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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  February 9, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PST

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pete: straight to fox news alert. two nypd officers are shot in what is being called an assassination attempt. emily: authorities believe this is the gunman on the run right now. david: what's's up, what is happening here? reporter: good morning to you. both officers are safe. one narrowly escaping death but that gunman is still on the run. security cameras captured the shooting. they were sitting in their van with emergency lights on, when this man walked up, asked officers for directions and pulled out a gun. he fired multiple shots,
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striking the officer behind the wheel. just missing the officer's carotid artery. his partner drove him to the hospital. back in 2017, a gunman killed an officer as she sat in her patrol car, also in the bronx. in 2014, two years were shot dead in their police car in brooklyn. in this case the commissioner is certain what the motive was. >> let me be very clear. this was an assassination attempt of two new york city police officers. reporter: mayor bill de blasio adding on to that that too much hatred being directed at police officers. he tweeted, tonight we saw a heinous assassination attempt against nypd officers in a marked police van. thank god we can report our officers survived and will be able to go open to their families safe and sound.
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this morning police don't have an identity of the gunman. we have the picture but they are pledging to bring him to justice. pete, jason. pete: isah. thank you. these two gentlemen were in a neighborhood that had spike in gun and violence. so they're doing the tough work we don't want to do, going to places besieged by crime and drugs and they're targeted, time and time again. emily: this year alone crime spiked 17% in this city and that culture of anti-police rhetoric and those unprovoked attacks, even ones that were not deadly with the water, the mayor is saying this now but what has he been doing this whole last year when there was nothing done to protect the officers or preserve a culture of respect for them. david: every moment those people are wearing the badge, putting flag on the soldier.
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he should be in jail the rose of his life. pete: he walked up saying i want directions. thankfully they had seen the firearm. these two partners were close friends. been there since high school. jason: they had been there together a long time. pete: thank god what nypd officers do. they are ones around our building and thank you for what they do. there is no justification for what it whatsoever, they know when they sign up, they're going to harm's way on our behalf. that is why we honor them so much. then there is this story. trump supporters were putting up a tent outside after shopping center in florida. a van pulled up and decided to plow into their voter registration tent, maybe half a foot away from the actual people. and when they did it, the guy
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who did it pulled up, stopped, got out, flicked off the trump supporters drove away. and now this individual in the van is being charged with aggravated assault. emily: listen to first-hand witnesses account. take a listen. >> all of sudden he hit the gas and plowed into us. >> how close did he come to hitting people? >> maybe half a foot. very close. >> i shouldn't have to worry about the safety of volunteers who are just trying to register voters. i'm, i thank god our people were okay. they were able to get out of the way in time. jason: these people are trying to get people registered to vote. donald trump tweeted about this. he said, law enforcement has been notified. be careful though. guys, who you play with. got to tell you i'm glad the president is aware of this. this is in florida. they're doing voter registration. for goodness sakes.
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there is evil, evil stuff going on. emily: if that had been a democratic tent would have been all over the mainstream media. we're barely hearing anything out of any other media source. that is horrifying. we have our entire commercials based on the democratic right to vote is literally what the foundation of freedom is based on in this country. the fact that guy almost killed people in the tent that is horrifying. pete: be careful, tough guys. who you're dealing with. by the way, it is not easy to go out in public, this is unfortunate reality of public, i talk to people all the time here in new york city. well, i'm coming to your diner, i am out here i feel comfortable wearing my make america great again hat or campaign swag because i am know people will not accost me physically for it. for these people publicly openly, proudly supporting the president, which we should do
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inflee country yet their fears are validated, when some clown most them over in their van, clearly make as political statement. this individual has not been caught or identified. the hopefully they have the visual of the van which we showed already will lead to that. jason: that is a pretty distinctive van. pete: probably a young 20-year-old. let's hope our politics don't devolve into something like this. jason: in part they already have. what are the democrats doing? where are they focused? what are they doing that? they are trying to get a video taken down. trying to get behind nancy pelosi and get a social media giant to take down this video put out. it was, they were showing nancy pelosi ripping up, that is what she did, this speech given by donald trump where he honored a lot of heroes behind america. pete: so there is a video put out, five minutes long, watch the whole thing, highlights all the human interest stories from the state of the union, tuskegee
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airmen right there, it follows up, this is the woman reunited with her husband deployed. scholarship given to the black family. all the things that the president highlighted. interspecialered with those clips, they show nancy pelosi ripping up the speech. of course she didn't rip up the speech in between everyone of those actions. so it was edited but jason, you've been a candidate for congress. every time there is a campaign or, someone will portray what you do in a light that is more favorable to them. it is a free country. she did rip up the speech. he did say those things. how is this not fair game. jason: the first amendment. you have to put the stuff together. they may not like it but she is the one who ripped up an official document there on the dais. i think it was contrived. i was there. i kind of felt this was sort of planned. i don't think it was spontaneous thing. you know, it was better than the
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alternative. there were all sorts of lies and other stuff. i want to know what she actually thinks. tell us where she thinks the president actually lied. she hasn't done that. emily: you know why the democrats want it taken down? they see it for what it is. every time something of honor, something happening for the american people that is what she was ripping up, she was ripping up them. they were aligned, they feel heard, represented by this president in that speech. she was fundamentally ripping up them every time. pete: it was really powerful. talks about black unemployment. disabled unemployment. hispanic unemployment. jason: facts. pete: bad look for nancy pelosi and chief of staff is going after twitter and facebook saying you have to take this down. other democrats weigh in. here are tweets from house democrats. representative veronica escobar, mislead and manipulate.
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representative ro khanna. video was doctored. they're trying to go after the policies at facebook and twitter which said, you create a "deepfake," like a real fake doctored video, absolutely not true, deceiving people, we'll review that and take that down. this is real things that really happened. it shows the chamber of nancy pelosi sitting while mike pence is standing, while everyone is applauding for black unemployment, female unemployment. democratic women are sitting on their hands. these things really happened. how you splice them up in a video that is just good politics. that is good optics. that is -- jason: are you telling me every news organization take as summary of what was nearly a two-hour speech and cuts down? so president's campaign team does this? i think that is fair game. pete: they're triggered. really are. emily: sorry -- jason: go ahead. emily: the national republican
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senatorial committee he made that exact point. he says he tweeted, look this video, they're arguing it is deceptively edited to misinform and want twitter to censor it, but she tore the speech that had the stories. repetition of highlight what she was tearing. these representatives are gas lighting. they're shifting the point so the conversation becomes about her ripping up the speech and not all the positive things in it and highlighted in the speech. jason: go watch it yourself. tell me if you think this is ultimately doctored. but that is in reality what happened. kevin mccarthy, leader of the house republicans, watch what he had to say about this. >> look at the statues, you cannot destroy official documents of the house. they weren't hers. remember what she did. she pretore it. she was predetermining, just like she predetermined to impeach this president regardless what she had done. she picked judiciary chairman based upon who would be
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impeaching. her freshmen on the day they were sworn in said they would impeach. her managers voted for impeachment a year before the phone call ever took place. thank god the american public saw through this and our president was strong enough. pete: show gone bad. everyone loved the "game of thrones" and remember how everyone hated how it ended? then a fantastic state of the union, acquittal, is the disaster never wanted. republicans, conservatives, trump supporters are smart enough, put it out there, breaks it down nice and easy for people. when you're ripping up all the speech you're ripping up all the things the president done and high lighted. that is dangerous to democrats. jason: you watch the video the republican put out. she started to tear it before the speech. it would be easy to tear it when it happened. you watch the video. this was not spontaneous thing. it happened in the middle the
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speech. pete: those papers are tough. jason: like tearing the phone book. emily: everyone hated ending. that ending was revealing. that ending showed how she thinks of all of us. pete: yep. jason: fox news alert. two servicemembers are killed and six hurt in an attack in afghanistan. u.s. officials say a person wearing a afghan uniform opened fire on american and afghan forces with a machine gun in a province east of kabul. hundreds of isis fighters live in the area. the extremist group could be responsible. the u.s. servicemembers have not been identified. former green beret commander and congressman kong -- congressman michael waltz joins us coming up. they are reviewing inconsistencies in the 95 precincts. all corrections are expected to be made tomorrow ahead of
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tuesday's new hampshire primary. the idp said 95 precincts account for roughly 5% of total precincts. with 100 percent reporting pete buttigieg hold as slight lead over bernie sanders. inaugural season is off to a nice start. >> mobley again. this making a touchdown, roughnecks. emily: fun to still have football around. houston roughnecks dominating the l.a. wildcats 37-17 the first day of the xfl. seattle sounders beat the dragons 31-19. today tam pay bay vipers play the new york guardians on fox. pete: i watched a little
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yesterday. good football. emily: after the super bowl i'm depressed until preseason. pete: not anymore. coming up senator bernie sanders wants to make a rule getting rid of cash bail nationwide. emily: still ahead a former police officer and his dad sharing his defense of law and order. ♪ but now i practice a different philosophy. quickbooks helps me get paid, manage cash flow, and run payroll. and now i'm back on top... with koala kai. hey! more mercy. (vo) save over 40 hours a month with intuit quickbooks. the easy way to a happier business.
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same time next week. yes! who doesn't love a deal? i do. check out the united explorer card. savin' on this! savin' on this! savin' in here. rewarded! learn more at the explorer card dot com. jason: a fox news alert. two u.s. servicemembers are dead and six are injured in a shooting attack in afghanistan. a military source telling fox news that the shooter wore an afghan uniform but was not one of the soldiers on parole. both the taliban and isis are known to operate in the region and neither one is being ruled out as responsible for the attack. this comes as washington seeks to enthe 18-year long war in afghanistan. our next guest has been voicing concern about this. gop congressman, former green
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beret commander michael waltz. he sits on the house services committee. congressman, thank you so much for being here. when you see horrific story, people, you have been there you have served. you have been deployed. when you see this story, what runs through your mind? >> well the first thing i think of are those families getting that awful knock on the door right now, that so many of us dreaded when deployed into combat. i do want to say it is a tried and true tactic for the taliban, al qaeda, isis to use after ban uniforms to try to infiltrate our ranks. it looks like that's what they did here but bigger picture, jason, all of these types of conflicts have to come to some type of political resolution. i certainly share the president's frustration, all of our frustration how difficult this war has been but we have to be very cave, getting frustrated, saying we have to pull the troops out, bring everybody home, whatever happens
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happens because that, half the world's terrorist organizations still exist there. they are planning to sow chaos and overthrow this government. then we will face what we did after obama pulled out of iraq too soon. we'll have isis 2.0 and 3.0, then where are we? that problem always follows us home. jason: what does victory look like? what i always struggled with, i went to afghanistan i talked to the generals, i asked them to define what victory looks like, nobody could name anything? >> victory looks like eventually the afghan army able too tyke care of their own security. pakistan, that is incredibly important, where al qaeda, taliban and others seek sanctuary, take care of this problem in a more meaningful way. i think we'll have a small sustainable counterterrorism force there a long time this is a broader war against extremism. it will follow us home. we have to stay on offense.
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jason we'll fight wars in places like kandahar and places like the middle east or it will follow us home to a kansas city, orlando, san bernanadino and places like that. so, where do we go in the meantime? i think we have a small counterterrorism force and small force training afghan security forces so eventually they can take care of the problem on their own. remember, we've been in south korea now with 30,000 troops for 70 years. japan with 50,000 since world war ii. really what this is about is american leadership. jason: well, this is the big debate. i know the president really does want to bring them home. >> we all do. >> thank you for your service. your deployments in the past. our hearts and prayers go out to the families, you're right, waking up to very sad news. congressman. thank you again. coming up senator bernie sanders wants to make a rule of getting rid of cash bail nationwide.
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>> 200,000 people are in jail without having been convicted of anything. that is outrageous. which got to end cash bail. jason: wow, our next guest a former police officer says this idea would be a spit in the face to law enforcement. his defense of law and order still ahead. ♪. you're pete nocchio? oh, the pic? that was actually a professional headshot. i'm sure that's it, yeah. i, uh, i think i've lost a few pounds recently too. i'm actually doing a juice cleanse. wait! you don't... (glass breaking) (gasp) ah! oh...! with geico, the savings keep on going. just like this sequel. 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance.
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♪. emily: welcome back. i have some quick headlines for you. israel now determining what parts of the west bank will be annexed as part of president trump's peace plan. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says they're drawing up a map which will include all israeli settlements. president trump proposed a two-state solution with strict conditions on palestine.
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congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez mixing up two economists in her instagram story. take a look. just reading today about how milton keynes, famous economist back in the day by 2030, u.s. gdp would grow six to eight times what it is, which would allow everyday working people to work 15 hours a week. emily: she says it was a typo combining john maynard keynes and milton freed done. pete: that is big mixup. they had very different views. she doesn't know that before. bernie sanders called for bail reform. >> 200,000 people are in jail without being convicted of anything because they can't afford the 500 bucks for jail. that is outrageous. we got to end cash bail. pete: isn't what is happening in new york city, new york state, proof it is not a good idea? here to react, former tucson
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police officer and cofounder of blexit, brandon tatum. appreciate it. the idea you get rid of bail nationwide, so it is a federal mandate what would that do? >> i'll say this, man, in the words of my grandmother, these people are nuttier as a king-sized snickers bar. they are out of touch with reality. this is a spit in the face of law enforcement. this will create crime. if you go to jail, no leverage point to come back to return. go back into the communities, consistently commit crimes. i was a police officer. i remember arresting people. they get out. we arrest the same people 10, 15 times. it is a bad idea. but done by politicians that want power more than they care about american citizens. jason: what are they hoping to achieve? they say folks less fortunate pay that. they are stuck in jail. you point to the idea of accountability f you don't have bail what assurance they will
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have showing up? >> because you're poor doesn't mean you're ignorant. you wake up one day, fall out of bed, falling into committing a crime. this is deliberate act. people jaywalking, walking across the street are not getting bail. these people committing real crimes. somebody who is assaulting another person, robbery, all of the above. so these are people who do crimes. they need to be held accountable. if you don't want to worry about paying bail, do not commit a crime. very simple. jason: that seems straightforward to me. mayor of new york city, mayor bill de blasio, we've seen crime spike in the city. he says the state's bail reform law is to blame. watch. >> we did see some impact in crime numbers going up, much more intensive impact in january when the law took full effect. there really dizzy not appear to be a lot of other contributing factors at this moment. the law was the right thing to do. when you apply a major change sometimes you see unintended
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consequences. pete: there don't seem to be many other contributing factors? does the mayor ignore his relationship in this city? >> he is out of touch with reality. law enforcement in the city they can't stand him. they have no trust or confidence with him. i believe he should be charged he should be held accountable for the deaths of citizens as a result of his policies. we've already seen, i remember reading a story about a man who was drunk driving, this is the third dui, he killed a family, killed a young man and a family, aspiring person graduated college. what is he doing? walking out on the street the next day. this guy has a habitual problem and will commit crimes and hurt other people. these politicians should be held accountable, no excuses about it. they should be held accountable. the american people deserve better especially citizens of new york. they are trying to spread this bull crap around the whole world. we need to speak up against it. pete: not my policing policies,
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albany imposing this law i agree you with we need too change it. he seems to be out of touch of reality the city. real briefly. >> he is completely out of touch with reality. people need to vote these people out. hold them accountable. american citizens should be protected more than criminals in this country. jason: well-said. thank you very much for your service and your time. >> thanks for having me. jason: "snl" takes on the latest democratic debate. did they nail it? more on the mockery coming up next. >> you initially claimed victory in iowa and then senator sanders claimed victory a few days later. who do you think really won? >> donald trump. [laughter].
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jason: the way they do the characterrers is spot on. emily: pretty much nailed every single one of them. pete: think of all the material they could have chosen from this week. one of those weeks with so many political moments. yet i think, "saturday night live," full of liberals, but they finally identified the fact that the democratic primary is the most mill lair russ process in the country. if you stick to it you will get laughs. jason: three hours, take 30 second clips, yes. pete: behind treadmills. emily: president continues to call joe biden creepy joe biden, that is it what "snl" further, criming up from behind. interesting they're kind of furthering what was kind of an original name by the president. tell us what you think here at home. send in viewer comments, friends at foxnews.com. pete: how, jason sudeikis as joe biden. jason: bernie sanders. he is so good. emily: we're days away from the
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new hampshire primary, and the gloves are coming off. pete: joe biden attacking. pete: an bernie sanders while on the campaign trail. jason: griff jenkins live in manchester, new hampshire, with more on the democratic infighting. griff, what is the latest? reporter: jason, pete, emily, it is down to the wire. it is getting quite nasty, to be honest. huge dinner, 12,000 people. all the candidates spoke up the street. sanders supporters booing pete buttigieg clearly surging here. joe biden taking harshest attacks on buttigieg. watch this. >> this guy is not a barack obama. barack obama was a united states senator of a really large state. reporter: biden feeling threatened because appears much of the poll numbers beat beat pulled from him, biden is steadily falling, buttigieg rising in the double digits. we went out to a mayor pete event to find out what all the
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momentum was about, to talk to supporters. listen what they said. >> reminds me years ago i first met barack obama, i met him early as we can do in new hampshire. i remember going home, telling my wife, i met the next president. when i met pete, i had the same exact feeling. >> he offers the solution to this country's addiction to outrage. >> he has reasonable positions on things. >> i love him. >> he is not older than my. i'm not voting for anybody he would older than me. reporter: clear this is two-man race here. that "boston globe" suffolk tracking poll, we've been having sanders on top at 24%, buttigieg at 22, warren, biden, 13 and 10. one thing for sure we can expect more jabs, punches thrown on the campaign trail. this is the last chance to make a final push. guys? pete: thank you, griff. emily: that was so interesting.
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jason: that was father time there and everything. that was really good. this is a primary. totally different than a caucus. different than the proportional allocation in other states. there is a declared winner that comes up. i think what is interesting, later in the show, we show you a clip of it, joe biden put out a campaign ad on pete buttigieg. just, cuts under pete buttigieg, they are really going. as biden come down, pete has gone up. i think when you see this biden ad that is online, holy cow, does he -- pete: he does. he slams him. small town mayor. another poll came out of new hampshire from the university of massachusetts. it polled 400 democrats in new hampshire this is not a joke. 62% of democrats in new hampshire said they would rather have a meteorite hit earth and kill all humans than have donald trump reelected
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president of the united states. that is a real poll from the university of massachusetts. 62% of democrats. giant meteor to strike the earth. emily: that is telling, griff touched on this, supporters for bernie would not clap for any other candidate and would boo them, other crowds for other candidate would support the others. that is something we've been hearing all along. the bernie bros would rather vote for trump than another democratic candidate. pete: there is nobody's second choice. jason: you want to be everybody's second choice. i thought it interesting, martha maccallum had tweeted out, been there in the past. donald trump packed the place to the rafters. every democratic candidate there with open spaces. democrats have a broaden thousand as i am gap compared to what donald trump is doing. that does not bode well. this would be the second state in a row where democrats are not enthused like they want you to believe at the national level. emily: except for that one guy. pete: turn to a few additional
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headlines. a woman found crushed in a trashcan may have been strangled to death. she was found dead in the chute in 2018. police ruled a drunken accident. her father asked forensic pathologist dr. michael bauden to investigate. there are marks on the body appearing to be strangulation. it may have been a homicide. robert conrad has died. a family spokesperson said he died from heart failure at his home in california. he was best known for the roles in the 1960s tv series, the wild wild west and hawaiian eye. survived by eight children and 18 grandchildren. terrifying moments for country star. he scared shared the scary situation with his fans. the bus, old glory, caught fire near mansfield, indiana. thankfully nobody was injured.
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australia, going from bush fires to flash floods. brutal storms to the east coast. sydney seeing reverse water falls. emergency services responded to more than 3,000 calls for help since tuesday. look at that the quart falls are going in the wrong direction a tree fell on a car injuring four people. more than one had you thousand people have been left without power and those are your headlines. emily: my gosh. jason: robert conrad. i will miss him. stargazers getting a treat with massive full moon. emily: the snow moon as it is called is the fourth largest full moon of the year with the brightest in april. jason: pete: adam klotz is here to explain this space spectacle and whether a meteorite is expected in new hampshire.
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>> as far as the supermoon goes, if you want to go outside, see that now, brightest early on sunday morning. sunrise in new york city is 6:57. you have a little bit of time, if you live farther to the west you have more of an opportunity to do that. unfortunately cloudy across the midwest and the plains. seeing mostly clear skies across the southeast. southwest, completely clear, you can step outside to see this thing. worried about snow, that is one area of the country. we'll see a winner storm watch and warning across portions of minnesota, into wisconsin. getting close to chicago there, over towards detroit. that is area to pay attention to today. we'll see at times, fairly heavy snow with this system. guys, it is winter. it feels like winter out there. 26 degrees currently in chicago. 16 degrees in minneapolis. freezing here in new york city. 32 degrees. only a little warm air piling up into the country. and no meteorites as far as i
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can tell. jason: thank you, adam. emily: president celebrating another big win in court. >> this was brought by 230 democrat in congress on emoluments. it was another phony case. we won it. >> we're breaking down the case for you and other top legal stories of the week still ahead. ♪. >> man: what's my safelite story? my truck...is my livelihood. so when my windshield cracked... the experts at safelite autoglass came right to me. >> tech: hi, i'm adrian. >> man: thanks for coming. ...with service i could trust. right, girl? >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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of time-tested, proven solutions in north america. at hairclub, we'll transform how you look, how you feel, and how you live so you can enjoy doing things like this. yep, this too and with confidence. so join people like ryan and love your hair again. - [announcer] to learn more, download our free, 16 page e-book, "top 10 tips to great healthy looking hair." there's no cost or obligation. (upbeat music) ♪. jason: some quick headlines. the stars will be shining bright in hollywood fors cars tonight. among the favorites, include sam mendes' film, "1917" for best picture. brad pitt for actor for "once upon a time in hollywood". people say watch for "parasite."
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it would be first none english film. it is up for five oscars. he laughed off the oscar sub during the acceptance speech at the indy spirit rewards. >> handsome, good looks fade in time. our independent personalities will shine on forever! jason: i like adam sandler. sander did it for sating best actor roll for his film, "uncut gems." emily: thanks, jason. a round up of the week's top legal stories, starting with this. the president celebrating a court victory after the democrats accused him of profiting off his businesses while in office. >> we won the big emoluments case. it was a total win. this was brought by 230 democrats in congress on emoluments. it was another phony case.
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and, 3-0. emily: here to react to that and more, attorney david bruno. thanks so much for being with us today. >> good morning, emily. emily: explain to viewers about the court case. >> sure. emoluments states no person holding office shall without the consent of congress accept gifts or other benefits from for instates and this case, democrats in the minority in 2007 brought the action. and with the d.c. circuit court said you can't bring an action based on the institution from the minority. so that was the standing. that was the standing issue that got dismissed. there are also two other cases coming through the courts. one in the fourth circuit. one in the d.c. sure cut as well. we'll see how it all ends up, this was a huge win for trump on this one point. >> so the democratic minority lawmakers don't have standing to bring suit. do you think the state attorneys general will? >> that is the argument being made by trump, there is no express right to bring a cause of action based on the attorney generals.
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at that will have to go through the courts. i think that goes ultimately up to the united states supreme court for that decision. emily: interesting, a different procedural argument on that one. topic two, we have opioid trials brought by san francisco and the cherokee nation are now set. what is the significance of the so-called rico claim in the san francisco one? >> there is 2700 cases that is right now in ohio. there is one judge, judge pollster, that is really running all this the ohio courts were going to have the big case on this last year but, it settled. it settled right before trial. so now it gets sent to california and california has ability to settle as well. personally i think this is all going to settle. there was discussion last year, 40 billion, was going to be the number. it hadn't been accepted yet but i think ultimately it will be in the best interests of these distributors, suppliers and manufacturers to settle this case instead of going to roll the dice at trial. emily: last topic real quick i want to ask you about, the
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disgruntled latte buyer hit starbucks who claimed the coffee giant is tricking customers to buy larger. >> press sew caffeine drinks despite the same in the smaller size. i'm paying more for the same amount of caffeine, who is with me? what are your thoughts. >> this will be dismissed in my opinion. the argument is, the consumers think there is more caffeine and expresso in the larger versions. there is no specific representations in the menu or restaurants to that effect. that is an assumption. i can't see this going anywhere. for all the starbucks drinkers out there to who think it is money for them, sorry on this claim. emily: the fact that starbucks policy they make everything to the buyer's order. the buyer can specify. they can comply. david, thank you very much for joining us. >> pleasure. emily: moving on, a sheriff's
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deputy going beyond the call of duty to save an american flag during a storm. we'll talk to the deputy and his partner who captured the moment on camera. ♪. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪. jason: a florida sheriff's deputy being praised for going above and beyond saving a american flag while on patrol during a storm. pete: the army vet noticed a flag blown off a post at a home. he got out of his car during the rain to secure secure it for the homeowner. emily: he joins us and fellow deputy paul hahn who snapped the photo. thank you first and foremost for your service.
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tell us about that night and that moment. >> good morning. thursday night we were having a big storm. we were respond to a call to conduct a well being check on elderly individual. i observe ad flag on the ground and stopped and secured it. pete: deputy hahn, in that moment was this something you anticipated taking a photograph of? is this something you would do otherwise taking pictures? get us behind the moment as well. >> we were responding to a call for service. that night we had pretty severe weather. we got there. observed deputy bowman securing the flag. he was rolling it up, picked it off the ground. i had a trainee driving the vehicle. so i had opportunity to take a photo of it. people that know deputy bowman. they know he is patriotic. i thought it was fitting to take a photo to secure the moment. jason: deputy bowman, you served in the united states military in the army. thank you for your service. you're now in law enforcement.
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what does the flag mean to you? >> well, i mean i was raised to respect the flag. we said the pledge of allegiance during the school. in the military you respect the flag. i couldn't just drive by and see it laying there. emily: did you expect the sort of viral reaction that has occurred from that moment when you were rolling up the flag and that point, in taking of the photograph, did either of you expect it would garner so much attention? >> no, it had gone viral before i even knew the picture was taken. emily: well. pete: those quiet moments, out in the middle of the rainstorm doing a job that no one else wants to do, yet you take, the definition of integrity, doing things when you know other people aren't looking. you didn't anticipate that. you talked about why you loved the flag, but why stop to take the next step to secure it? >> i believe any law enforcement, many people around the nation would have taken that moment if the opportunity presented itself to them.
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emily: right. and what has the homeowner, have you had any relationship with her after this? you were there for a welfare check. how is she doing? >> as far as i know she is doing well. >> yes. emily: great. pete: these subtle moments which speak so much to the character of the people that wear blue like you guys, they inspire all of us. you didn't have to do that you're already risking your lives. we hear terrible stories what happen to police officers here and around the country. thank you for what you do. there is a reason it went viral. people connect with those acts of service. appreciate it. all right, the senate voted to acquit the president but seems the argument is not over yet. still ahead the house impeachment managers refusing to let go. >> i think he has not been exonerated. >> what do you mean by that? >> hard to have an acquittal without a fair trial. (sensei) when i started cobra kai,
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♪ ♪ emily: this pick would be mine. , straight up now tell me -- emily: that's paula abdul.
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[laughter] we are glad you guys are all here with us on this sunday morning, and we hope you love this music too president it's been a big week. we're just days away from the new hampshire primary, and the gloves are coming off. jason: joe biden attacking pete buttigieg and bernie sand isers on the campaign trail. emily: good morning, griff. >> reporter: you know, four years ago bernie sanders crushed hillary clinton by 22 points and ran away with the granite state, but that is not the case this go-around. at a 12,000-person dinner last night, all the candidates. and the sanders supporters were booing buttigieg. it is former vice president joe biden feeling perhaps the most
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threatened in going after mayor pete listen. >> this guy's not a barack obama. barack obama had been a united states senator of a really large state. >> reporter: but so biden feeling very threatened because he's lost a lot of his supporters to buttigieg. that's clear what the polling is showing. we went to mayor pete to find nt. what all this momentum was take a listen are. of years ago when i first met barack obama. i met him early as we can to here, and i remember telling my wife, well, i just met the next president. when i met peernghts i had the same exact feeling. >> i think he offers a solution to this country's addiction to outrage right now. >> i really like his honesty. >> i think he's got reasonable positions on a lot of things. >> i love him! he's not older than me, and i'm not voting for anybody who's older than me.
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>> reporter: sanders back on top 24%, buttigieg has dropped 3 points to 22%, but till very close, within the margin of error. warren at 13 and biden at 10. and one other poll that is worthy of mention, the united states -- the university of massachusetts poll, by 62% over the re-election of donald trump. guys? pete: that's an unbelievable number, and we're going to talk about that, but that bell seems to ring every time you talk. it's the griff jenkins bell. two minutes after the hour. [laughter] let me ask you a quick question before we get to that poll. do you have any sense that biden's attacks on buttigieg are going to gape attraction? does he win voters by trying to go after him this late in the game? >> reporter: that's a great question, because biden wants to be seen as not giving up here. there have been a lot of comparisons
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jason: as senator lindsey graham announces the next steps. take a listen. here are the house managers. >> i think he's not been exonerated. >> what do you mean by that this. >> it's hard to have an acquittal without a fair if trial. >> the acquit am part of this, i would consider that fake news because we did not have a fair trial. >> he's not been exonerated. this is the first impeachment in
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american history where a senator from his own party voted to convict the president. given the nature of the republican party, they were never going to convict no matter what, but we had to do it. pete: jason, you know a lot of igfi
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democrats likened this to a simple political process, and this is not like any trial we have in our typical court system, and when it suited them differently as it is now, they're saying this is how a fair trial looks like, and this is exactly what it's supposed to be. that vote at the end every senator made if, the answer was no. for them to claim it wasn't a fair trial and, therefore, eradicating the acquittal, a, fellow senatorse to thatof zero faith in terminatih wasn't the same as a typical court case verdict. it was on the amount of jason: and they should not be repeating this idea that there were no witnesses. the witnesses were the witnesses that were called in the house of represent at this times, and they played hundreds of p clips pete: here's what i think, their time in the sun is over. adam schiff really likes being on tv all day long, so why not go for act two or act three?
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he wants to be the next senator of california because he got glowing reviews for his time -- really a lot of this comes down to politics, vanity and ego -- jason: totally. pete: why not keep the band going? but if you open "the new york post" this morning, page 11 in your print edition, michael goodwin has a column, and it's a great one. pearl-clutching democrats got massacred by trump impeachment trial, and here's a portion of the argument. he said the heart of the case is that dems dug themselves into a hole and won't drop the shovel. they have nothing to show for their 2018 house victory except a partisan impeachment that was the senate killed it. blinded by their personal contempt for the president and his supporters and captive to the whacko wing of the party, pelosi's team still acts as if there's a magic button that will persuade even the deplorables to
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turn on the president. to that, because if you look to that debate stage that was panned by saturday night live as being a clown car, i'd try for impeachment too. it doesn't look like the candidates i've got have the muster, midnight try something? jason: they took their best shot, and what happened? his poll numbers started edging up. and the prime minister's actually doing what -- the president's actually doing what america wants him to do. but it'll be interesting to see what happens in the senate next. let's listen to what lindsey graham has to say about this. >> every time they throw a rock at trump, they get hit. so here's what we should look at, why did the state department not act when they were told about the conflict of interest with hunter biden regarding the ukraine, right? who is the whistleblower? does he have contacts on was information leaked to the whistleblower? and as to the fisa warrant, how
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could you sign the warrant four times and not know the whole thing was off the rails in that's where i come in. i'm going to give a list of witnesses to the department of justice that i want to call. it's going to be the case agent. i want to find out how this pete: we'll see. there could be a chapter two. e-mail us at friends@foxnews.com. where do you think this should head? emily: turning to headlinings. the coronavirus killing more people than the sars outbreak in 2003, depths rising to 811 after 89 were reported in the last 24 hours. there are more than 37,000 coronavirus cases worldwide, but doctors say the spread of the virus may be slowing at the number of new cases fell significantly in the last 24 hours. four passengers from a royal caribbean cruise are released from a hospital after the doctor said they to not have the virus. it was expected to leave for bermuda tomorrow. right now an urgent manhunt is underway for a gunman in a
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police ambush. authorities say a suspect opened fire on two new york city officers as they sat in their marked police van. one of the officers grazed in the other officer, thankfully, was not hit. >> let me be very clear, this was an assassination attempt of two new york city police officers. emily: the nypd releasing these photos of the suspect as their manhunt heats up. participants of a driving test is now gone in nevada, the state's dmv removing the parallel parking portion from the test. the exam still meets standards. those are your headlines. that might be because nevada has so much space if, they don't have the tight squeeze that we have here in the -- pete: but do they have good pizza, because today is national pizza a day. and we live around a lot of italians here in the tristatement area, so all the
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states are fighting. new jersey claims it's got the best pizza. here's what they tweeted. they said this sunday in honor of hashtag national pizza a day, we're declaring new jersey the pizza capital of the world. emily: bold statement out of jersey, so the connecticut governor responded. he said, relax, new jersey, i honor,n gas day in your+jsg [laughter] jason: i don't know.jñ all you need to do is go to your local grocer and peck up a tostino's -- pete: oh, you are offending a lot of people. emily: i don't know about that, jason. 'em 'em i'm going to have to look around and see if socks and pete: but we're going to reveal our favorite pizza, you know, prepared pizza but also frozen pizza. i eat a lot of frozen pizza -- emily: yes, so yummy.
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pete: and it's fantastic. e-mail with us, what is your fae pizza? friends@foxnews.com. be creative. i love big, national chains and you can too. whatever you love, we're going to be eating it and enjoying it all morning long. jason: stay with us because, coming up, joe biden is vowing to only put forth supreme court nominees who support abortion. >> would there be a litmus test on abortion? >> yes. it's a woman's right to do that. of. jason: it's just another example of him changing his tune. a former clerk to justice
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>> judges are supposed to apply the rule of law, and unfortunately you have a whole slew of democratic candidates who say judges should ignore the law and do what they think the right answer is. jason: that's the danger here. what i've heard in the past is people saying, look, i want a judge to just make a ruling and not put a litmus test out here. is this the first time you seen them kind of cross the rubicon and go to this place that says, yeah, we're going to put all these political barriers on people moving forward. >> joe biden himself when he was vice president made clear when they picked nominees to the supreme court, they didn't have a litmus test. and now he's out there saying it should be enforcement on roe v. wade, bernie sanders and tom
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steyer, the entire panel supports a litmus test. jason: in fact, sorry to rut you, but let's listen to joe biden. this is back in 2012. >> we pick two people. we pick people open minded, they've been good justices. so -- >> was there a litmus test on them? >> there was no litmus test. we picked people who had an open mind and not come with an agenda. jason: what are the ramifications of these changes now that democrats want to go this direction? >> well, it worries me because it reinforces this idea that, you know, judges shouldn't be judges, judges shouldn't be applying the rule of law as passed by congress. it allows us to get off, you know, not holding congress responsible, but instead, asking judges to fix these problems for us. judges should not be politicians in black robes. your job is to apply the law, not to make it up themselves. jason: jamil jaffer, thank you for this. it's an important issue.
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she lost her son who was a navy seal serving in afghanistan. now the gold star mother is on a mission to help other military families across the nation. she joins us live next. ♪ ♪ uhh, excuse me, is there a problem here? you're in a no parking zone. oh, i... i didn't know. you didn't see the sign? that... that wasn't there when i was here earlier. (whimper) really? you know, in italy, they let you park anywhere. have a good day, sir. with geico, the savings keep on going. just like this sequel. 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance. (glass shattering) (frustrated yell) (car horn blast) (yelp) car vending machines and buying a car 100% online.vented now we've created a brand new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old, we want to buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate,
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♪ ♪ pete: welcome back. a couple of quick headlines for you. a college is giving new meaning to higher education. colorado state university will be offering a cannabis-free program. it will focus on the science behind growing weed. colorado was the first state to legalize recreational pot in 2014, and now you can get a master's in it. and from cannabis to crime, "the wall street journal" reporting cyber criminals swipes more than $4 billion with cyber currency scams last year.
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that's more than 2017 and 2018 combined. 90 percent of the funds were reportedly stolen by just six scams. look out. emily: all right. when our nation's heroes make the ultimate sacrifice, their families are left at home to pick up the pieces. jason: our next guest lost her son when he was killed in action in 2011. now she's working to help gold star families like hers by bringing them together for tours of our country's national treasures. pete: absolutely. here to tell us more, that gold star mother and director of gold star family freedom tours karen vaughn along with found orer of operation 300, tara -- you're a dear friend of mine, and i love this operation. tara, if you would, share with us what operation 300 is for the audience. >> absolutely. so operation 300 is a nonprofit organization that we founded back in 2012 in honor of my brother, aaron vaughn, who was killed in action in afghanistan. and he left behind two small
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children and just in the wake of that, our family realized that they were never going to know him, they were never going to do things that they would have done with him and realizing that that was actually the reality for so many other children around the country, we started operation 300. up until this point our main program has been providing mentorship for these children. so so we pair them with men who would have been about their dad's age, and they get to spend time with these men doing things that they would have done with their gad dad. so it's a really cool program. >> and it extends. just this past weekend, one of our mentors actually drove to three of the little girls were that he'd been mentoring and took them to a daddy/daughter dance. i mean, it just extends and extends. you know, their dads are gone. they died for us, somebody has to step in. that's the whole purpose behind operation 300. we owe them something. emily: how can people watching from home help? >> go to op300.org and you can
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see everything that we're up to, you can see where where to donate, where to help. i mean, what we're looking for especially and what we're going to talk about in just a second is corporate sponsors. and we'll hit that -- i'll hit that in a minute. but that he's the way we need people to help. we're giving you opportunities as americans to just say we care. pete: a cool new initiative. tell discuss about it. >> yes. so we're going to start gold star freedom tours in april 2020, and i'll let tara -- i'm pretty proud of her. [laughter] but she had this idea -- >> she's got a personality. [laughter] >> so back in july of last year, my family and i are two little girls and my husband were afforded a really unique opportunity to go to washington, d.c. and just do some really cool things. but the access that we were given was really unique. so we were able to go with david barton from wall builders and congressman louie gohmert on a
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nighttime private tour of the capitol. and to have these historians, you know, walking through the capitol and really explain to you the treasures of our nation, my girls and i, my husband were standing on the balcony, and it just so happened there was an work that playing the william overchurch it was this -- overcure. jason: you have any congressman give you a hard time about opening their doors, just let me know -- [laughter] >> we'll take you up on that. pete: you're going to do that for other gold star families. >> yes. we were standing there thinking if anyone deserves access like this to our national treasure, it's these families because the gold star families have given their loved ones. that was the inspiration -- jason: now, last night, tragically, we had two american servicemen lose their lives in afghanistan. tell us from your perspective what they're going through and what's going to happen with the families now. >> you know, jason, it's really
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funny that you ask that question because i'm very frustrated that we're till having am -- still having ambushes in afghanistan. i was really hopeful that this administration, and i love donald trump and i'm 100% supportive, but i was really hopeful we would stop the nonif sense of the way we're operating in afghanistan, trusting people who we should not be trusting -- pete: this was an insider attack. >> it was an insider attack, it's an ambush, and how many times does this have to happen before we finally say, you know what? the lives of our sons and daughters are worth more than that. i'm all for going to fight an enemy. i'm all for staying over there and finishing the fight. that doesn't bother me at all, but when the rules of engagement inhibit9 our sons' and daughters' ability to come home, that bothers me. i just want to say i offer my most sincere prayers for your comfort and for your, the restoration of your family and the protection of your family. and, you know, we know all too well what that day is like and we'll never forget it.
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jason: well, i'm glad that they're going to have the support of people like you, and they're going to need it. unfortunately, there are a lot of families like yours, but op 300.org, you can go to that. you can help a lot of families as they go to d.c. and new york and open opportunity doors and have amazing experiences that they would have had if their mother or father was still alive, but they lost their lives serving their country. and we can't thank you enough. >> i want to thank just a couple of people real quick, fdny fire family transport foundation reached out first to say you're coming to new york? amazing, we're there. the port authority police, the nypd, 9/11 museum memorial reached out -- pete: op300.org. congratulations. great stuff. >> can i please just say one more thing? american warrior initiative, fareway mortgage is funding this first trip, and we're looking for more people to reach out and do that. pete: thank you, karen.
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pete buttigieg may be beating joe biden in minnesota, but the form -- in new hampshire, but the former vp wants people to know who's really in charge. >> this guy's not barack obama. emily: mike huckabee sounds off next. any comments doug? yeah. only pay for what you need with liberty mutual. only pay for what you need with liberty mutual. con liberty mutual solo pagas lo que necesitas. only pay for what you need... only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪ ♪ president whose song was that if i don't know that song -- [laughter] emily: i feel like we're -- pete: there it is. bright lightenings, big city -- emily: i don't have my glass on. it is not my song. it is ceelo green. bright lights -- pete: i recognize it a little bit. emily: how is it none of our songs -- jason: if it isn't on spotify -- pete: it's the producers' world. it's true. [inaudible conversations] jason: there's a lot going on this morning. pete: maybe it was our next guest's pick and we didn't know it, former governor of arkansas mike huckabee. you a ceelo green fan, governor?
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>> i'm more into jimmy hend distribution and the stones -- hendrix and the stones -- jason: the governor plays! pete: many talents. governor, thanks for being here this morning. big week of politics. now, we're two days before the new hampshire primary, and we're seeing the democrat candidates now start to turn on each other and attack each other. i've got to say, you know this stuff. you won iowa in 2008, you had to go to new hampshire, you were the one taking the incoming. is this going to be effective with joe biden taking on pete buttigieg? how does this cut in. >> yes. he doesn't have any other choice. buttigieg is moving up, expect momentum is on his side -- and the momentum is on his side. what has to happen from the other candidates is they've got to stop this momentum, otherwise they're going to get run over. i agree with joe on one point. what is it that buttigieg is actually bringing to the idea he's going to be prime minister in he's been -- to be president? he's been a may jr. of a maul town -- mayor, there's no great
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accomplishments where he could say i transformed my city. even that would be somewhat of a platform. but to jump from being a mediocre mayor to say i want to be president -- jason: well, let's watch what actually joe biden said about pete buttigieg. >> this guy's not a barack obama. barack obama had been a united states senator of a really large state. barack obama had laid out a clear vision when he thought international society should look like. but i do not believe we're the party at risk if they nominate me, and i do believe we're at a party at risk when you nominate someone who's never held a higher office than mayor of south bend, indiana. jason: well, and to that point, the vice president does have an ad out, it probably hasn't been seen far and wide, and that's probably part of his problem. he really does go after pete buttigieg as one who worked on fixing walks and really hasn't done anything of substance. >> well, it's a pretty tough ad,
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you know, and i think it's effective. and that's why the buttigieg people are totally unhappy and pretty unhinged about it. one thing joe said was how experienced barack obama was. one of the knocks on him was that he never passed any significant legislation either as a state legislator or as a senator. he was largely ab sent as a u.s. senator out running for president, but i will give him that at least he served in the senate. he did have some experience at that level. and, you know, it just seems hard for me to believe that the democrat party would end up m nominating someone who's highest accomplishment was to be the mayor of south bend. but you know what in they do it, what great news for donald trump. great news for donald trump. although leapt me tell you this quickly, anybody on that stage getting nominated is great news for president trump. 'em 'em that's true. and, governor, weigh in on the strategy of that. for these remaining candidates
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here, is it wise for them going into new hampshire expect subsequent south carolina and nevada, is it wise for them to be attacking each other, or at this point should they be focusing on their own perceived strengths to garner and gin up their base? how to you feel about what they're doing going into new hampshire? >> emily, it has to be a little bit of both. the fact is, and it's not pleasant, but if you're behind and the momentum is moving toward a candidate, you don't have to, you know, cut him in the jugular, but you've got to make the contrast and show this guy's not ready, i am, give me a shot. if you don't, then he just keeps moving on. there's a time to be nice and there's a time the play hard and tough. if you're playing in the nfl, you don't go out there and say, pardon me, i may have to hit you on this next play, but i'll try not to do it too hard. no, you try to put him on his e rear end, and you hit as hard as you can because that's what the game is about. i'm sorry, but when you run for public office even at a lower level, it's hard-hitting.
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i say it often. if you can't stand to see the sight of your own blood, don't get into politics. it is a brutal game, full contact played without pads. emily: wow. pete: the problem is joe biden is not hitting as hard as he used to, to we'll see if those attacks are actually effective. governor huckabee, thank you so much for your insight. >> you bet. great to be with you. emily: on to some headlines. hundreds of gun with rights activists rally at the u.s. capitol in salt lake city. they touted the second amendment as lawmakers proposed strict gun control measures, calling for universal background checks and red flag laws. several activists carried their guns to the rally. firefighters, meanwhile, battling this massive fire at a construction site. crews in alexandria, virginia, saying it took them several hours to control the fire. two people, including a firefighter, were sent to the hospital with miles per hour injuries. authorities are investigating what caused the fire. scientists are gearing up
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for a historic mission to the sun. tonight the european pace if agency and nasa are launching a brand new spacecraft. the solar orbiter is expected to take the first pictures of the sun's north south pole. researchers hope it will give them new insight into the sun's activity. delta airline employees reunite a little girl with her lost doll. it looks like her marine dad who was deployed overseas, he gave her the doll he left, and it has a good night message in his voice. delta workers pointed on a plane after the little girl lost it while traveling with her mom, and the airline sent the daddy doll back to her south carolina home. and those are your headlines. that's a good story. a wonderful doll, how incredible. pete: do what you can when you can, and they did. coming up, hollywood's most attempted night, it's here. emily: i forgot. pete: this year's biggest drama happened in washington where democrats delivered their finest
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performances to take down the president. jason: so who played the biggest role in his acquittal? stick around, comedian michael watson is handing out the impeachment awards coming up. ♪ ♪ i'm finding it hard to stay on top of things a faster laptop could help. plus, tech support to stay worry free woory free.... boom! boom! get free business day shipping... ...at office depot, officemax and officedepot.com
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( ♪ ) ready to juvéderm it? correct age-related volume loss in cheeks with juvéderm voluma xc, add fullness to lips with juvéderm ultra xc and smooth moderate to severe lines around the nose and mouth with juvéderm xc. tell your doctor if you have a history of scarring or are taking medicines that decrease the body's immune response or that can prolong bleeding.
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dr. nicole saphier and author of the upcoming great book make america healthy again, she joins us now. congrats on the book. >> thank you very much. very excited. pete: very cool. give us an update, where are we right now? >> as we saw in the headlines, it has now surpassed the death rate of the deadly sars which we saw two decades ago, but i do want to keep things in perspective before everybody gets even further panicked. the death rate for sars was about 10% for those infected. you had a 10% chance of dying. coronavirus, it's still less than 2% because there's so many more people infected. at this point, if you're taking the chinese point on their word which historically in the past they have kept some information, if you take them by their numbers, then we still have high numbers. i think they're probably underestimated because of some milder cases that maybe they were too mild to even get attention, and also they're just very overwhelmed with this illness. is so i do think the numbers are
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higher. however, i do want to drive home that, one, it is a much lower death rate. but also we have now seen in this last week about a 43% decrease in the number of new cases, which is hopeful that these prevention measures are possibly working. pete: how has our government done in its response to stopping the parade? >> i mean -- the spread? >> president trump did not wait. as soon as possible we got word from the chinese government that this was much bigger than we originally thought, he put together a task force, they're restricting travel, quarantining people and keeping an eye on it. it is not a huge threat in the united states, but they are staying on top of it which you have to appreciate from a public health perspective. pete: keep an eye on it -- >> but you should not be panicked. for people who have not gotten your flu shot, your thought process is backwards, because you are significantly more likely to get the flu than the coronavirus. pete: got it. let's talk about the book.
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what's the premise? >> so americans are dying earlier, and it's largely due to preventable illness. in my book i go through the history of american health care, i go through the most common ailments that are inflicting americans, and i talk about how decades of government intrusion has largely allow ld this bad behavior that is making these diseases run rampant. i also give a lot of great points on how you can make your individual health better but also improve the overall health of our nation which spends trillions of dollars. pete: i love chapter seven which is about the benefits of pizza on national pizza day. [laughter] >> i don't recall that chapter. pete: you don't remember that chanter? >> but i do love pizza. in fit i do say everything in moderation, and i think i actually say have pizza ever now and then. pete: there you go, you nailed it. doctor, thanks so much. congrats on the book. all right, coming up i, hollywood's most anticipated night is here, but forget the oscars. the year's biggest drama happened in washington, d.c.
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where democrats delivered their finest performs to try to take down the president. who played the biggest fools in his acquittal? he's got the podium, he's got the awards, he's dressed -- as usual -- [laughter] and he's preparedded, overdressed, to give out the awards. ♪ ♪ do you have concerns about mild memory loss related to aging? prevagen is the number one pharmacist-recommended memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. it's timcan it helpltimate sleep nukeep me asleep?he sleep number 360 smart bed. absolutely, it senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. plus 0% interest for 24 months on all smart beds. only for a limited time
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♪ ♪ emily: welcome back. hollywood's most anticipated night is here, the oscars. pete: but as the stars shine bright in tip selltown, the year -- tinseltown, america
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couldn't stop watching as democrats delivered their best performances to take down the president despite the predictable epping. this morning we present oscar sunday, the impeachment edition. jason: so who played the biggest roles in acquitting president trump? comedian michael loss discuss is here to do the honors. >> it is a magical night -- [laughter] and i know we're just doing a bit, but i think we should do this every year. pete: i think so. >> everybody loves an awards show, everybody loves the oscars, everybody loves ad good performance -- jason: and i'm really impressed with the outfit you wore. you saved -- >> i thought it was national pizza day, not national bash me -- [laughter] jason: very impressed. >> thank you. [laughter] do our red carpet portion where earthly i'm getting -- pete: we will introduce each category. >> i love it. pete: and if you would present the award in that category. >> and this is probably as long as the oscars should actually
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be. let's give away -- [laughter] some political oscars. emily: all right. [inaudible conversations] jason: music we should be playing here. pete: we need dramatic music. >> there it is. pete: best actor in a comity. comedy. >> the award goes out to adam schiff. [applause] adam schiff wins the award for fake phone calls. he won for fake phone calls. you might remember his work, also he was nominated in i have evidence of russian collusion but please don't ask me to show it. and his great performance in i don't know the whistleblower. [laughter] jason: i didn't believe him. pete: riveting. >> yes, it was. it was an eye-bulging good time. emily: for the next category,
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best actress in a comedy. >> bess actress in a comedy goes to nancy pelosi. [applause] nancy pelosi -- [inaudible] her performance in i don't hate anyone. who could forget, here's a clip. i don't hate anyone! [laughter] she was also nominated for her role until i pray for the president and impeachment: a sad, solemn a affair. she's currently on location filming rip that speech. [laughter] jason: that is impressive. all right, best horror film. >> best horror film, this is, for the third year in a row, the best horror film goips goes to the democrats. >> standing ovation. [applause] >> they were previously nominated for russia, russia, russia and the mueller probe, but this is the final
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installment of the trump derangement trilogy. it comes for impeachment: a giant waste of time. pete: wow. i really like the russia, russia, russia. >> that was stunning. jason: as long as -- all right, best picture? >> before we get to best picture, an in memoriam to mitt romney's political career. emily: oh! [laughter] >> okay. best picture, this is the one we all came out, best picture goes to, hold on, acquitted! acquitted, starring donald trump -- [laughter] produced by donald trump, directed by donald trump -- am i the only one here who read the constitution? sadly, the president couldn't be here to accept. he's currently on the set of the sequel to make america great again, keep america great: four
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more years. congratulations, mr. president, we love ya. 2020, baby. emily: michael loftus, that was great. [laughter] ♪ ♪ taking a shortcut. finish finish dot com. . hi, i'm bob harper, and i recently had a heart attack. it changed my life. but i'm a survivor. after my heart attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together
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>i spend a lot of time sin my truck.y? it's my livelihood. ♪ rock music >> man: so i'm not taking any chances when something happens to it. so when my windshield cracked... my friend recommended safelite autoglass. >> tech: hi, i'm adrian. >> man: thanks for coming. >> tech: oh, no problem. >> tech: check it out. >> man: yeah.
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they came right to me, with expert service where i needed it. that's service i can trust... no matter what i'm hauling. right, girl? >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪. jason: is that yours? emily: that is our capitol. happy sunday morning. you don't like the song. pete: it is great. we have a lot of great towns. we could have shown seattle or forest lake, minnesota. where are you from in utah. jason: alpine, utah.
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we have snow in my front yard. pete: wow. this is national pizza day. jason: every day is national pizza day at my house. pete: that's true. stay with us. i hope one in your fridge that is even better this morning. jason: a lot happening. a amazing week. this election comes fast and furious right now. we're only two days away from the new hampshire primary and the go gloves are coming off. emily: joe pie biden attacking bernie sanders and pete buttigieg on the campaign trail. jason: griff has more on the democratic infighting. good to see you. reporter: good morning. jason, you got it right. the gloves are coming off. they have only 48 hours to make the case to granite state voters. all the candidate got pretty nasty when sanders supporters were booing mayor pete who is breathing down sanders' neck.
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i tell you another story we're watching, the fall of biden in the poll numbers. biden taking on both sanders and buttigieg, attacking them pretty harsh. listen. >> ask yourself, will it be easier or harder for a democrat to win, with a democratic socialist at the top of the ticket, or will it be harder? i do believe we're a party at risk if we nominate someone who never held higher office than the mayor of south bend, indiana. reporter: let me show you why biden is sighing those things. if you look at "the boston globe" suffolk university poll, sanders 24% he is back on top. buttigieg 22. he fell three. warren 13. biden at 10% still in fourth place. now this surging mayor pete is really quite a story. remember four years ago sanders ran away with it beating hillary clinton by 22 point. this time virtual neck to neck with sanders and buttigieg. we went to a mayor pete rally to
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talk to supporters. here is what they said. >> they are tied to polls. bernie is next door to us for decades. that is statement how pete buttigieg is respected and admired. >> i like his policies. >> has reasonable positions on a lot of things. >> i love him. he is not older than me. and i'm not voting for anybody who is older than me. reporter: we should point out biden still leads nationally but it is very clear that biden is already predicted he may not do well here in the granite state. he may finally be able to deliver the results when he gets to south carolina but that is only three days later. you have super tuesday. really a tight race up here. guys? jason: thank you griff. always good news when you're lowering expectations about your outcome. i'm being sarcastic. biden saying i didn't do well in iowa. i'm not doing well in new hampshire. i'm tepidly attacking my points.
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jason: i will be the leader to take us to the next level. one. people we're not talking about, elizabeth warren. i think you're also seeing the demise of elizabeth warren. she is right next door in massachusetts. she has no excuses for losing here but by all indications she is looking third or fourth place type finish. i don't know where she can go to actually win. emily: how quickly she was forgotten. she was decimated. no one talked about her in the conversation. jason: details of her plans. when america started to digest that even liberal socialists realize these multitrillion dollar plans were not palatable. emily: shows what messages were resonating in iowa. the margins were so interesting and revealing she was. you how high mayor pete was. clearly something resonating with the voters among democrats that might be revealed in new hampshire as well. pete: we asked mike huckabee, the governor type, about pete buttigieg. here is what he had to say.
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>> buttigieg is moving up. the momentum is on his side. what has to happen from the other candidates they have to stop his momentum. hard for me to believe the democrat party would end up nominating some whose highest accomplishment was to be the mayor of south bend. you know what? if they do it, what great news for donald trump. anybody on that stage, getting nominated is great news for president trump. pete: i said it every hour. i will repeat it every hour, it is in the mind much democratic primary voters. 400 democrats in new hampshire were polled whether they have donald trump reelected president or a meteor to hit the earth and kill every human on earth. 62% would rather have meteor hit earth and kill everyone on earth than to have donald trump elected. you want a glimpse how deranged the left is now?
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62% would rather have you die. emily: "gallup poll" says 90% of americans are satisfied with the personal lives. new hampshire says, no, we would rather choose death than a continuation how life is at this moment seems dramatic and unbelievable. if you really -- jason: look at pete buttigieg, here he is is, never accomplished anything. never done anything. doesn't have a record. hasn't taken a bold stance on thing except some of his most radical ideas like fundamentally changing the supreme court. i think he wants 15 people on the supreme court, and new formula how to pick them. "green new deal," free health care for illegal aliens. all these types of things need to be exposed. when he gets sunshine on him in this country it will not go well for him. right now he seems appealing. he is the butt of jokes as most of the candidates when "saturday night live" took this on last night. watch this. >> joe biden will do what joe biden does best, creep up
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from behind. [laughter] >> i can't believe all this mess happened in iowa because of an app. hey, i have an idea for an app. it is called no app. [laughter]. no computers, no gadgets, no gizmos. >> who do you think really won? >> donald trump. [laughter]. >> i mean out of the democrats? >> oh, then i guess me. >> a lot of people like me but they worry about if i'm electable. i have a great solution for that. elect me. [laughter] >> why am i not doing better? [laughter]. emily: remember, tulsi gabbard is still in it. tom steyer. there is more to choose from when we saw on the stage. jason: in middle of that clip, pops up, this debate sponsored by mike bloomberg. sniffing out after plastic straw, big gulp, if you don't like these guys, you can go for me. jason: formidable. hundreds of millions of dollars out there. emily: including influenceers to
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have fake supporters and reports he plagarized some of his policies. more sunshine, the more interesting among those candidates. pete: for $150 you too can make michael bloomberg look cool. jason: exactly. pete: you guys watched the state of the union, powerful address by the president. we all saw what the speaker of the house did ripping it up afterwards. the president tweeted a video recently, edited what the president said about saving tuskegee airmen, reunion with troops, educational scholarships, all things he pointed out, doing that in between all of them, nancy when you rip up the speech you are ripping up those stories. ripping up historically low black unemployment. the left, including nancy pelosi, chief of staff are going crazy, facebook, twitter. jason: can you believe they want to take this down. look at tweets democrats are
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putting up. representative veronica escobar, mislead and manipulate. representative ro khanna, misleading video. representative don beyer. the video is doctored. they cannot stand the truth, when you clip it together, she ripped up the entire speech the president was showing parts of his speech and i think it was an offense to a lot of people. these people are so unhinged, they want to go, what, suppress free speech, take it down. emily: there is nothing deceptive simply repeating footage of what someone did. for someone like nancy pelosi who talks about the symbolism of the office, how it needs to be represented in a certain way, why doesn't she grasp the symbolism of what she did? which is why so many americans were offended not only personally but also people and policies that were represented in that document. anyone should understand what it looked like when she ripped it up. we know exactly how she feels
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about it. pete: a lot of us have issues with facebook and twitter. some of us banned from twitter for a lot less. they have new policies that want to prevent "deepfakes," fake videos, might put us on the couch have me saying something totally crazy which might be normal but not true. those things they want to get rid of. nothing in that video, watch it. is fake. simply showing what the president said. nancy pelosi ripping it up. they want to censor. they want to suppress, they want to cancel, delete reality after fantastic speech and terrible response by the speaker of the house. you can't undo that. emily: repetition, not deception. national republican senatorial senior advisor matt whitlock weighing in, via tweet. they're arguing it is deseparate timly edited to misinform and they want twitter to censor it. she tore the speech had those stories. repstics to highlight what she was tearing, is not
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misinformation. she is representatives are gas lighting. jason: totally on point with this. watch it yourself. you can go to c-span watch full two hours. they will clip stuff together. the president does it, intersperse tearing it up. watch the other video out there. she starts to tear these things ahead of time. i believe it was con strived. i think she knew exactly what she was trying to do. she is playing to the radical, far left aoc base of the party not representative of america t was demeaning to the office. state of the union has been going on for a long period of time. it is offensive for the speaker to take it to a new low. emily: what is going on a long time. these gaffs, on continued attacks on americans, that was not isolated incident. that comes in a series, pattern last three years, democrat as attacking president's legitimacy, attacking average
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americans by nature of behavior, symbolism and their words. jason: i sat through 12 state of the unions and joint addresses to congress. i sat through all eight of barack obamas. i sat through with four of donald trump this is by far the best one. the president started outlaying out facts, facts democrats couldn't stand. he recognized ordinary americans doing extraordinary things. it was emotional moment. democrats could not put their hands together. pete: email us friends@foxnews.com. turning to headlines, green berets killed and six hurt in an attack in afghanistan a person dressed in an afghan uniform opened fire on american forces with a machine gun in a province east of kabul. they say hundreds of isis fighters live in the area. the extremist group could be responsible. servicemembers have not been identified. insider attack. god bless the troops.
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police arrest a man for plowing through a republican group's tent in florida. the group was registering voters in a walmart parking lot. they say he drove his van into the tent, destroying tables and chairs. no one was hurt. he stopped the van, got out, flicked them off before driving away. gregory timm is facing charges including aggravated assault. police are investigating whether it was a politically-motivated attack. those are your headlines. jason: glad they arrested him. could president trump's impeachment be expunged if republicans take back the house? gop congressman, good friend of mine, john ratcliffe next. ♪. my teeth have always been a very sore spot for me,
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emotionally, socially. if i would've known that i was gonna be 50 times happier... i would've gone into aspen dental much sooner. it was a very life changing experience... and it felt like i was me again. that's when i realized i hadn't been for three years. at aspen dental we're all about yes. like yes to flexible hours and payment options. yes to free exam and x-rays for new patients without insurance. and yes whenever you're ready to get started, we are too. call 1-800-aspendental today.
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♪. >> they should, it was a hoax. that is a very good question. should they expunge the impeachment in the house? they should because it was a hoax. it was a total political hoax. pete: president trump says his impeachment in the house should be expunged. republicans reportedly plan to do just that if they win back the house in november. jason: here to react gop congressman and judiciary committee member john ratcliffe. i had the pleasure of serving with you in the previous congress. thanks for being with us this morning. if the republicans win back the house, kevin mccarthy suggests they should do expungement. do you think that should happen? >> jason, pete, thanks for
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having me on. as everyone saw, 197 out of 197 republicans thought this was an unfair impeachment and voted against those articles in the house. obviously we have to gain control of the house of some sort of resolution of expungement, i do think as more details come out about how the origins of impeachment really began, there is every possibility that will happen. the record has not been put in public view about the context between adam schiff, his staff and whistleblower, and profound contacts with one another had on the inspector general's investigation of this matter. the fact that those contacts were concealed from the inspector general. as this becomes more public, i think it will, i think perception that this was unfair impeachment will move to one that it was perhaps coordinated or fraud impeachment. if that happens, there is every
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possibility that a expunge men action could be take in the house. reporter: you had a chance to ask christopherway head of the fbi and ask him about surveilance. we'll play that exchange. get you to expand on it. >> this was illegal surveillance about respect to several fisa applications because there was not probable cause or proper predication, correct? >> right. >> to the point of one of my democratic colleagues, there was no fraud on the court, illegal surveillance, and changing evidence to conduct illegal surveillance is the very definition of fraud on the court, is it not? >> describes conduct that is utterly unacceptable. pete: based on this you anticipate more sunlight on the process that led to surveilling the candidate? >> i do, pete, talk about planned, coordinate the actions against the trump campaign, remember where this began. this idea came out the trump
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campaign was surveiled by the obama administration and officials, it was called a conspiracy theory. then it moved to acknowledgement, yes there was surveillance, as jim comey said this idea of fisa abuse was bunch of nonsense. it was done lawfully. you have mission stray everyone, fisa court itself, the department of justice. you heard the fbi director, inspector general michael who are wit with respect to part of the surveillance done, these fisa applications didn't have the proper predicate. therefore they were illegal surveilance that is a profound you know, admission by the fbi director that was just heard there. i think it is very clear that the obama administration began and then continued an inlegal surveillance action against first candidate trump and then president trump. jason: one thing i do hope that happens, there is application of justice. that somebody gets charged doing all this because there is a lot of people making referrals but we're not seeing justice.
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pete: last one he said they were being wiretapped at trump tower. congressman, we have to leave it there. joe biden putting an impeachment witness on pedestal. said colonel vindman should have gotten a medal instead of rush limbaughth. advice to stop you from overpaying on worker's comp. try pie instead and save up to 30%. thirty percent? really? sure! get a quote in 3 minutes at easyaspie.com. that is easy. so, need another reminder? no, i'm good. reminder for what? oh. ho ho, yeah! need worker's comp insurance? get a quote in 3 minutes at easyaspie.com. when you shop with wayfair,
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jason: back with fox news alert and somber one. two green berets were killed in an attack in afghanistan. jason: a afghan spokesperson said someone dressed in a afghan uniform opened fire on united states and afghan soldiers in a province east of kabul. emily: our next guest served in kabul. medal of honor rye sapient leroy petrey joins us now. thank you for your service. we're welcome, glad you're here.
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welcome to share your perspective right now. >> i'm honored. thank you for having me. first of all, my condolences go out to the families of those soldiers were killed. i wish a speedy recovery to those injured and also to their afghan counterparts may be injured as details come out or are killed. i hate to say it, it is something that has been going on for a while now. that is part of gaining their trust is riding right alongside of them in this effort to train, assist and advise. pete: leroy, speak to that. you lost a hand throwing a grenade in combat operation practices in afghanistan. awarded our nation's highest medal. when you see green beret training afghans we don't know whether that is mem insider attack or someone posing as a member of afghan forces. people say almost 20 years in, how long do we have to train them before they're ready to
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take over the country themselves? this feels endless? can they actually do it? your response. >> i think they're getting there. they are taking a brunt of the force. i wish they would have the numbers of cab wallets the afghans are taking, they are hard-charging trying to do the best they can. unfortunately they are still growing. as far as endless, i think it is a, in my eyes should be an endless thing we should always have an alliance with them. we maintain presence in most countries we've been at war with with over our country's history. jason: i got to till. i think you have a bigger voice in this than anybody, given your sacrifices and your commitment to the country and serving overseas, but joe biden, the former vice president, he told a crowd that we should stand and applaud colonel vindman. watch this. >> he should be pinning a medal on vindman and not on rush
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limbaugh. and i think, i think we should be doing now, i think we should all stand and give colonel vindman a show of how much we supported him. stand up and clap for vindman. get up there. [cheers and applause] who we are. that is who we are. jason: when you see that, what is your reaction to it in. i like joe biden, i met him several times. that right there is ridiculous and, i respecter donald trump's actions on escorting him out of the white house because he, as a team player he should have brought it up through the chain of command and then blown the whistle if it didn't get approved. so, exactly my insight is, i would fired him too, i can't trust you on my team, if you can't bring me things you don't agree with. for nancy pelosi to also calling
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him a hero. i think this. i respect his service, i understand he is purple heart recipient. being a purple heart recipient doesn't make somebody a hero. i'm sorry. pete: i appreciate your candor. wearing the uniform doesn't make you immune from criticism especially on the national security council, it has now been identified you're probably a part of leaking, certainly a part of concerted effort to hurt the president. he testified against him. democrats are outraged the president takes his prerogative you serve at my pleasure, you're moving on. still in the military. he is moving out of the white house. why the outrage from people that want to hold up vindman saying he is such a big hero? >> i think, a lot of the folks that i know when this all started, those that new him, when he was going through ranger school, said that he was a -- in ranger school, said he couldn't
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be trusted. they tried peering him out. i guess it hasn't changed much. usually folks that try to make a big statue of something, what we call spotlighters in the military. trying to highlight themselves as a hero or doing something great and you could do something great just doing your job. pete: let me translate that. child thief, when there is limited food, you're taking some so you and your bodies don't. spotlight ranger, spotlight is on, you do a great job when spotlight is on, and you're not necessarily helping your buddies. peered out, the fellow peers are voting for to you graduate out of the your particular school. we're allowed to have our political views. he is left-winger his entire career. the president has a prerogative to get rid of him. >> he will have to accept the title of mr. vindman. pete: say that, again, leroy, i
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didn't hear it. >> then he will have to accept the title as mr. vindman, not lieutenant colonel. pete: as opposed to what he did correcting the house member when they didn't say lieutenant colonel. leroy, you earned the rank of master sergeant, medal of honor for our country. thank you for some coming on. we really appreciate it. >> thank you for having me. can i say, quick happy birthday to my mother. she turned 60 today. i love her. jason: happy birthday. emily: happy birthday. >> to all the troops deployed, my best to you and your families. jason: pete: god bless you. thanks, leroy. move on now, breaking news, fox news alert, nearby where two new york police officers were ambushed. another shooting inside of a police precinct. this is brand new. breaking details. coming next. ticking towards bad breath, receding gums, and possibly... tooth loss. help turn back the clock on gingivitis
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jason: fox news alert. authorities are confirming a shooting inside of a new york city police precinct. it is unclear if a new york city police officer was shot. this is two hours after two officers were ambushed sitting in their police van. one officer hit in the neck and chin but is expected to recover. the search is on for the gunman. emily: bringing in mark morgan, acting cpb commissioner and former police officer in los angeles. welcome to you, sir. your quick thoughts on the developing situation and the
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police precinct here in new york? reporter: it is a stark reminder. it does, emily, brings back my days as a police officer. i have over 2 1/2 decades in law enforcement. one of the most challenging, dangerous positions in law enforcement is to be a beat cop out on the street. i can tell you to the commissioner of nypd, to one commissioner to another i will make sure i will share whatever information and intelligence we have and we'll work with the department to capture these cowards. anyone that does a ambush is a complete coward. remind the american people out there, when somebody attacks law enforcement in an ambush, that should wake up everybody, that is an alarming incident. jason: this would be the second ambush in roughly the same area of new york. this second shooting happening just, not too long ago. your perspective is important. i have to transition what we invited you to come on and talk about which was in new york, they are going to take on the
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department of homeland security and go to court in a move to prevent illegal immigrants from petting driver licenses. new york is allowing illegal aliens to get drivers licenses and now homeland security is saying you can't be able to use those licenses process to get tsapre and other things. give us an update. >> this goes hand in hand what we were talking about. for law enforcement to work with state and local governments, to share intelligence, share information, is critically important for overall public safety but not just new york and national security. this law is about public safety. and this law, american people need to understand what you unique about the green light law in new york is, it is specifically prohibits customs and border protection and i.c.e. from gaining access to critical data we use, not only for our national security mission, our trade and travel and customs but also our trusted traveler
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programs. we need that information to determine eligibility and to determine whether someone is low risk or meets those eligibility requirements this is absolutely absurd. pete: in response, this is not an arbitrary response, we're trying to vet people for global entry or tsa precheck, how can we validate the validity of double word there, how can we validate who they are if the process has green-lighted someone who might be illegally or not here for lawful purposes? >> pete that is absolutely right. important that everyone understands. before they passed this law, they didn't reach out to us. they didn't have a conversation with us. they didn't ask us how it would negatively impact our job to keep the country safe. they specifically banned i.c.e. from accessing this data and held a press conference. the president made it very clear, even though sanctuary
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citizens won't protect people of that country we're going to. this is about public safety, and us doing our job, plain and simple. emily: commissioner you took a recent trip to central america. share with us about the trip, what you learned and what you would like viewers to know about that. >> it was a great trip. i really wanted to get even and better understanding about the economic and border security challenges there and also to strengthen and make sure that those countries knew that cpb is committed to working with them to address this as regional crisis. and what i learned was, across guatemala, honduras, el salvador, i talked to high-ranking officials in all three of those countries. i met my counterparts in all three countries. they're committed to improve on economic prosperity but addressing border security challenges. they are absolutely very grateful to the united states government's help, specifically cbp's help. i want to get out there to
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remind citizens of the country, don't listen to the cartels that are lying to you. we have because of this administration, president trump's strategy, we ended catch-and-release. if you come to this country you will not be allowed in the night anymore. don't risk your lives. don't pay the cartels. stay home. build your country. pete: that word is getting out, mark? people are realizing there is a new sheriff on the border? >> it is. we've seen a dramatic drop, 75% of immigration in the northern triangle countries in the past eight 1/2 months. those countries are joining us. they're sending the same message. they talk about hope, pete. instead of putting hope coming into the united states, put your hope in your own country. work with the government officials. work with private and public investors that are there to have hope in your country and build your own country. that is the other message that they're trying to put out. >> commissioner, thank you for your service so much, and your perspective this morning.
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>> you bet. emily: turning now to your headlines, a woman fund crushed in a trash bin may have been strangled to death. laura was found dead in a chute in 2016. police ruled it was drunken account. her father asked dr. michael baden to investigate. there are marks apparently from strangulation that it may have been a homicide. iowa democratic party now reviewing inconsistencies in 95 caucus precincts. 2020 hope if you recalls, pete buttigieg, bernie sanders and elizabeth warren flagging the inconsistencies to the state's party. idp says the 95 precincts account for roughly 5% of total precincts. with 100% of those precincts reporting pete buttigieg held a close lead over senator bernie sanders. meanwhile congressman alexandria ocasio-cortez mixes up two economists in her
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instagram story. >> just reading today about how milton keynes, famous economist back in the day predicted by 2030 u.s. gdp would grow six to eight times what it is which would allow for every day "people" to work 15 hours a week. emily: aoc posting it was a typo after combining names of economist, john maynard keynes and milton friedman. she has a economics degree. pete: saying it was a typo. very different views from the economy when you learn in econ 101. emily: yikes! jason: toss it out to adam klotz on fox square. he is not enzian. he is milton friedman guy. >> you got it, feet. ready for meteorology. that is like 15 mile-an-hour wind that makes it a lot colder. that is forecasting happening on
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fox square, where the temperatures is a little bit on the cold side. that is big snowstorm movinged across last week. that is moving on out. if you're living in the middle of the country we're tracking a system at least for some folks quite a bit of snow. that is winter storm advisory from portions of minnesota, across wisconsin and into michigan. otherwise here is look at temperatures, yeah, 32 degrees in new york city. feels like we're down into the 20s because of those winds. well, guys it is winter. this is what is supposed to be happening right now even though i'm not into it, this is what is supposed to be happening. pete: it is winter. it is supposed to be cold. jason: cold is february. pete: you're nailing it, adam. appreciate it. pete buttigieg may be beating joe biden in new hampshire but the former vp wants voters to know who is really in charge. a former obama advisor is here to react. >> this guy is not barack obama. i do believe we're a party at risk if we should nominate someone who never held a higher office than the mayor of
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♪. jason: we're two days away from the new hampshire primary. as polls show pete buttigieg currently beating joe biden. the gloves are off and they're coming off hard. >> this guy is not a barack obama. barack obama was a united states senator of a really large state. barack obama had laid out a clear vision what he thought the international society should look like. i do believe we're a party at risk. we should nominate someone who never held the a higher office than the mayor of south bend, indiana. pete: fox news contributor, former president obama advisor robert wolf met with many candidates including pete buttigieg. he joins us to weigh in. one of our favorite democrats. >> can we caulk about pete rose instead of pete buttigieg. pete: we'll done.
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an attempt at deflection. you have your own inclination who you would like to see. how does that sort out for your party? >> this is not surprising. when you're a front-runner, you talk about yourself and what you are going to do. when you're not the front-runner, you pun of up. mayor fight, for most of the campaign he went after joe biden and bernie. because it worked for him. you know the democratic party, we like hope and change. we haven't had a presidential candidate over age of 53 since john kennedy. that being said, where you are in the policy the most important thing is beating president trump. it takes what we've done in the past to throw it out. jason: that is the conventional wisdom, right? we want to put up, put forward the person that has the best chance of beating donald trump. you see bernie sanders, self-avowed socialist. >> yeah. jason: out there. is that really coming into
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fruition? was that just a talking point of the past? >> i think this past week has been brutal for our party because out of iowa, the one thing that always happens is, you have a winnowing of the field, you have real momentum and donor and grass roots and excitement. we still have five individuals that were within 10% of each other. then you have michael bloomberg on the sideline. i don't even know if it is on the sideline, but you know, for the most part already in. if you look at 2008, literally obama was at 40%. hillary and edwards were each 30%. it winnowed the field down to three. we didn't have anyone at 25% for the most part in iowa. the idea we have a front-runner doesn't exist. in 2016, bernie and hillary were 50% each. so we're, we have not been in this situation. that is why i think iowa, irrespective of the app and this and that but the idea we're still talking about five to eight candidates going into
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super tuesday, that is not good for the party. emily: tell us your prediction on elizabeth warren? suddenly conversation is only on sanders and mayor pete. shy has dropped off. is that premature or harken of what is to come? >> i think it its premature. people say she is struggling with the money and populist lane. there is 40 to 45% of the vote. there is still 40, 45% of the vote. she was at eight 18. bernie is at 25. the idea we're saying she is out, i'm not saying it. she needs to perform in new hampshire. what does performance mean, if we're like iowa, four or five candidates all between 15 and 25%, then literally i agree with joe biden where he is kind of pivoted that made sense. you will have to look at nevada, south carolina and new hampshire and iowa all in an aggregate perspective. the democratic party, i know we're proud of the diversity in our tent. therefore what i would say is, how can you actually say you're
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the front-runner before we get to what is predominantly union -- jason: biden has been saying he is the front-runner and people for months. when you are third or fourth. coming in third or fourth again, hard to believe he has a viable path going forward. >> i disagree. i have not been saying he is the front-runner in iowa. i would change the narrative. i would have said, if i was in their campaign, getting 15% in iowa, knowing there are four or five getting delegates is great. it is all about delegates. joe had 7 or 8 delegates. winner had 12. we're talking about a field that is so wide open. can we go back to pete rose. pete: we can go back to pizza. >> do i look like i like pizza? pete: new jersey starting a food fight, declaring itself the pizza capital of the world. we're putting that bold claim to the test.
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with pizza shops from new jersey and new york city battling it out coming up next. ♪. little fleet. big relief. try it. feel it. feel that fleet feeling.
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[ fast-paced drumming ]
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♪ emily: welcome back on the national pizza day, new jersey is starting a food fight, tweeting it is the pizza capital of the world but new york city has an issue with that. we have anthony of owner of grimaldi's of new york and taking on tony of tony d's in new jersey. pete: tell us why your pizza, grimaldi's on 6th and 20th is the best. >> our pizza is the best. we use new york city water. jason: that is the secret. >> new jersey doesn't have the water. new york has the best water. we use a special cheese.
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100-year-old recipe that we make that is outstanding. it is especially made for the coal-fired pizza that burns 700 degrees. gives a golden brown topping. pete: we'll try that. jason: new jersey pizza over here is pretty good. coming over to new jersey. >> the water. emily: tony, tell us about your amazing pizza? >> jersey pizza, thinner, crispier. always cooked with love. we do everything well-done. we don't have institutions that new york has. we're pretty much always the underdog. took some shots in the green room over it. once you try the pizza i guarranty you -- jason: this stuff is it good. >> scrappy. always the underdogs. jason: why is it bitter than new york pizza. >> one is not better or worse. we're not here to compete. jason: he thinks yours is worse.
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you guys battling out between the two a long time? >> not really. not really. >> tony has -- emily: you guys, these both absolutely outstanding. jason: you have to a take a position. emily: my position is you are both equally's amazing. pete: my position, i would never mess with anthony. so he wins. i live in new jersey. jason: my position i'm going to jersey to get my pizza. >> thank you. smart guy. emily: you guys are all amazing. connecticut governor was weighing in. this was a top down fight. we're the boots on the ground. we're eating both. you both get gold medals. pete: we're introducing our pizza. which one is the national pizza chain does it best. >> that is tough one. grimaldi pizza chain. pete: stay with us on "fox & friends" this sunday.
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pete: straight to a fox news alert, a police officer is shot inside the headquarters of the 41st street precinct in new york city. the officer, thankfully, in stable condition right now. jason: now, this happened 12 hours after two officers were ambushed in the city. a gunman approaching their patrol have van and opening fir. one officer was shot. he's expected to recover. the other officer was not shot. it's up clear if the shootings -- unclear if the shootings are related. the city's police commissioner is, obviously, outraged. >> let me be very clear, this was an assassination attempt at two new york city police officers. pete: absolutely. that was in response just to the first shooting, and we learned just moments ago live on the program that there was a second shooting just two blocks away and reportedly an -- jason: within 12 hours. pete: dan bongino, former nypd officer and friend of the show. dan, you hear this news,
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officers directly targeted. these first two were in their patrol car, the guy comes up to get directions, instead he opens fire on these officers. now we're learning just moments ago something happened a couple of blocks away. the war on cops continues, dan. >> yeah, pete, something in our society's unraveling. someone's pulling on a thread, something is pulling on the thread k and our culture's deteriorating. i remember my time very vividly as a police officer and a police cadet between 1995-1999, and this thing, by thing i mean direct clearly assassination attempts, this is not high potential ifly, this is clear -- hyperbole, this was unheard of. i mean, crime was not unheard of, obviously, street violence was not unheard of, people resisting e arrest was not unheard of, but i don't recall during my time of this phenomenon of assassination attempts. tragically, this is not the first time we've herald this
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story. frankly, it's not even the second or third time. i know many of you remember these patriots who grew up in my hometown of glendale who were shot assassination-style in brooklyn, new york, in 2014. i remember because i did "fox news sunday" with chris wallace having to talk about that. something is going on here. i don't know what it is. it just makes me think of the ellis line that, you know, civilization is a thing crushed on a volcano x that thin crust and is protected by our military and police. i'm having a hard time grasping what's going on here. emily: and, dan, this coming on the heels of a report released that january saw a 17% spike in crime here in the city, and that's acknowledged by the mayor due to the cash bail reform laws. what happens if we find occupant that the persons were reed sid vises? -- perps? they would have been or but for the law, they would have been incars rated before awaiting trial? >> well, the attacks on police
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officers are difficult to explain. i believe it has a lot to do with the war on police and the constant attacks by people with a public profile who use their platform to gain political advantage and use it to step on cops to do it. and that's participant of it. i don't know if it's the whole thing, but it's part of it. the rise in crime in new york city where i grew up, emily, it's easy to explain. i lived through policing in new york when rudy giuliani was the mayor, and he had a broken windows theory where if you let one broken window go in a neighborhood, people break more windows, and chaos end sues. it's an oversimplification, but it was what it was. you jumped the turnstile in new york when giuliani was mayor, you got arrested. he wasn't going to pay the fare to go rob someone. now we've taken the opposite approach. you have this liberal style of policing which, shockingly, prioritizes the rights of the criminals over the rights of the people. and i don't mean civil rights, i
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believe in constitutional rights for everyone, i mean the rights to be given meants tickets after you get -- mets tickets. and shockingly, it makes it a lot easier to live life as a criminal when you're let out of jail early x you never serve a day for beating people up, robbing them, mugging them and breaking in their home. emily, listen, you're a lawyer, you've been dealing with this probably a lot longer than i have. but from the law enforcement side, this is really easy to understand. when you make it easy to be a bad guy, you're going to get more bad guys. pete: yeah. >> this has only complicated, the liberals running the biggity. jason: we don't know the disposition of what these officers are going through right now. we're hoping and praying that they're going to be okay. but i tell you, the men and women who put on that badge and go to work, i don't care where you are across the country, you put your life on the line, you don't know what's going to happen whether it's a traffic stop or you're working at the precinct or responding to
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domestic rages. the mindset though of the 41st street precincts has got to be devastating with two attacks within 12 hours. >> yeah, i know the precinct. it's near the bruckner in the south bronx. it's actually across the rikers island, i know it well. i was on "fox & friends" a few months back, tragically for another police shooting which is sad but we have to report it, this is a news channel. and ainsley are asked me a question about it, and i responded by saying, you, you were a congressman, pete, you were in the military, emily, you're a lawyer. can you imagine getting a text two or three times a year, god forbid, that a colleague of yours was killed in the line of duty? asking everyone in the audience to think about that. about two or three times a year i get a text from a friend of mine, he was a detective, talking about someone we knew or someone we knew who knew someone else who was a cop friend who was killed, shot or attacked. think about that, america.
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if you're a liberal out there or someone who likes to crap on the cops, i want you to think about that. you ever go to work and two or three times a year someone you know is attacked? it does happen to cops every day. i want you to process that. that's what they go to work with every day. jason: i remember being in congress and when there was the shooting at the ballfield, i happened to be in the house gym. and if not for a law enforcement officer, a guy with a gun and a woman with a gun who were there to help protect steve scalise, that shooter could have taken out a whole lot of other people. but these men and women who engage in these types of things and run to the sound of the guns, i'm always amazed by them. pete: absolutely. >> you know, jason -- pete: go ahead. >> that's the perfect example. think about that. that text you got was probably one of the worst days of your life. i don't need to speak for you, i don't need to be in your held, i know that because i know you.
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imagine getting that text two or three times a year for 20 or 30 years of your life. it gets really old. and then you have to hear politicians who do squat. they sit on their thrones like kings and queens, these swamp rat rodents, and they sit there and use their twitter accounts and their public profile to take every opportunity to trash the cops that go out there working for -- you think these guys are getting rich? doing this job? what do you think they make a year in you think they're doing it for the glory, for the money, to be videotaped constantly by people and put on youtube and made infamous for trying to deescalate a public situation? they're doing this because they care. you know, of course there are bad apples, there are everywhere, but this war on the cops, i mean, it's unfathomable what's going on. these are the best among us, not the worst, and they should be treated as such. pete: dan, if you could be king for a day or commissioner for a day, what should happen to change this culture in -- culture? the president's talked about
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endless respect for our police, but ultimately what would you like to see to make this change? >> i'd reimplement the broken windows approach rudy giuliani applied. before that, police captains and executive and cos and commanding officers of precincts used to go in, and it was a big fluff session. giuliani sat them at 1 police plaza, headquarters, and said what are you doing about the squeegee men on the corner? that's low level. it's not low level. those are the same people sometimes that are breaking into homes. what are you doing about jumping turnstiles? you know what de blasio's doing? nothing, giving them mets tickets. giuliani put 'em in jail, pete. and after they jumped the turn style and got put in jail, they didn't mug someone on the train. again, listen to me, this is not come pri candidated. -- complicated. when you prioritize the rights of citizens and not perps first, everywhere you've done that crime hasp gone down, lives have
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been saved and neighborhoods have been cleaned up. everywhere. listen to me with a capital e, everywhere. finish it has a 100% success record. this is not hard. the is citizens have rights. criminals have rights too, i get that, but they don't have the rights to free mets ticket when they get let out of jail when they start jumping turnstiles and low level crimes like urinating in the street, drinking in public. it's a civilized society. we don't do that. remember, the thin crust on the volcano, it's protected by our cops, and we damn well better back 'em up, or you're going of to have that explode. emily: dan, you talked about the wear and tear it takes on your morale, and we also have a death by suicide among police officers, so speak to that for viewers. talk about how that morale not only affected, also that internal struggle that we're seeing with those statistics rising?
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>> you know, it's tough. when i was a police officer and a secret service agent as well on the federal side, you know, the divorce rate was something like 70%. listen, these are really good, high men and women of character. you have to ask yourself what's gone wrong in their families and their lives where it's become so bad that their families are torn apart, and then in the end as you accurately stated, you have these suicide rates that are elevated as well. i mean, think about the mental state you have to be in where that calculus comes into play. what's behind it? a lot. i mean, it's complicated, but one of the things, you know, there's a sense of bravado in policing. i know, pete, you've seen it in the military as well. this is not enough. please, please, i love the men and women in the police department. i was one of them. but it's not -- it's tough to talk about. but you really don't want to go in the muster room and start talking about your personal problem. it's tough. you know? even though everyone's having them, it's kind of kept quiet. and i think what happens is you have what i call the beach ball
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effect where you sink ill underwater and you hold it and hold it, sooner or later you get tired, what happens? it just explodes. you have to be able to talk, there's nothing wrong with that. now that i'm not on the front lines anymore, you know, it's easier for me to say that, and i get it. these are really brave men and women and sometimes in that setting they just don't let out their feelings, and, you know, it's tough. i don't mean that in a soft kind of way, but these are tough men and women, and it's really tough to to do. they just explode. jason: well, there are a lot of people out in that want to thank you for your service, they want to thank the men and women who are serving every day. to recap last night, two police officers sitting in a van, a person comes up says he wants directions, pulls a gun, grazes by the shot a police officer who was sent to the hospital, should be okay, i think is the initial report. but then 12 hours later, roughly 12 hours, nearly about two blocks away from that a gunman goes into a precinct and shoots
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a police officer. we don't know the disposition of that officer right now. but, dan, thank you so much for joining us. pete: yeah, dan. these are live pictures right now in the bronx outside that precinct. as we gather more information, we learn whether the two are connected or not, the condition of that officer, we will bring it to you. everyone has a stake in new york city, in the new york city police department as the centerpiece of america. we're going to follow this and bring it to you. but we do have some additional headlines including this. the coronavirus killing more people than the sars outbreak in 2003. deaths rising to 814 after 89 depths were reported in the last 24 hours. there are more than 37,000 coronavirus cases worldwide, but doctors say the spread of the virus may be slowing as the number of new cases fell significantly in the last 24 hours. four passengers from a royal caribbean cruise are released from the hospital after doctors said they do not have the virus. the ship docked in new jersey
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last week, it's expected to leave for bermuda tomorrow. and a fox news alert, iran unveils a brand new ballistic missile. the revolutionary guard unveiling the weapon. they say it's more advanced and accurate. the u.s. says their new advancements violate a u.n. resolution, calling for no activity related to nuclear weapons. big surprise, iran doesn't follow the rules. terrifying moments for country music star the neil mccoy after his tour bus catches fire, sharing the scary situation on facebook. he says the bus, nicknamed old glory, caught fire near mansfield, louisiana are. thankfully, everyone made it out safely. mccoy thanked his fans for all their thoughts and prayers. scary situation. yep. emily: all right. those are are your headlinesful still ahead, however, we have a growing feud between texas governor greg abbott9 and austin's mayor. over next guest says liberal
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policies are to blame. stay with us. ♪ ♪
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pete: welcome back. texas governor greg abbott clashing with the city of austin over its handling of the homeless crisis, specifically calling out city leadership for making it legal to camp in public. in a tweet the governor confirming a statewide solution is in the works, writing next steps should be to reinstate the ban on camping and work with nonprofit organizations to assist with shelters. that's exactly what i will ask the texas legislature to do. joining us now is austin business owner michael cargill. thank you very much for being here. so you're a business owner in austin. ultimately, the city changed its homeless policies. it's become a magnet. what should be done about it? is the governor right?
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>> yeah, you know, and my thoughts and prayers go out to the police officers there in new york city because that's a very sad situation there. and we're trying to prevent things like that from happening here in austin. president trump, who gave a great state of the union address, said it correctly. he said that democrat-controlled cities and their fails policies are are destroying our country. he is absolutely correct. but i'm going to go a step further, and i'm going to say, you know, these policies, you know, this bernie-style policies are definitely destroying our cities. the mayor and city council, they're living in aha la land, saying that -- la la land, saying that needles are from insulin users and not drug users? that's absolutely crazy. they found thousands and thousands of drug needles on our streets, and no insulin containers whatsoever. so this mayor and this city council, i don't know what world they're living in. and austin's one of the highest -- and i don't know if people know this -- they're the highest std rates in the entire
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country. you know, we have dallas, we have houston, we have el paso. we're the smaller of those cities, and we have the higher std rates. and, you know, just hiv rates in the entire state, and we're 56th in the country. pete: does the mayor acknowledge in this at all? is there reaction to outcry of business owners who say we're seeing our city change in front of our eyes, or are they just doubling down? >> you have the mayor, or he's doubling down. that's exactly what he's doing. he's ignoring the business owners, he's ignoring our cries for help. but we're grateful that greg abbott, the governor, is going to step in. unfortunately, he can't step in until next year, 2021 is, until the texas state legislature comes into session and do something about these policies that we're being just, you know, rammed down our throats here in austin. pete: absolutely. ultimately, the texas
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legislature may get a chance to weigh in on this. michael, thank you very much for your insight. we'll follow the story, have you back if there are updates. appreciate it. >> absolutely. thank you for having me. pete: democrats up in arms over a social media video of nancy pelosi rip iing up the president's state of the union address. isn't that what happened? sure is. got it on videotape. we'll have reaction coming up next. ever since we moved here, i've been noticing it. i think the house is changing him... -[ gasps ] -up and at 'em! ...into his father. [ eerie music plays ] is it scary? -[ gasps ] -it's in eco mode. so don't touch it. mm-hmm. i can't stop this from swinging. must be a draft in here. but he did save a bunch of money bundling our home and auto with progressive. progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents, but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. -hello? -sorry, honey. [ telephone beeps ] butt dial.
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♪ ♪ pete: we are just two days away from the new hampshire primary, and the gloves are coming off. jason: joe biden attacking pete buttigieg and bernie sanders on the campaign trail. emily: griff jenkins is live in new hampshire with more on the
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democratic in fighting. good morning. >> reporter: hey, good morning to you. whether it's the cold weather or the close race, but these candidates are being much less cordial to one another. some 12,000 democrat voters last night, all the candidates were speaking there. you had sanders supporters chanting wall street pete at him. earlier in the day vice president biden, who's been dropping in the polls, also going after mayor buttigieg. he, by the way, was responding to all the attacks that say he's not qualified for the job. listen. >> i know some folks are out there saying what business does a mayor of south bend have running for the presidency? what i'm saying is that's exactly the point. i'm here to carry those voices to washington, to bring solutions not from washington, but to our nation's capital. >> reporter: the big question's going to be whether or not a little known mayor from
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south bend can dethrone bernie in his backyard. this latest poll has sanders 24%, buttigieg at 22%, warren, 13, biden 10. buttigieg was up one point yesterday, now down two, but biden dropping to the bottom is the real story. we won't to a mayor pete -- went to a mayor pete event, here's what some of his supporters had to say. >> i think he has a lot of courage. >> i want young blood. >> it reminds me of years ago when i first met barack obama. i remember going home and telling my wife, i just met the next president. and when i met pete, i had the same exact feeling. >> executive, i want to be calm, i want somebody who is able to make decisions and think about all americans and not just their base. to me, that really is important. >> reporter: now, i got an e-mail from the communications director for mayor buttigieg just in the last hour saying yesterday was her largest organizing day, their rallies, the largest one we went to was
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overflowing with people, so we'll find out whether or not this is going to be as close of a two-man race as we think it's going to be in the final 48 hours. pete: thanks for the update. jason: all right. the democrats were outraged of the president's post of nancy pelosi writtenning his state of the -- ripping his tate of the union speech. pete: fox news contributor tammy bruce is the host of get tammy tammy bruce on fox nation, she joins us now to react. nancy pelosi rips up the speech and someone puts it in the video. >> misleading and manipulative, like i guess the russia dossier hoax, like the impeachment itself, like everything they've accused the president of, his staff of, his family of, manipulative and misleading like accusing americans who vote for the president of being racist. they know about that, and they're projecting once again. the fact is nancy pelosi did something symbolic, right in
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it's a political move, it's an action you take, etc. and the president responded with symbolism. and that's more than appropriate. but what this exposes is the knee-jerk reaction of the left and not just average, you know, grassroots individuals, but leadership to want to censor, to want to shut down things that they don't like. if she did not want the president and the american people to discuss this, then she should not have done it. that is the problem. and the other problem she had was that stunt eclipsed the official democratic response to the president. they had a star in that governor, maybe they still do. we do not know what she said because the democrats managed to eclipse their own individual and their own response because of something that dumb. it was juvenile, it's childish, but it's part of the meltdown that we've been seeing across the board with the democrats. pete: what argument could they be making? it's one thing to do a deep fake video, it's another thing to just splice clips that are accurate and put them in a video
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and then -- >> what i think was appropriate to complain about and the new facebook guidelines about artificial intelligence or synthetic videos, it's like the video of nancy pelosi was slowed down to make it appear as though she was drunk. that is an element that never existed in real life. facebook's reaction was appropriate. are you saying that she did not rip that up and the president didn't say those words? and, of course, both of those things happened in real life, in realtime. then you have a typical response, attack ad, responding with the symbolism of what the republicans have been saying which is by tearing that up, she was tearing up all of what was being said in the speech. which is technically true. and they get to show that. but i agree that that video about pelosi and deliberately changing the nature of it, introducing manager that didn't exist -- something that doesn't exist is what we're talking about here, and we should all
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reject that kind of thing because it's unnecessary. considering what the democrats are doing, we don't need to make things up. emily: tammy bruce, thank you for your insight. viewers at home, catch her show on fox nation. thank you. pete: you're right. the truth these days, better than fiction. >> that's right. pete: well done, tammy. back to our fox news alert, a police officer shot inside a new york city precinct hours after two other police officers were ambushed in their police van. just blocks away. the breaking details moments away. he wanted a man cave in our new home. but she wanted to be close to nature. so, we met in the middle. ohhhhh! look who just woke up! you are so cute! but one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with homeowners insurance. yeah, it was really easy and we saved a bunch of money. oh, you got it. you are such a smart bear! call geico and see how easy saving on homeowners
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jason: straight to a fox news alert, and a live look at the new york city police department precinct where an officer was shot this morn morning. pete: one of the officers in a police van was shot. emily: alex hogan joins us live with the latest. >> reporter: the officer is? stable condition, he was shot in the arm. a suspect is now in custody. all of this happened 12 hours after two officers were ambushed in the city. a gunman approaching their patrol van and opening fire, one officer we know was shot. he is expected to recover. the other officer was not shot. police say that they're looking for this man in connection to last night's shooting. m again, it's not clear if he is the same gunman taken into custody this morning. it's unclear if the shootings
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are related. the city's police commissioner is outraged. >> let me be very clear, this was an assassination attempt at two new york city police officers. >> reporter: governor cuomo also condemning the attacks, saying that he is horrified by the attacks on nypd officers. pete: thank you very much. appreciate it, alec. let's bring in sergeant joseph -- founder of blue lives matter. he's out in the field right now as this story the develops. he joining us on the phone. joseph, you're in touch with the police department here. break down what we're seeing right now. >> well, first of all, this is a complete, direct result of the pro-criminal, anti-police rhetoric that's been spewing for the last couple years. it's really hard for all these police officer right now, because it brings you back to december of 2014 when the two detectives were sitting in their patrol car, and we saw that last night. by the grace offed god, we're not planning two funerals. and an individual dose into a
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police precinct and opens fire, striking a supervisor. we're hearing word that he's not likely, but this is tragic all the way around. jason: no. and this happened supposedly about two blocks away, 12 hours away. we don't know if it's the same shooter. we we don't know the motive of what's happening here, but it does highlight the idea that the men and women who are wearing the blue put their lives on the line are every day, and everybody needs to have their back. >> well, this is absolutely targeted. you need to realize and all the viewers need to realize this was calculated. this is as soon as people are showing up to work around 8 a.m., and this individual knows that. it's a sunday, there's normally less manpower, and to walk inside of a precinct, display a firearm and open fire, it's a complete, total disregard for anybody around him, you know? this is -- we see it all the time with this bail reform, just letting these criminals out, and i guarantee you when the word comes out, this person's going
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to be many, many ties and dealings with police officers and being locked up. i can guarantee that. emily: talk to us about the morale with the boots on the ground and also their level of fatigue with this. >> well, every single day, and i say it all the time, other than the military, i don't think there's any other job where you leave your house and say you know what? there's a real possibility i might not go home today. and that weighs on you, your family, your kids, especially in the world we're living in. police officers being targets just because of the uniform. it doesn't matter the color of their skin, religion or is sexual orientation, they're a target. and last night for an individual to walk up to a police vehicle with the internal lights on, you know, familia just sitting in her car a couple years ago in to 2017, brings you back to ramos and liu, you know, years ago and it's just with, it's a shame because when you have a politician or politicians spewing such hate and violence,
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bringing back the obamaed a managers and it all started back then, and to have a target on your back, these families that see their loved ones go to work every day, to think that we might be planning a funeral tonight, these individuals are young. these poor cops are going out there to do their job, and to think you're going to have bullets fly your way, it's unimaginable. pete: joseph, we've had you on the program talking about how this has, unfortunately, become a trend, and leaders have not gotten in front of it. do you have any reason to believe that in the light of two officers targetedshot within blocks of each other in this very city within 12 hours, will this trigger a change in the way city leadership support the police or attack crime? >> well, we've seen in the very early stages with the commissioner, he is completely behind the police officers, and he does not stand for any act of violence whatsoever towards police. whether it's going to be a protest, whether it's fists or whether it's like last night and this morning where people blatantly open fire. that's what we need.
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we need leadership like that to let our police officers know they're going to have our backs no matter if it's in new york city or anywhere else in the united states. i guarantee the president will l make a statement, and that is huge. he's within one of the only -- been one of the only politicians that stands up for officers every single day. vice president pence, same thing. a.g. barr. that's what we need. on top of that, it's great to have someone sporting us, but we need politicians and lawyers and judges to make sure these criminals aren't on the street in the first place. and what the viewers need to understand too is the majority of times, overwhelming majority of times when an officer is shot at or killed, it has to do with an individual who has a history of violent crime. especially murder, attempted assault, first-degree, whether it's going after and intentionally trying to kill somebody or just going into the middle of the street and letting their firearms go. firearm history and possessions, these individuals have no business being on the street whatsoever. and if they're not on the street, they can't commit these
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acts. and once again we have three officers in 24 hours that we could have been planning funerals for, but thank god for the angels up above watching out for them. finish. pete: blue lives matter nyc, 13-year law enforcement veteran. thank you for your service and being a voice for the guys and gals walking the street every day on our behalf. thanks for joining us. >> god bless.'em god bless. turning to your headlines, starting with a fox news alert, two green berets are hurt and six -- are killed and six hurt in afghanistan. a person dressed in an afghan uniform opened fire on forces with a machine gun after a meeting. gop congressman and former green beret p commander michael walz joined us earlier saying the issues cannot be sod by just pulmo-- solved by just pulling the troops out. >> they are planning to sow chaos and overthrow this government, and then we will face what we did after obama pulled out of iraq too soon.
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emily: american officials say isis could be responsible for the attack. a medal of honor recipient blasting joe biden for saying lieutenant colonel alexander vindman should have gotten a medal over rush limbaugh. take a listen. >> that's ridiculous. as a team player, he should have brought it up through the chain of command and then blown the whistle if it didn't get approved. i would have fired him too and said i can't trust you on my team if you can't bring me things you don't agree with. emily: vindman was removed this week of after testifying against president trump in the impeachment trial. meanwhile, a deputy going above and beyond to save an american flag. deputy bryan bowman joined us earlier this morning to explain why. >> i was raised to respect the flag. we said the pledge of allegiance during school, and in the military you respect the flag. i just couldn't drive by seeing it laying there. emily: deputy bowman p an army veteran, putting it back on the post for the homeowner.
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he said his story went viral before he even knew the photo was taken. and those are your headlines. president very cool. a day of remembering the service of what so many do both here at home and abroad. thinking about those green berets. tossing it out to adam for some weather. adam: hey, guys, how's everybody doing? [cheers and applause] it's a bit on the cold side. is everyone staying the warm? you seem pretty happy. we've got great energy out here despite the fact that, yes, it is a little bit on the cold side. let's take a look at the maps across the country. mostly clear along the east coast, and if you guys are all visiting, i'm sure most of you are, i'm looking at a cold but nice forecast across new york city today. see that big snowstorm moving across the middle of the country? winter storm watches, warnings, advisories across this entire region. a lot of that settling north of milwaukee, but snow running all the way over to detroit. anywhere from light to moderate, so this isn't going to be a huge event, but they just continue to
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see rounds and rounds of snow. currently, temperatures 32 degrees here in new york city. colder back a little farther off toward the west. we're going to throw it back and give it a back to you and toss it back n. one, two, three -- >> back to you! [laughter] adam: back to you, guys. pete: fbi director christopher wray testifying for the first time this week on the scathing fisa report admitting the surveillance was ill reel. maria bartiromo joins us on that. ♪in ♪ the only fda-approved once-daily 3-in-1 copd treatment. ♪ trelegy ♪ the power of 1,2,3 ♪ trelegy ♪ 1,2,3 ♪ trelegy woman: with trelegy and the power of 1, 2, 3, i'm breathing better. trelegy works three ways to open airways, keep them open
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♪ ♪ pete: welcome back. some quick headlines for you. mayor pete buttigieg firing back at joe biden and the former vice president took a swipe at the recent front-runner saying he's no barack obama. buttigieg responding moments ago. >> well, he's right, i'm not. and neither is he. neither is any of us running for president.
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and this isn't 2008, it's 2020. pete: biden has been taking swipes at buttigieg since he merged as a front-runner after the iowa caucuses. the responses will continue. and the iowa democrat party now reviewing inconsistencies in 95 caucus precincts. 2020 hopefuls pete buttigieg, bernie sanders and elizabeth warren flagging the apparent inconsistencies to the state's party. all corrections are expected to be made tomorrow ahead of tuesday's new hampshire primary. the idp says the 95 precinct accounts for roughly 5% of total precincts which could, anything a tight race, matter. with 100% of precincts reporting, buttigieg holds a close lead, but, of course, bernie sanders says he won because he got the most first votes. jason: all right. christopher wray testifying about that scathing fisa report admitting it was illegal.
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>> this was illegal surveillance because there was not probable cause or proper predication, correct? >> right. >> illegal surveillance and changing evidence to conduct the illegal surveillance is the very definition of fraud on the court. >> it describes conduct that's utterly unacceptable. jason: sunday morning futures host maria bartiromo has followed this story from the very beginning. she joins us with reaction. it was a very consequential hearing. john ratcliffe, one of the as a matter of factest on this issue, asking the -- one of the smartest on this issue, asking the right questions. do you think anybody's going to be held accountable? >> i do. there's a reason john durham's investigation is a criminal investigation. you don't have a criminal investigation unless you think there was something done that was criminal. so i do believe that we will see accountability. but you're right, it has taken long, and it's incredible to me that the mainstream media refuses to acknowledge this. and the democrats refuse to acknowledge this wrongdoing. this is the biggest political
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scandal of our time, let's be clear. they wanted to take donald trump down. they used the tools that we use against terroristsment they did -- terrorists. they did wiretapping, illegal. they did informants, they did leaking to the media, and then they used those same leaks as evidence to the fisa court. and, by the way, christopher wray just said that the last two fisa warrants were illegal. they're still looking at the first two. so don't kid yourself, it may very well be that all four warrants to spy on carter page were unlawful. this is the biggest scandal we've ever seen. finally, we're getting some admission from the top at the fbi. i believe there will be accountability. jason: let's listen to what john ratcliffe had to say on this issue. >> remember where this began. when that idea originally came out that the trump campaign was being surveil ised by the obama administration and its firms, it was called a -- its official, it was called a conspiracy theory.
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now you have an admission by the fisa court itself, by the department of justice. these applications didn't have a proper predicate, therefore, they were illegal surveillance. pete: president trump was laughed at when he said i was wiretapped in trump tower, and here we are. >> you know what happened, they laugh at anybody who says anything like this against, you know, to say the truth. but then the mobs come at you, and they try to shut you down, shut you down on twitter, on instagram, whatever it takes to make you go away so you do not expose the wrongdoing. it's been expose ld, it's out there. little by little the american people are figuring it out. thank you, or john ratcliffe, thank you, devin nuñes, for exposing the truth. this morning my lead guest is ruedty giuliani, the president's personal lawyer. he told me he's got two pieces of evidence that are smoking guns against joe and hunter biden. we've got acting dhs secretary chad wolf to talk about not just the coronavirus concerns, but
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also what's going on in terms of new york suing dhs. new york will not allow them any access to the department of motor vehicles. devin nuñes is back with us along with congressman doug collins. congressman nuñes got a big shout-out from the president as did senator tim scott. senator scott is going to join us as well about how the black voten increasing for president trump going into 2020. pete: do not miss it in about nine minutes from now. >> thanks so much. pete: up next, it's national pizza day. we had a debate, what's better pizza, new york or new jersey? >> brooklyn all the way. pete: maria says brooklyn. we're going to unveil our favorites, plus a little friendly competition. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ pete: in honor of national pizza day, we are revealing our favorites. now, mine i'm going to start with the best up front is, of course, pizza hut. which is the best pizza in america. [laughter] the crust is amazing, jason -- jason: i happen to be a domino's guy. if i'm at home, i'm going with the totino's, and the credit is open up -- secret is open up a can of tomato paste. emily: my favorite is zachary's pizza, can and chicago style -- >> thin crust. emily: to death, i'm not going to do thin. i'm all about deep dish. pete: adam, what's your favorite? adam: art choke, that's what's coming up here. pete: we've got to learn how to make real pizza. joining us now are co-founders, francis garcia and --
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[inaudible] >> yeah, get in here. emily: so happy to have you here. what do we have? >> big news over there. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] emily: oh, gosh, i love it. jason: what is the secret? >> new york water. that's it. pete: what about the new york water? >> it's just fun to say it. the perfect day to eat pizza with friends and family. pete: you go with the cheese first here? >> it bakes into the crust, and when you pick it up, it don't slide off the pie because the sauce is on top. pete: i like that. >> it's a little reverse engineering. jason: i love pepperoni, i'm saying this is the best one. this is exceptional. >> health care orme -- hormel makes the best pepperoni. [inaudible conversations] pete: here we go. i think we got it right there. adam and i are together to make the best pizza.
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emily: come on, jason! [inaudible conversations] yes, yes! i like this teamwork. now what? [inaudible conversations] emily: a little parmesan? >> that's a lot of sauce. emily: what next? what's my next step? pete: a little fresh basil. emily: all right. a little basil? pete: ding, ding, ding. jason: all right. [inaudible conversations] emily: after the break. pete: after of the break.
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what if we make king's hawaiian breakfast sandwiches? yum! and king's hawaiian monkey bread! yum! yum! king's hawaiian what an irresistibly delicious idea.
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thank you. >> who won the contest? it sunday everyone. thank you for joining us. president trump this past week is acquittal and the state of the union address. the president's personal attorney rudy giuliani plus we are two days away but the next big one by the democrats. super tuesday march 3. also this morning, cast tall death toll from the coronavirus. plus fighting the department over changes to this program.

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