >> andy reid is like santa claus, how do you not root for santa claus? he's done such a wonderful job and after 20 years the chiefs are back and they've got an exciting young quarterback in patrick and go to the other side you look at san francisco with their defensive line, jimmy is not getting enough credit for what he's been able to do to lead the football team, i mean, they can throw it around as well as anybody on the san francisco side, we just get captivated by the things that patrick does, it's the offensive line of the kansas city chiefs versus the defensive line of the san francisco 49ers that i believe will be one of the keys, the other one is we saw with kansas city was able to do against
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tennessee, be able to hold down the run, shut down the run, that's what they will have to do and put the game on jimmy's shoulder, this game will boil down to two quarterbacks being able to make plays and/order -- and/or don't make critical mistakes, special team. that's where critical decisions are made, do we kick off, do we kick the ball in the end zone, we send it deep, are they fast, punt to somebody, do not punt to somebody. brian: packers beat the patriots. steve: have you noticed that in every sound bite joe puts up the hand with super bowl ring. ainsley: he's an expert. steve: joe, this week has got to take you back to a happy time when you won the super bowl with the redskins, it's got to be a little emotional, right? >> it's interesting, steve, this day 37 years ago was the day we won the world championship on this particular day. >> not that you're counting.
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>> all the dais and years, it's a very special moment, when i have a chance to come back here and spend time and visit with you guys, i feel like brian and i have been doing this for the last 30 plus years, it's such a wonderful experience and i'm happy for the guys that are here, i'm happy for the fans, i'm happy for the organizations, the players on the field, this is a lifetime opportunity for somebody, i mean, to find a career for me it's given me so many opportunities because i'm a world champion quarterback, i believe there's only 36 of us before this, 37; they'll be a new one since tom is not in this one to have a chance to be able to put a ring on, brian know what it's like to put this thing on. brian: made me give it back at the end. >> e maid him give it back. [laughter] brian: you know what it's like to lose it and to win it, that's what's at stake this week, joe, we will see you down there, bring your credit card because we can't expense anything and you can.
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♪ >> before we go to miami, we have to tell you, if you want to be part of our live audience with your significant other, sign up at fox & friends.com for our february 14th valentine's day. >> see you in miami tomorrow, everybody! >> martha: good morning , everyone. the coronavirus now killing at least 170 people. 170 people in china, a number of cases is increasing dramaticall, forcing more airlines now to cancel flights to mainland china as the world health organization is now considering declaring the virus a global health emergency. good morning, everyone. i'm sandra smith. >> ed: i'm ed henry. china seen more than a thousand new cases every single day, nearly 8,000 cases worldwide. five of them right here in america. >> sandra: in the white house, announcing a task force to monitor the outbreak of the world health organization is weighing next steps on how to deal with a deadly disease.
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